Norton Simon Museum

Norton Simon Museum
Pasadena
December 4, 2016

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We met up with Kathleen, Meredith’s sister, to spend an afternoon at the Norton Simon Museum. This museum has an extensive and good quality collection of European art, and we toured those galleries first. Meredith enjoyed the Degas works particularly, both paintings and sculpture. Bob’s eye was caught by a Georges Lacombe painting, the Chestnut Gatherers. We both liked the Baciccio painting, Saint Joseph and the Infant Christ, so we picked up a packet of Christmas cards with a reproduction of it in the gift shop.

Kathleen will be teaching a comparative religion course next term and found material of interest in both the European and Asian art sections. The Asian art collection is extensive, and consists largely of religious statues.

The museum is a good size — compact enough to see the collection in one visit, but large enough to contain its considerable collection and show it to good advantage. The interior galleries, redesigned by architect Frank Gehry in the 1990’s, are light and airy.

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The sculpture gardens are a treat to explore and something that sets this museum apart. As you approach, the path to the entrance is flanked by Rodin sculptures, including the Burghers of Calais. Inside the museum is another sculpture garden, around a lily pond, with lovely trees and other plantings. The stroll around the pond is as much a part of the museum experience here as strolling through the interior galleries.

Admission is $12 for adults, $9 for seniors. Children and students are free. Wheelchair access is good. Parking is free.

There is a cafe at the museum, outside by the lily pond, but we met up with Kathleen for brunch at a local coffeehouse in Pasadena first, Copa Vida. We all enjoyed our meals.

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The day before we went to the Norton Simon, we drove up to Pasadena to stay the night and went out to a local theater, the Sierra Madre Playhouse, to see “A Little House Christmas.” As the name suggests, the play is based on the Laura Ingalls Wilder stories and features the Ingalls family preparing for and celebrating Christmas. We love the books and thoroughly enjoyed the play, which is based on stories in the books, primarily in Little House on the Prairie. Rights are owned by the Little House Heritage Trust. The actors were very good, and the production was engaging — funny at points, and poignant at other times. We would definitely see this show again and hope to see other theaters produce it.

Getty — Cave Temples

Getty Center
Sepulveda Pass
May 15, 2016

We took Margaret to the Getty Center, primarily to see the new exhibition, the Cave Temples of Dunhuang: Buddhist Art on China’s Silk Road. History is one of her main interests, and she had very much enjoyed the Silk Road exhibit at the Natural History Museum when we saw it several years ago, in our pre-blog period, so this exhibit was a “must see.”

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We first heard about this exhibition through the Getty 360 email newsletter which the Getty sends us each month, and we then saw an Associated Press article about it in the San Diego Union Tribune: Getty Center Recreates Elaborate Chinese Caves. It runs through September 4, 2016.

The caves of Mogao near Dunhuang were carved out in stages over nearly a millennium from the 4th to the 14th centuries, by Buddhist monks and others. The cave temple complex served those traveling on the Silk Road. The area is situated in northwestern China, on the eastern edge of the Gobi Desert, north of Tibet and south of Mongolia. Roughly half of the approximately 1000 caves have some decoration, and many of those feature elaborate and beautiful religious sculptures and paintings. Many caves fell into disuse during the Ming Dynasty of the 14th to 17th centuries, and the complex seems to have been used only as a local religious center after that. Sand drifted over the site and obscured many of the grottoes and the wooden facades of the cave entrances decayed. Early in the 20th century, Wang Yuanlu, a Daoist monk, discovered tens of thousands of ancient documents and other artifacts that had been sealed in one of the caves. In 1943 the Dunhuang Academy was established to explore and conserve Mogao. Since the 1970s the caves have become a tourist attraction, and the number of visitors has made conservation a critical need. For the last decade, the Getty Conservation Institute has worked with the local institute to stabilize, preserve, and restore some of the cave paintings.

The Getty exhibition has three parts. In the Research Institute building, which we visited first, are displayed actual historical artifacts such as sculptures, parchments, paintings, and drawings. Margaret particularly enjoyed a large embroidered silk tapestry showing a life-sized Buddha, called the Miraculous Image of Liangzhou. It was made around 700 A.D. (It enjoyed a shout out in the AP article linked above.)

Right next to that exhibition there is a small movie theater showing The Cave 45 Virtual Immersive Experience, a short film in 3-D of one of the restored caves, explaining the details of the statuary and the paintings in that particular cave.

The third part of the exhibition is a tent that has been set up especially for this purpose on the entrance plaza at the Getty Center, right near where the trams drop arriving visitors. Within that tent are replicas of three of the cave temples, with docents available to answer questions.

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Due to capacity limits, there is timed entry to the replica cave tent. We had the bad luck to time our visit to coincide with a very large group from Riverside which had blocked out some time in the early afternoon. When we first tried to get timed tickets, right after lunch, we were told there would not be any given out for an hour and a half, so we went off to look at the new Rembrandt (see below). When we came back, the earliest timed tickets we could get would have had us waiting at the Getty for nearly an hour and a half, and Margaret was already fatigued at that point. We asked at the information booth if any accommodation could be made for her, given her disabilities, and a supervisor helped us to the front of the line both for the replica cave and the movie, with just a short wait for each. He was gracious and helpful; we were relieved and grateful. If we had been there on our own the wait would not have mattered, and we could have toured other galleries in the meantime, but Margaret has very limited stamina these days.

Although the Chinese cave art was the main focus of our visit, we did make time to see another new exhibit, The Promise of Youth: Rembrandt’s Senses Rediscovered. The Getty owns several Rembrandt paintings and has a couple others on long term loan, but the one which is currently the center of attention is on short term loan only until August 28, 2016. It is called The Unconscious Patient (Allegory of the Sense of Smell) and is one of a series that Rembrandt painted as a young artist illustrating the five senses. See more about the series, and photos of the paintings, on the Getty’s website: here. This painting, illustrating the sense of smell, is displayed between paintings illustrating touch and hearing. The backstory is one of those stranger than fiction stories; the painting was recently rediscovered, and its owners did not know it was by Rembrandt. We read the story of its discovery in an article in the Los Angeles Times. Adjacent to the three “senses” paintings are the museum’s other Rembrandt works.

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Admission to the Getty is free, but those arriving by private car pay $15 to park. Parking is at the foot of the hill, and visitors ride trams up to the entry plaza. There were ample handicap spaces in the garage, and accessibility is generally good throughout the center. Finding the elevators is sometimes a little challenging, but all levels of the exhibit buildings can be reached either by elevator or (within the Research Institute exhibit space) by ramp. As we noted, the staff was very helpful with accommodating Margaret, so we give them high marks for disability services.

The café is arranged as a food court with half a dozen stations offering a wide selection of food. The food is good, and the prices are reasonable for a museum cafe. There is also a sit down restaurant.

San Diego Museum of Art

San Diego Museum of Art
Balboa Park
February 27, 2016

We used our Macy’s Museum Month pass for a 50% discount at the Museum of Art, which we had not visited for several years.

Bob had spotted an article in the Union Tribune about a triptych of paintings on display, the Virgin of Sorrows, an altarpiece painted during or about 1564 by a Flemish artist, Pieter Claeissens the elder. We found the Madonna on display in the gallery devoted to religious art. That same gallery includes pieces by El Greco, Murillo, Sanchez Cotan, and Zurbaran, among others. Meredith lingered in that gallery while Bob moved on to other works.

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We then viewed the special exhibition of works of Harry Sternberg, a 20th century artist who first worked on the East Coast then moved to Escondido. His paintings are powerful, but the most moving pieces were the simple black and white works featuring the gritty reality of steel mills in Pennsylvania and the artist’s youth in New York City. The Sternberg exhibition closes May 8, 2016.

Margaret has struggled recently with several health problems. Last week we visited, planning to take her for a stroll around the Lake Balboa park. On the way to the park she felt ill, and we ended up taking her to the hospital instead. She spent a couple of nights there, being treated for atrial fibrillation and congestive heart failure. She is back home now, this time on oxygen. We visited on Sunday and brought sandwiches in. Meredith read her several Robert Service poems, and all three of us looked through recent letters and photos that Min, Bob’s aunt, had sent to Margaret.

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We wonder whether and when Margaret will recover enough strength to resume our customary outings. Or have the many decades of heavy smoking left her heart and lungs too weak to be up to that level of activity? Too soon to tell; we will just have to take things as they come.

San Fernando Mission

Mission San Fernando Rey de España
Mission Hills
December 26, 2015

We took Margaret to see the San Fernando Mission, founded in 1797, one of 21 missions established by the Franciscans in Alta California, i.e. what is now the state of California. (Missions were established in Baja California as well.)

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This visit brought back memories of a week long road trip we took in 1999 with Margaret and our three girls, up to Sonoma and back down to San Diego, visiting all of the missions. Here are our three daughters back then, outside the San Fernando Mission:

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As anyone who grew up in California knows, the missions were an integral part of the Spanish colonial era and of the history of early California generally. Nowadays the Southern California missions are generally well restored; some of the Northern California missions have been mostly obliterated. After the Mexican government secularized the missions, confiscating them from the Church, the mission buildings fell into disrepair. The adobe walls of some of them dissolved after opportunistic neighbors took the roof tiles for other projects. The San Fernando buildings have been well restored.

The mission church at San Fernando is an active place of worship, and there was a ceremony going on the day we visited — a quinceañera we think — so we were unable to see the church this time. We were able to see the museum rooms and gardens though.

Several of the buildings have rooms with historical displays in them. There are some informative displays, such as rooms arranged with period appropriate furnishings, and also some workshop rooms showing blacksmith and carpenter tools, a loom, and a saddle making display. Many religious artifacts are displayed, including both liturgical items like vestments and art such as statues, and there is an entire “Madonna Room” given over to iconography of the Virgin Mary. Some of the museum display cases have items which, although interesting in themselves, are not particularly appropriate to the mission. In the first couple of museum rooms, for instance, there were a number of Native American baskets on display. Those baskets included some very nice pieces, but few of them were from the local area.

Bob Hope is buried on the grounds. As he was dying, his wife Dolores asked him where he wanted to be buried, and he is reported to have said “Surprise me.” In any event, this is the resting place she chose for him. The thing Margaret most enjoyed about our visit was a pair of display cases featuring Bob Hope memorabilia. (These are tucked, for some inexplicable reason, in the workshop area.) Margaret even stood up, to see the photo of Bob with Dolores on the top shelf.

Admission to the mission grounds is $5 for adults, $4 for seniors. Most of the grounds and rooms are on a level, so wheelchair access is pretty good.

Margaret asked after her grandchildren as soon as we picked her up, and we brought her up to speed on family news over lunch.

Getty Center — Tapestries

Getty Center
Sepulveda Pass
November 15, 2014

We took Margaret to see the special exhibition at the Getty, of tapestries and related paintings by Peter Paul Rubens. The tapestries are part of a larger set celebrating the Triumph of the Eucharist, commissioned in the 1620s by the Infanta Isabel Clara Eugenia, the ruler of the Spanish Netherlands. The tapestries were woven in Belgium and installed in the Convent of the Poor Clares in Madrid, an institution closely associated with the Habsburg monarchy. We first learned about the exhibition through a preview piece Joyful Weaving of Art in the Los Angeles Times. After it opened there was a longer review in the Times, Wonders Unfurl, as part of an article which also looked at a tapestry exhibit in New York.

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The tapestries are of monumental size. Next to them were paintings on oak panels that Rubens had made as models from which the weavers could work. It was interesting to note that the paintings are mirror images of the tapestries. The weavers were working from the back side of the tapestries and this reversal of the pattern image made their work easier. Although the colors have faded slightly with time, the tapestries still show remarkable shadings of detail.

The overall spirit of the series is triumphalist, very much in keeping with the Counter Reformation period in which they were made. They are devotional works and celebrate one of the central mysteries of Catholic Christianity, the sacrament of the Eucharist. Some panels are allegorical, such as the victory of Truth over Heresy. Other panels illustrate scriptural stories which Catholics see as prefiguring the Eucharist, such as the sacrifice offered by Melchizedek for Abraham, and the gathering of manna in the desert.

After touring the special exhibition we went over to another building to see a Rubens painting in the permanent collection, of the Caledonian boar hunt. We strolled through that gallery and looked at other period paintings, mainly by Flemish artists. Margaret enjoyed a Rembrandt self portrait in which the artist is laughing.

Admission to the museum is free, but parking costs $15. The parking system has been changed so that one pays on leaving, rather than entering.

We ate at the museum café. A nice feature is that there are half a dozen different stations, so one can select from a variety of choices. We each enjoyed Mexican food; Margaret had a fruit salad from the grab and go section.

We enjoyed the tapestries and related panels a great deal. Margaret was not particularly interested in them. Her preferences run more to historical and anthropological museums, and less toward art. After the museum visit she was very interested to hear about our trip to Ontario last week, where we met three of her cousins. They had asked to be remembered to her, and she enjoyed hearing about our dinner with them. After we left the Getty we met up with Kathleen for coffee and showed both Margaret and Kathleen our slides from Brampton and Toronto. We gave Margaret a framed photo of Meredith with the cousins which she was very pleased to have.

Getty Villa

Getty Villa
Malibu
August 9, 2014

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We went to the Getty Malibu campus this time, primarily to see a special exhibit of Byzantine art, “Heaven and Earth: Art of Byzantium from Greek Collections.” We had seen that exhibition described in the LA Times some months before and noticed that it would close on August 25 so wanted to be sure to see it before that date.

The Malibu campus is similar to the Sepulveda Pass Getty Center in offering free admission but charging for parking. Parking at the Malibu campus costs $15. There is one additional requirement here: visitors to the Malibu site have to make advance reservations and print admission tickets, even though there is no charge for those tickets. Unless the driver can show admission tickets, cars are not allowed to drive up the hill to the parking garage. Admission is time regulated, to control the number of visitors and more importantly the number of vehicles. Other procedures may apply for those arriving by public transportation, but that is not a viable option for us bringing Margaret. For parking and public transport options see the museum website: Getty parking and access.

Traffic was heavy on Pacific Coast Highway this time, and I am sure that is a chronic problem. The museum can only be accessed from PCH heading north if one is arriving by car; left turns from PCH south bound are not allowed, nor can one access the museum from other neighborhood streets.

The building and grounds are a treat in and of themselves. The Getty Villa is based on a villa at Herculaneum which was buried when the Vesuvius erupted in 79 A.D. and has only partially been excavated. One can stroll the arcades to the south of the main museum building and enjoy the plantings in the garden. On prior visits we have always enjoyed the fountains and a large reflecting pool, but we found all of those features drained and dry on this visit, due to the severe drought.

There is one little known feature of the gardens. If one stands on the star in the pavement in the middle of the semi circular benches in the central garden area and speaks toward the benches, one can hear an echo back. We could not make this work for Margaret, but Bob was able to make it work as we have done in the past. We are guessing that it is a trick of height; one must stand rather than be sitting in the wheelchair. Bob then demonstrated this to a visiting Italian couple, and they were thrilled.

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We had lunch at the museum café. The food was quite tasty. The prices were a little on the expensive side and the selections were limited. Margaret wanted a quesadilla – remembering the Sagebrush Cantina lunch from our last visit, maybe? – but she made due with a cheese and fruit plate that we both thought was quite generous. In addition to the café, there is a coffee cart available which sells some sandwiches, and there is a picnic area to the north of the museum building for those who wish to bring in food.

The Byzantine exhibit spanned over a millennium, from the time of Constantine in the Fourth Century A.D. to the fall of the empire to the Turks in 1453. It was dominated by religious art, including, among other things, some large and spectacular icons. Some everyday items were also included, such as serving bowls, combs, and oil lamps, to name a few.

After we saw the Byzantine exhibit we went to another gallery on the second floor which had a special exhibition of ancient glass, “Molten Color: Glassmaking in Antiquity.” This exhibit opened in 2010 and is ongoing. There were pieces made with a variety of techniques, including some pieces made as long ago as 2500 BC.

We also strolled through some of the museum’s permanent collection. Margaret was tired, so we did not stay long, but we did go in to see the bronze sculpture known as the Victorious Youth, which has always been a favorite of ours, and we saw the Lansdowne Heracles statue, also a favorite.

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Wheelchair access is easy throughout the museum. Wherever there are stairs, there is always an alternative of ramp, elevator, or wheelchair lift.

Note: some of the photos used above are from last year’s visit; the photo of Bob and Margaret by the bronze statute of Tiberius was from this most recent visit.