Monday, October 31, 2022

Spittelau: Incinerating Art

Our last day in Vienna we wanted to visit another heuriger, so we took the train and tram out to Stammersdorf, east of the Danube, to check out several recommendations. We didn't find anything to our liking--we like our heurigers to have nice views of vineyards--and so hopped back on the tram and eventually a bus back to Amstift am Walde and a sure thing, old friend Fuhrgassl-Huber. Between the tram and bus there was a walk across the Danube Canal and past the Spittelau incinerator, the one re-decorated in the 1990s by Friedensreich Hundertwasser (at the city's request). Still processing 250,000 tons of household waste per year. Artfully. Well worth a detour, with plenty of smiles. So Viennese.

Crossing the Danube Canal (note: this is the channel that historically
went through Vienna, now called the Danube Canal; the BIG river
is a couple miles east; and paralleling it is the New Danube Canal,
recent, and primarily for navigation (I guess))

Back-lit sighting of Spittelau

So Hundertwasser




So if you cross-bred Bowellism and Hundertwasser,
it might look like this




Ground level




In Spain, the Catholic bell-towers often conceal the Moorish
Minaret; here, the 1960's brick smokestack peaks out above the
Hundertwasser "hat"

All of it producing tons of electricity, cleanly; beautifully; well,
interestingly...

Definitely worth a look!



Sunday, October 30, 2022

Fashion...

"...a form of ugliness so absolutely unbearable that we have to alter it every six months," according to Oscar Wilde. Residing however briefly in the various capitals we have visited recently has provided ample opportunity to observe fashion, changes in fashion, and so on. We are not students of fashion nor do we have nor do anything that anyone would describe as fashionable. It's not possible to see the things we have seen, however, and not comment. So here, in a few pix, are some of the extraordinary things, loosely described as fashion, we have seen the past few weeks, in Vienna.

Beam me up

Sleeveless is quite the thing, although we are not sure
whether it is this year or was last year

Eyes and lips...

"No fotos"

In time, everything comes back...except leisure
suits; yes, now a man of leisure, I am bitter

Fashion croakies

Puffy fuzzy look

Everything meant to unravel

Nothing hemmed





Sculpture installation right in the middle of Graben, Vienna's most 
fashionable shopping district

[Click to enlarge] The quote from Brecht is especially interesting


Another sleeveless wonder

Crop-top puffy jacket

Shoes made from Middle Eastern rugs

And boots

Monty Python sock set

Moon Boots and imitations are popular here

Backdrop not included


 



 

MAK (Museum of Applied Arts)

Our last museum visit was at the Museum of Applied Arts and especially its "Vienna 1900" permanent collection. Vienna has so many fine arts museums relatively few visitors get to the MAK. We found it eminently worthwhile. Discount admission on Tuesday evenings, too.

Facade of main hall; beautiful 19th century building

Interior; Pompeii painting decor on the ceilings; nevermind the
huge over-sized couch on the main floor; it will figure in a later
post

Ceiling; we visited in the evening, so didn't get the
full effect

Humongous marquetry restoration project being done out on the
floor of the cabinetry exhibit room

Main attraction

Josef Hoffman, Cabinet Presented at the 1st Secession
Exhibition, 1898; if Darth Vader were a cabinet, he would
look like this, Vicki says

Poster...

Tony Selmersheim, Petroleum Lamp, 1900

Beautiful silver tray; guess I was too overwhelmed to get the designer's
name

Henry van de Velde, Writing Desk, 1900

Adolf Loos, Corner Seating for a Study, 1900; way before "less is
more"
Theodore Pogacnik, Wine Mug, 1900
Alfons Mucha, Poster for Austria exhibit at the Paris, 1900,
World Fair

Kolomon Moser, Guestroom from House Moser, 1901; so comfy, 
warm, and inviting...we're now clearly out of art nouveau

Klimt, part of nine "drawings" for a house in Brussels, 1910

Josef Hoffman, Tea Service, 1903

Kolomon Moser, Jewelry Box, 1906

Josef Hoffman, Chandelier, 1914

More of the Klimt drawings...

Much of a wall

The big thrill for us...Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh, The Seven
Princesses
, 1908, for a house in her native Glasgow

Detail: note the Mackintosh roses

And then it was all over...

Dagobert Peche, Display Cabinet, 1920

We also took in a couple special exhibits, one on the
picture book as artistic medium

That was fabulous

And another rounding up the 100 best posters of 2021 from
Germany, Austria, and Switzerland

Personal favorite: "Measure Everything: Know Your
Numbers"; great museum experience