Looking Around - TIME.com

Tadao Ando Comes to the Clark

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Stone HIll Center, Ando, 2008/ All Photos: RICHARD LACAYO

I was up in Williamstown, Ma. last week to catch an early look at the Stone Hill Center, another splendid little exercise in High Modernism, 21st-century Japanese style, by Tadao Ando, this one on the campus of the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute. It uses gestures and elements that Ando recombines all the time, but we have very few examples of what he does in the U.S. This is Ando's first completed building here since the opening six years ago of his majestic and even mysterious Fort Worth Modern Art Museum. Set on a hillside a short walk (or drive) up from the main Clark campus, the Stone Hill Center holds galleries and restoration labs, plus some classroom and office space. A second Ando building — galleries, a visitor center and conference facilities set on a reflecting pool across from the main Clark buildings — is planned for the future.

I wrote about the building in this week's Time. But here on "Looking Around" let's make this picture day.

On this project Ando worked with the landscape designers Reed Hilderbrand Associates to produce a Japanese-style meandering pathway approach up the hill.

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It defers your arrival at the main entrance by first bringing you around the gallery side of the building.

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After turning the corner...

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...the main entrance comes into view, though still deferred behind a wall that to my eye recalled the "moat walls" that Louis Kahn, always a great Ando inspiration, used around his Yale University Art Gallery, but there are many other potential sources. (And Kahn of course got the idea partly from the "moat walls" at the base of many Yale campus buildings.)

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You arrive past the ticket booth at right — that's an outdoor patio on the other side of the glass — and pass through the glass doors...

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...to enter a long corridor. Go through those glass doors an turn right...

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...and you enter a gallery that terminates in one of the quadrant window-walls that Ando has been using since the '80s. It opens to a view of woodlands framed by a covered patio that extends from the gallery, a view very much conditioned by a human framework.

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If you had turned left you would have entered a gallery that puts the window wall on one side that looks over to the first gallery, to create a different kind of indoor/outdoor play.

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Meanwhile, from that upper level patio, which will serve as an outdoor cafe in good weather...

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...one of Ando's spare, floating stairways descends beside one of the free standing walls that he often uses to transect his main volumes at a diagonal. The wall encloses a square archway cut that frames and in a way abstracts the view within a proscenium.

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The restoration labs have been up and running for a while...

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One of their projects is the repair of two abused and abraded wall paintings that Arshile Gorky did in the mid-1930s as a WPA project for Newark Airport.

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5 Comments to “Tadao Ando Comes to the Clark”

  1. Toby Says:

    Thank you for your observations and your photos of the Clark.

    I wonder if you would take a moment to replace the term "landscape designers" with "landscape architects" in your post. Landscape design is an important and honorable trade, but it isn't the same as landscape architecture, which is a licensed profession in most states, including Massachusetts. Check out Robert Campbell's article on the Clark in the Boston Globe, where he gets it right: Reed Hilderbrand Associates are landscape architects.

    Again, thanks for bringing this important building and landscape to our attention.

  2. M_s Says:

    Thanks for the article and pics.

    I have been a fan of Ando and known many of his work. I am so disappointed to find out that this building is so NOT Ando. The concrete finish looks rough and dirty (bad contractor?), railing on the stair and roof look too complicated (poor interpretation of the ADA code?). In addition, the interior finishes do not remind me a thing of Ando's work (except the "cross" mullions on the glass).

    If I had looked at the pics at Time only (not at this blog), I would have assumed this was just one of those precast buildings in any business parks across the country.

    I am very curious to know who is the executive architect in the US that finished the contruction documents for Ando?

  3. Rafael Montilla Says:

    Great architecture is frozen music, a melody that stretches long into the sky returning each day for an encore. Architecture can fasten itself to the heart of the beholder. If great architecture is music, Tadao Ando is the master conductor.

  4. DanielArchitect Says:

    The Stone hill art center is not the second Ando building in the US...it's the 3rd...I suppose Richard Lacayo has never been to St. Louis to see the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts Building- it's real Ando.
    http://www.pulitzerarts.org/architecture-commissioned-art/

  5. Richard Lacayo Says:

    I'm well aware of the Pulitzer Foundation and even discussed it with Ando at his offices in Osaka a few years ago. My article in Time doesn't say that the Stone HIll center is his second building in the U.S. It says he hadn't done a building in this country since completing the Fort Worth Modern Art Museum. The Pulitzer opened in 2001, the Fort Worth Museum the following year. For the record, Ando also designed a private residence in Chicago in the 1990s. I simply didn't have room in a one page piece to mention everything he's done but I can see how the way that sentence is worded left an ambiguity.

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Looking Around

Richard Lacayo

Richard Lacayo writes about books, art and architecture at TIME Magazine, where he arrived in 1984. He is the co-author, with George Russell, of Eyewitness: 100 Years of Photojournalism and has won various lesser known journalism prizes, which he keeps in his desk drawer. Read more

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