Hiroshi Sugimoto Threatens to Quit Hirshhorn Sculpture Garden Revitalization Project
In a January 11, 2021 about the Hirshhorn Sculpture Garden redesign, Hiroshi Sugimoto, the artist commissioned to do the work, was adamant about including stacked stone walls in the modernist landscape going so far as to threaten to quit the project unless he got his way: 鈥溾橧f you cannot accept this key part of the redesign鈥擨 do everything 100% and I would have to withdraw from the redesign,' Sugimoto says of the stones.鈥
Officials connected with the project were questioned about Sugimoto鈥檚 threat at a March 10, 2021 Section 106 meeting about the Sculpture Garden revitalization. Hirshhorn deputy director Jaya Kaveeshwar and YUN Architecture principal Felix Ade both said that Mr. Sugimoto, and the Hirshhorn and Smithsonian teams have been 鈥渞esponsive鈥 to public comments and input, but they never denied that Mr. Sugimoto had threatened quit if he didn鈥檛 get his stacked stone walls.
For nearly two years, Hirshhorn and Smithsonian officials have been insistent about the necessity for two major alterations at the Sculpture Garden: changes to the pool and pool area and the introduction of stacked stone walls. While they have tinkered with various iterations of the pool area, there has been no meaningful change concerning the stacked stones walls. Moreover, they have determined and that these changes would have negative impacts ("adverse effects" in federal parlance) on the historic design by architect Gordon Bunshaft and the later overlay by landscape architect Lester Collins.
In fact, Hirshhorn and Smithsonian officials have gone to considerable lengths to justify the inclusion of stacked stone walls. At the October 7, 2020 Section 106 meeting, Hirshhorn director Melissa Chiu gave a somewhat convoluted rationale for the stone walls. In addition, a standard part of their public presentation includes a photo of sculptor Henry Moore and Joseph Hirshhorn looking at one of the artist鈥檚 sculpture in the latter鈥檚 estate in Greenwich, CT with the two standing in front of a stone wall. Problem is, Mr. Hirshhorn lived in a French Normandy-style chateau, not a modernist design by Gordon Bunshaft of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill.
In the Hirshhorn鈥檚 , issued in advance of the March 10 Section 106 meeting, we鈥檙e told that Mr. Moore 鈥済rew up in Yorkshire, where stacked stone was a permanent fixture in the visual landscape, and it is fitting to emphasize the pairing of bronze and stone here, where the radicality and sophistication of Moore鈥檚 work will render with renewed freshness and feeling.鈥 Interesting, perhaps, but irrelevant, as are images of non-modernist style parks on the National Mall with stone walls and modernist projects that included stone walls as part of their original design (and not later additions as proposed at the Hirshhorn).
Perhaps sensing that these and other justifications are falling flat, the Hirshhorn has come up with a new reason for needing stacked stone walls: acoustics. According to Hirshhorn associate curator Anne Reeve, the inner partition wall鈥檚 flat concrete surface can 鈥渞eflect sound creating acoustical echo and making performance acoustics very difficult to negotiate.鈥 Smithsonian historic preservation specialist Carly Bond said: 鈥淚n contrast the angled surface of the stacked stone wall redirects reflected sound upwards to avoid acoustical anomalies like echoes.鈥 Mr. Ade, the architect claims: 鈥淥ur studies have found that the new shape of the wall will improve the acoustics by 90% and over what currently would exist with the current wall.鈥 These are very generalized statements and claims. In fact, Mr. Ade does not state what his measurement refers to. Consequently, 独家爆料 has requested that these studies be made public.
The day after the Section 106 meeting the Wall Street Journal published a review 鈥 鈥 that begins:
The Hirshhorn Museum鈥檚 Sculpture Garden in Washington is nearly perfect; of course, it must be destroyed. This is the paradox of landscape architecture: The more sensitive and subtle the garden, the more invisible it is鈥攅ven to its custodians. At a certain point they can mistake it for an opportunity to exploit rather than a sacred trust to protect.
In the space of three lines critic Michael Lewis gets to the essence of the problem: [a] the specific threat to the Sculpture Garden, and [b] the broader threat to significant historic designed landscapes. What makes this especially troubling is that the Hirshorn, a leading national cultural institution, sees its Sculpture Garden as 鈥渁n opportunity to exploit rather than a sacred trust to protect鈥 and they鈥檙e seemingly willing to cave to Mr. Sugimoto鈥檚 threat.