Showing posts with label Then and Now. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Then and Now. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Then and Now: Dutch Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1926 and 2015

Dutch Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1926 and 2015


Then and Now:
Dutch Room
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
1926 and 2015
Composed by Travis Simpkins


Dutch Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1926

Dutch Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 2015

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Then and Now: Tapestry Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1926 and 2015

Then & Now: Tapestry Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1926 and 2015 


Then and Now:
Tapestry Room
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
1926 and 2015
Composed by Travis Simpkins


Tapestry Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1926

Tapestry Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 2015 


For more info, please visit:


Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Then and Now: Titian Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1903 and 2015

Then and Now: Titian Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1903 and 2015


Then & Now:
Titian Room
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
1903 and 2015
Composed by Travis Simpkins


Titian Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1903

Titian Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 2015


For more info, please visit:

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Research: Worcester Art Museum "Then and Now" by Travis Simpkins. Update #53

     -The first photo, from 1910, was taken from the entryway looking into the west gallery of the third floor. Natural light bathes the room and illuminates a symmetrical series of portraits and landscapes. The row of paintings consists largely of what was then Contemporary Art, American Impressionism, intermingled with some Colonial and Hudson River works. Today, the same spot finds the onlooker gazing into the American Decorative Arts Gallery. Companion portraits by Gilbert Stuart frame a view of Revere silver and, further on, Whistler's "Arrangement in Black and Brown (The Fur Jacket)."
     -The second photo, taken 100 years ago in 1914, shows the third floor landing 25 years before the fourth floor was added. "Lady Warwick", which had just been purchased the previous year, is roped off and presented in stately fashion across the way. The current view would be looking east to west from the Donnelly Gallery across to American Decorative Arts (the Rocket Ship and walls in the center of the gallery prevent me from accessing the exact spot, so the angle is slightly off). The scale and grandeur of the two scenes, separated by a century, has surely changed.
     -In the third photo, from 1920, early Renaissance works are showcased inside a quiet corner gallery. This room was located on the lower level of the first building addition of the Worcester Art Museum. Revisiting the same spot today, now greatly changed, finds the viewer in the dining area of the CafĂ©. The space was opened up, both interior load-bearing walls in the old photo were torn down, and replaced with the necessary big support columns at left.
     -The last "Then and Now" composition shows Salisbury Hall both pre and post "Knights!". Neo-classical sculpture and portraits of local benefactors were replaced with creative video projections and a mounted rider on a strawberry-pink horse, clad in 16th century armor from the John Woodman Higgins collection.

     -The sketches depict two Corinthian Helmets, Thomas Crawford's "Boy Playing Marbles" and an Aztec Fertility Goddess.

3rd Floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

3rd Floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

2nd Floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

2nd Floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Corinthian Helmets. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Boy Playing Marbles. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Aztec Fertility Goddess. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Thursday, May 7, 2015

Then and Now: Music Room, Spanish Cloister, Tapestry Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1914 and 2015

Then & Now: Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1914 and 2015


Then and Now:
Music Room (now Spanish Cloister and Tapestry Room)
1914 and 2015
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Composed by Travis Simpkins


Music Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1914

Spanish Cloister and Tapestry Room- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 2015

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Research: Worcester Art Museum "Then and Now" by Travis Simpkins. Update #52

     -In the first photo from 1910, the grandly ornate plaster casts of Ghiberti's "Gates of Paradise" and Michelangelo's "Tomb of Lorenzo de' Medici" are in stark contrast to the minimalist decor of the Contemporary Gallery today. While this room now serves a single purpose, up until the late 1990's it was a multi-functional auditorium... hosting everything from academic lectures to Alfred Hitchcock Film Festivals. If you enter the gallery and face right, the outlines of the door and window to the projection room are still visible on the wall.
     -The second photo, from 1920, shows an elegant interior vista capped by a petite arch and colonnade. Looking from the third floor landing across the main staircase towards a small balcony room and the Lower Third Floor gallery below, it is a view that no longer exists. About 70+ years ago, a hurricane came through the area, causing severe damage to the roof and original glass skylights of the Worcester Art Museum. The administration at the time weighed two choices: 1) Repair the roof, or 2) Take the opportunity to construct a fourth floor on top of the existing galleries. They chose the latter option, lowering the ceiling of the third floor and removing most of the grand original architectural features. The same viewpoint cannot be revisited today beyond in a general sense, but I positioned the camera in such a way as to include part of the cases flanking the entrance to the Lower Third Floor Galleries, which are the only elements that remain from the 1920 shot.
     -In the third photo, from 1920, Medieval works are showcased in the calm southeast corner of the first addition's Main Hall. The mantle piece and andirons at center are now displayed in the less-sunny Gallery 111. This same corner sees much more fast-paced action today, with waitstaff buzzing in and out of the Cafe kitchen area. The decorative corner columns and capitals are still there, the window was lengthened and a new door opening was cut, but the area is still recognizable when compared side-by-side. The unseen area behind the wall now contains the kitchen and storage rooms, but once housed Museum Administration offices.
     -The photo at left in the last "Then and Now" composition, from 1984, shows the inaugural exhibit in the freshly-built Hiatt Wing: The Collector's Cabinet. (This view was partway through the gallery, with another room just before it at the entrance). The current view from the same spot in Knights!, finds Batman presiding over his "Knights" in the center of the gallery.

     -The sketches depict the Ancient Greek "Colossal Female Head", Richard Greenough's "Cupid Bound" and a silver coffee pot by Paul Revere.

2nd floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

3rd floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

2nd floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

2nd floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Ancient Greek Goddess. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Cupid Bound. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Paul Revere silver coffee pot. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Then and Now: Courtyard Cloister, East Walk- Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1915 and 2015

Then and Now: Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1915 and 2015


Then & Now:
Courtyard Cloister, East Walk-
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
1915 and 2015
Composed by Travis Simpkins


Courtyard Cloister, East Walk. Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1915

Courtyard Cloister, East Walk. Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum,  2015

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Research: Worcester Art Museum "Then and Now" by Travis Simpkins. Update #51

     -The first photo, from 1900, shows the old Trustee's meeting area and casts a backward glance of 114 years. The Worcester Art Museum had only been open two years at that point. The sturdy table and chairs, at center of the meeting room, have endured a century of activity and are still in use today on the upper level of the Library. The light fixtures, and age of the photo, suggest the space had a hybrid gas-and-electric lighting capability (an interesting subject, reflecting antique building technology in a brief period of hesitant transition from 1890 - 1905). Today, as part of the lower level of the Library, the room retains little resemblance to it's original appearance and has a strictly utilitarian office aesthetic. The only visual signs that assure me the two photos depict the same place, are the shape and dimensions of the room, and the placement of certain windows and door openings. This space will see drastic change once again, however, in the forthcoming years... as this area is slated to become part of the new home for the Higgins Armory collection.
     -The second photo, taken nearly 100 years ago, shows a group of children and their teachers enjoying the works on display in the third floor's East Gallery. John Singer Sargent's portrait of "Mrs. Edward L. Davis and Her Son", hung at center, was commissioned and painted in Worcester during the summer of 1890. The most ambitious work created during Sargent's productive Worcester sojourn, the painting has sadly left Worcester and resides at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Today, in the Donnelly Gallery, the same location features vibrantly-hued Modern Art and is still a favorite spot amongst youth classes and groups.
     -The third photo, from 1950, shows a west-to-east view of the fourth floor galleries about a decade after the new level was added on top of the original 1897 building of the Worcester Art Museum. For the first five decades after it's construction in 1940, the fourth floor was used as Special Exhibition space. Today, a viewer in the same spot would find themselves in the center of the Pre-Columbian Gallery (which contains many of my favorite objects in the WAM collection).
     -The last photo, from 1970, shows a group of dancers that are clearly enjoying themselves, caught in mid cavort, on the Antioch Hunt Mosaic. While the sight of people boogieing or performing on the 1,500 year old tesserae might seem cringe-inducing to current sensibilities, photos show that various events took place right on top of the artwork up through the 1980's. The photographs, when viewed in timeline sequence, are interesting because they illustrate a gradual shift in conservation awareness. Here, in 1970, folks are allowed free reign on the tiles. By the late 1970's, dancing was still allowed, but the mosaic was covered. By the 1990's, the railing was up and access was restricted.

     -The sketches depict a Tang Dynasty terracotta "Horse" and Paul Gauguin's 1884 pastel portrait of "Mademoiselle Manthey"

     -The world lost a talented artist and wonderful person when Terri Priest passed away on September 12, 2014 at the age of 86. Here my portrait of Terri is paired with one of her paintings in the WAM collection.

1st Floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

3rd Floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

4th Floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

1st Floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Tang Dynasty Horse. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpins

Mademoiselle Manthey. Paul Gauguin. by Travis Simpkins

Terri Priest, by Travis Simpkins

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Research: Worcester Art Museum "Then and Now" by Travis Simpkins. Update #50

     -In the first photo, from about 1960, it is apparent that the large recessed arch between the third and fourth floors was designed with a specific intent… that being to display a mural replica of one of the famous Byzantine "Hagia Sophia" mosaics. On the sides of the staircase are two elevators: a small passenger elevator on the left, and a large freight elevator on the right. Wide doorways allow for a open flow of exhibition space from east to west across the landing. Today, the "Hagia Sophia" mural is still there, but is walled-up behind the blank archway. The old passenger elevator was retired (with utility closets on each level now), and the old freight elevator was renovated to suit dual purposes.
     -Up until the late 1990's, for roughly 100 years, the west gallery on the second floor was used as an auditorium space. The photo at left, from 1980, shows the last set-up the room had. It looked like this, wood-paneled with theater seating, for nearly three decades. I have seen old posters advertising an Alfred Hitchcock Film Festival, lectures and performances that took place in this auditorium. It held a diverse array of events. The projection room (openings seen on the back wall) is still there, but is decommissioned. The space was renovated as part of the WAM Centennial project, and serves as the Contemporary Gallery today.
     -I estimate that this photo, from about 1940, was taken in late March or early April. Situated at the intersection of Salisbury and Tuckerman Streets, a circular driveway sweeps the Museum façade and once-reliable trolley tracks are visible in the foreground. The newly-constructed fourth floor can be seen at rear, looming above both the original 1897 edifice as well as the 1933 Renaissance Court building. In the same spot today, it is apparent that some of the curb real estate in front of WAM was lost to the widening of Salisbury Street. It is also clear how thoroughly the 1983 Hiatt Wing now envelopes that side of the building, obscuring all of the early elements as well as hiding the fourth floor addition from view.
     -The last photo, from 1910, shows how grand the third floor galleries of the Worcester Art Museum appeared a century ago. The skylights were removed and the ceiling was lowered significantly when the 4th floor was added on top of the building in 1940. Today, this spot finds the viewer inside the American Decorative Arts gallery. The only recognizable elements are the original floor and the opening to the main stairwell at right.

     -The sketches depict M. Louise McLaughlin's 1903 vase and "Old Man Contemplating", circa 1500.

     -The admission screen in the Lancaster Lobby includes the sketches of "Caligula" I made in 2013.


4th Floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

2nd Floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Exterior. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

3rd Floor. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Vase. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Old Man Contemplating. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Caligula. Lancaster Lobby. by travis Simpkins

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Research: Worcester Art Museum "Then and Now" by Travis Simpkins. Update #49

2014 Highlights …

-The first photo, from 1910, shows the 2nd floor main hall during an early period of transition in the museum's history. At that time, the collection still consisted largely of plaster casts and works on loan, but the process of acquiring original works of Art for the permanent collection had begun to gain momentum… with works by Thomas Crawford, Gilbert Stuart and Joseph Badger intermingled with copies of Classical sculpture. The same spot today, Salisbury Hall, once again reflects a new stage and shift in the museum's development. As the starting point of "Knights!", a transformative acquisition of arms and armor, bold change is evident with a mounted knight on a strawberry pink horse and dual video projections glowing in the openings of the original 1897 windows.
-The second photo pairing, from 1933, was taken shortly after the Renaissance Court building was constructed. The 26-foot long, 500-year-old Flemish tapestry of "The Last Judgment" is theatrically stretched above the trio of archways. Modernist paintings (probably here on loan) flank the openings. A cord hanging to the right closed the curtains, and the tapestry could be raised and lowered via a mechanized pulley system located above the lay lights (which is still there, but the system is in pieces and non-functional).
-I'm usually able to visually connect historic photos with current locations fairly quickly. However, in all honesty, the first image shown here (from 1920) took me a little while to place. It was simply labeled "First Floor, Main Hall" and was taken just after the first addition to the Museum was built. As a starting point, I try to look for visual patterns that ignite some mild spark of recognition, and go from there. The shape of the trio of windows at the far end of the gallery, a large opening flanked by two thinner ones, looked vaguely familiar. It took some imagination, visualizing those three openings extended and reaching from floor to ceiling, and an old image of the current Museum Cafe began to form. Some of the old decorative columns and capitals still frame the doors to the courtyard today. The wall at right in the 1920 photo, a load bearing wall, was removed and replaced with the two large support columns in the center of the Cafe. The door at left in the 1920 photo is still there, leading into the kitchen, but is obscured by the booth constructed in front of it. Also, if you walk around the perimeter of the Cafe today, the original crown moulding can still be seen running alongside the edges of the modern drop ceiling.
-The fourth photo set, from 1938, shows a portion of the damage inflicted upon the Worcester Art Museum when a hurricane passed through the region. The roof was nearly destroyed and the surrounding area was ravaged. When it came time to discuss reconstruction, the administration decided that rather than repair the old roof, they would instead take the opportunity to add a fourth level on top of the 1897 building. It was a decision that still incites criticism today, over 75 years later. At far left in the 1938 photo, the chimney and side of the Director's House can be seen (in the area that is now the courtyard and upper Tuckerman parking lot). Four decades ago, the house was torn down and the surrounding ground leveled to make way for the Higgins Education Wing. At present, the view is further altered by the addition of the 1983 Hiatt Wing, which envelopes the whole east side of the original Museum building.

-The Sketches depict the Neoclassical bust of "Claudine Houdon" and the "Standing Vishnu" sculpture.

-The last photo sequence is the culmination of nearly four months (15 weeks) of repeat visits to the gallery during the exhibit's construction. I started when the gallery was empty, not knowing what the final floor plan would be, and chose about a dozen specific reference points to which I'd keep returning every 7 days. After a few weeks (as the walls went up), it became apparent which views would work, and were worth continuing. From the installation of hardwood floors, to the painting of the walls and horse, it was a remarkable process to observe considering the short time frame. In the end, I created 5 separate 15-week sequential compositions from different points in the gallery.

2nd Floor- Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

1st Floor- Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Cafe- Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

1938 Hurricane- Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Claudine Houdon. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Standing Vishnu. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Knights! Construction. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins