We were on a mission to see the
Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao. We drove the rental car
on the coast highway from San Sebastian to Bilbao and
returned the car at the Bilbao airport. The return was
easy since we paid for the full insurance on the vehicle, so
they did not inspect it. We had expected to be
nickeled-and-dimed to death, thus the insurance
decision. We did take some door hits, and I expect
that they would attempt to charge us for it. We got a
taxi from the airport to the hotel and dumped our bags and
headed to the museum. The museum was ultra-cool, but
the contents were, um, suspect. You can decide from
the photos below.
The photos below are what we saw.
A nice
interpretation of a classic style in a new building across from
the museum.
The
topiary was unexpected, but apparently it is iconic in Bilbao.
There
was an interesting structure next to the bridge that crosses the
river.
Our
first look at the exterior of the Gugg.
We
walked to the center of the bridge and looked back on the
museum.
The
bridge itself was modern and a work of art.
Looking
downriver we could see the newer parts of Bilbao.
The
exterior of the museum was stunning.
Kathleen
booked us reservations for lunch at the Michelin 5-star rated
restaurant next to the museum. The food was pricey, but
excellent. We had wine with lunch which had a predictable
impact on our motivation. The spider on the river
boardwalk was a popular exhibit.
These
polished spheres were assembled as a statue. I am not sure
how they clean this to maintain the polish. The "fog" by
the sidewalk was some kind of misting device to reduce the
temperature. It was pretty hot in the direct mid-day sun.
We went
inside the museum and were blown-away with the architecture.
There
were very few planar surfaces in the building.
Very
nice stone tiles on multiple surfaces.
And, on
to the art....well, it is modern art. That comment, pretty
much tells it all.
Some of
the so-called "pop art" was acceptable. Most of the really
odd, even objectionable, art was not photographed.
Big with
bold colors, a classic pop art image.
There
were many instances of finger paint. This would get you
several stars for participation in 3rd grade.
Possibly
interesting to some.
Graffiti
looks better, IMHO.
The
typographic errors threw me off, but still not interesting.
And
finally, an exhibition that shows that pop-art is actually
dead.
There
were a number of Warhols on display.
Some
of Warhol's work was interesting.
This
Warhol work, while not as famous as the Marilyn Monroe, was
noteworthy.
This
piece was 3D and the combination of color and monochrome was
interesting to me.
Excellent
stone work, even on the curved surfaces.
This
work was a bit hard to describe, but a view from overhead aids
in understanding the effort. These were big and
presumably hard to transport.
A huge
shuttlecock, meaning and symbolism unknown.
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Photos and Text Copyright Bill Caid 2024, all rights
reserved.
For your enjoyment only, not for commercial use.