Photo Courtesy of Crystal BridgesYou are going to hear a lot more about Crystal Bridges in Bentonville, Arkansas. The New York Times calls it " the art museum Wal-mart money built. oO you might have heard about the uproar caused by Alice Waltons purchase of a landmark Hudson River School landscape painting, Kindred Spirits, by Asher B. Durand, from the New York Public Library for around $35 million. Apparently the library needed the money and Ms. Walton, the daughter of Sam Walton and founder of Wal-Mart, had it. How scandalous is that? The real story is how the painting was carried off to a little known neck of the woods in Middle America where a world-class museum was designed and built by renowned, Israeli-born architect Moshe Safdie.
On a pristine 120 acre site that features six pedestrian and multi-use trails winding through woods and gardens, sits the Crystal Bridges Museum, connected by the surrounding neighborhoods, parks, and downtown Bentonville. This is how New York Times writer Roberta Smith puts it, You are never far from the outdoors, never cocooned by a maze of galleries. Moving through the building becomes something of a tour of its remarkable setting. Meanwhile, the art on view defines the museum as foremost an exceptional if idiosyncratic picture gallery assembled by someone with a discerning and independent eye for paintings.

In particular I was star struck when standing within one foot of The Lantern Bearers (top) by Maxfield Parrish. Although the painting was originally created to be reproduced as a frontispiece for the December 10, 1910 issue of Colliers magazine, its visual effect is much like the Grand Canyon, you just have to see it in person to understand the magnitude of depth it presents. Parrish achieved the glowing blues and yellows in this work by layering pure pigment and varnish repeatedly on a blue white background, a time-consuming technique inspired by Old Master painters. In this particular painting the lanterns appear to glow as if they are back lit.

Whats next? Crystal Bridges announces they are launching a four-year collaboration between the Musée du Louvre, the High Museum of Art. Curators from each of the partnering institutions are working together to shape themes and installations, and works will be drawn from the collections of all four institutions. The first installation premieres at the Louvre on January 14, 2012 before traveling to the other collaborating museums, and will explore the birth of American landscape painting through the works of Thomas Cole and Asher B. Durand.

For more information visit CrystalBridges.org.

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