Redesigning Modern Life. The exhibition features a vast array of representations of the hotel -from archival photographs and advertising to the latest video, film and interactive display. Four main themes: Travel, Design, Social and Culture.
co-curated by Jennifer M. Volland, guest curator, and Bruce Grenville, senior curator, with assistant curator Stephanie Rebick
Everyone has a hotel story. It may be about a hotel they’ve stayed in, read about or have seen in a film. Whatever the circumstances, these stories represent the unique status of the hotel in the context of contemporary life. The hotel is a universal and identifiable symbol, yet the diversity and individuality of its form and purpose is extraordinary. It is a space that combines the private and public realms and is intimately connected to a rich history of social and cultural change. Each hotel thrives (or fails to thrive) in a local context, and yet it is inextricably bound to a vast network of travel and movement that is without geographic boundaries. It is a fundamental architectural form deeply embedded in our culture, responding to the basic human need for shelter with dynamic designs, innovative forms and surprising insights into the nature of modern life.
Grand Hotel: Redesigning Modern Life charts the evolution of the hotel from an isolated and utilitarian structure to a cultural phenomenon that figures prominently around the world. The scope of the project is global, an acknowledgement of the pervasive presence of a commercial network that is architecturally formed, geographically distributed and socially defined. The title of the exhibition is in part a reference to the influential 1932 Hollywood film Grand Hotel, in which the lives of individual guests interweave during a brief hotel stay. The film depicts a thoroughly modern condition and demonstrates the potency of the hotel as both a real and symbolic nexus of human movement, interaction and ideas.
The exhibition’s four main themes—travel, design, the social and culture—consider the vital role of travel and design in the development of the hotel, as well as the hotel’s important role as a site of social interaction and cultural production. Each theme speaks to a critical force that has given shape and meaning to the hotel. Together they tell the collective story of this important built form, elucidating its prominence in the public consciousness and reflecting the nature of the hotel itself: engaging, innovative, provocative, ephemeral. Quite simply, the hotel is a veritable laboratory of modern life.
The exhibition is accompanied by a richly illustrated 336-page catalogue published by Hatje Cantz Verlag.
Exhibition events include a special talk by artistic director Suzanne Oxenaar of the Lloyd and Llove Hotels on Tuesday, April 16th at 7pm, and a lecture on 20th-century Danish architecture and design by architect and scholar Michael Sheridan on May 28th at 7pm.
Organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery.
Presenting Sponsor: The Keg
Generous Support for the Exhibition Provided by: Mark McCain and Caro MacDonald/Eye and I
Image: Waldorf-Astoria, New York, postcard, c.1931
Press contact:
Carolyn Jack, Communications Manager, cell: 604-671-2358 cjack@vanartgallery.bc.ca
Dana Sullivant, Director of Marketing and Communications, 604-662-4721 dsullivant@vanartgallery.bc.ca
A media preview will take place on Thursday, April 11st at 9am in the Gallery
Opening Saturday, April 13, 7pm
Vancouver Art Gallery
750 Hornby Street Vancouver, British Columbia Canada V6Z 2H7
Gallery Hours:
Daily 10 am to 5 pm
Tuesdays until 9 pm
Admission:
Adult $17
Senior (65+) $12
Student (with valid ID) $12
Children (age 5 and older) $6
Children under 5 Free
Family (maximum 2 adults and 4 children) $50
Gallery Members Free