BY JAN HAAG
BILBAO
Guggenheim Museum
11-30-97
You saw it first on TV, you
didn't catch the country,
but saw the gigantic prow, the stack of
cylindrical forms, the reflections
and the light.
It must
have been the opening, or the pre-opening
promo, you didn't listen very
closely,
but it did seem to resemble it's older
cousin, Guggenheim,
where you,
O Devayani,
have walked round and round going down on
a ramp,
going down past the art in the quiet well.
But this was more
than that: the shimmer,
the glow. The sound
bite
passed.
Where is Bilbao?
The Basques? O,
Devayni,
it's Spain, not Basqueland.
There was trouble there some
years ago.
The Basque regional government, Autonomous Basque
Community,
Basque Country --
they call themselves various things
--
want cultural prestige, and are willing to gamble
a hundred
million dollars, theirs and others,
to get it. You study the story in
the Architectural Record:
The Basques persuade Guggenheim and
Gehry,
who engages CAITA the computer,
and a formidable conceptual
enterprise -- of
boats and blossoms, of sheer sided walls,
undulating
curves,
crowns and prows, sleekness and sheerness,
shapes of
reactors and rotundas, shapes of
hulls and umbrellas, shapes of
precise
corners and pinched curves, bellying
walls,
cantilevered,
and multileveled -- manifests. It sits on
the Nervion River
being no color, every color,
like a hummingbird
-- irridescent --
for its patterned skin is titanium:
colorless
rectangles of
silver, gold, blue, brown, the color of sunlight and
night,
the color of the water and the sky,
the color of buildings
near by,
the color of convex and concave, the color of repetition,
of coherence and
numinous thought
rearing dreams on the
river, heaving dreams
up from industrial dirt,
O
Devayani,
turning geometry into light.
And you've only seen pictures --
of Museo Guggenheim Bilbao,
Bilbao, Spain, built by the Basques,
Guggenheim, Gehrey, et al
--
...the geometry is the light...
Photograph, Copyright ©
Architectual Record, October, 1997
Poem, Copyright © 2000 Jan Haag
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Jan Haag may be reached via e-mail: jhaag@u.washington.edu
See also under
Feeding Frenzy
From The Jocasta Poems #15, Blindness
From The Jocasta Poems #16, Death
George Coluzzi
India
I Am Innuit
McDonald Observatory
Palimpsest I, Sphere
Ryoangi
Tibetan Chronicle
Trivial Clews to Cantalloc
The Woman Who Had No Necklaces
BY JAN HAAG