Monday, March 21, 2011

Construction at the Atheneum


The Wadsworth Atheneum's renovations are supposed to be finished this summer.  Most of the work has been the thankless task of fixing the roof . . . lots of money, entirely necessary, but no more space and no new features.  The museum has been open during renovations, but I am sure attendance has been hurt by the construction barriers that obscure the building.

The lead exhibition today is Monet's water lilies.  I didn't go in today.  I will have to see it later.

Nathan Hale's statue is bravely standing amidst the construction materials.  I showed him before here and here.

26 comments:

Lowell said...

Nice building! Impressive tribute to Hartford! But I doubt the construction stuff hurt attendance. When we visited the palace at Versailles, they were remodeling and construction stuff obscured whole sections of it...but zillions of people were there screaming to get in.

Well, maybe not screaming, but...

Yeah, Candler Hills is a very nice golf course. Not as difficult as Stone Creek, but is different enough to make it an enjoyable outing.

What's this about not caring where the ball lands? One of my two friends says it's a terrible game and if he didn't love it so much he'd quit playing!

VP said...

Please don't get lost in Monit's lilies! Honor to the brave Nathan Hale, a really beautiful and noble statue.

Mo said...

Make sure you get to see those stunning water lillies

Kate said...

I wonder if the museum will let you take photos inside? It would be nice to get a shot or two of the paintings. The building looks pretty massive.

Virginia said...

Good ole Nathan, ever the faithful servant! :) THis is a lovely structure, but we all need patching as we age! HA Even the Louvre had cranes and such in January.

Now go back and see M. Monet's lilies. He worked very hard on them!
V

Sharon said...

I love the building and I'm glad too see that Nathan has held his ground.

Cezar and Léia said...

This is an amazing and important building.Thanks for the sculpture shot as well!I love the arches in the entrance.
So nice they are taking good care of it!
Hugs
Léia

cieldequimper said...

I'm sure Nathan Hale has seen worse. Monet? And there's no queue? Gosh, you'd have to stand in line for about 5 hours here!
I think I recognise where yesterday's chap, sorry I mean gal, was walking along...

Dawn said...

Oh...so jealous you get to see the Monet!
And that statue? What a brave one! He looks to be in a very precarious position.....

Lois said...

It is a grand looking building. I would love to see that water lily exhibit!

lizziviggi said...

It reminds me of when we had to shore up a corner of our house a couple years ago-- the beams were rotting underneath. Same story-- spending lots of money and time and effort on something that did not contribute to the beauty of our home. It hurts... but it's necessary!

You'll have to let us know how Monet was when you get back there.

RedPat said...

I would love to see the water lilies! Enjoy them when you get there!

Unknown said...

I'm still working a good time to visit. Right now it's snowing (mixed with rain) and has been for about three hours straight. I could use some water lilies right about now!

Thanks as always for your glimpses of Hartford and its goings-on, Jack!
Gina

Gina

Halcyon said...

Good old Nathan! He'll weather any storm. Sorry to hear there won't be any rennovations to the building. But it's lucky it got a new roof. A lot of institutions have fallen on hard times in the recession. Would love to see the Waterlilies. Hope you get back before the exhibit closes.

joo said...

Wow, Monet's Lilies? You have to go!
Nice building, by the way:)

Clueless in Boston said...

That's an interesting looking building. Can't wait to see the finished product.

Unknown said...

If I was Nathan I was very worried about that crane! :-) Enjoy the lilies, Jack.

youth_in_asia said...

It's a gorgeous building. Those old roofs are difficult. I checked out a church that redid its slate roof and spent nearly $1,000,000 on it. You wouldn't know if no one told you.

I think you could manage out at night! I just started doing it a few months back and REALLY like it. It's a unique set of challenges. Anyway, thanks for the nice words. I certainly agree about (and enjoy) different perspectives.

Cildemer said...

Great building! Would love to go there and see Monet's water lilies too.

SRQ said...

Nathan looks as though he's standing guard over the museum. Btw, that's a great name for a pub. If it was located in SRQ, I'd have some great additions for their walls.

Regina K said...

What a wonderful buildings. I am buying my ticket for Monet here.

EG CameraGirl said...

Renovations can be awfully expensive. The Monet exhibit ought to be wonderful.

Sailor said...

Looking forward to lots more pictures from inside the museum.

Michelle said...

I would love to see that Monet exhibit.

Randy said...

I would love to see that exhibition too. Are you going to sneak a few shots?

Malyss said...

I agree with Ciel: Monet and no queue?!!!We would cut one of our arms to be able to see a Monet exhibition without queueing here!
What a strange building, both old and new, I wonder about this architecture..