While looking at Skidmore Owings & Merrill’s Inland Steel Building in Chicago, I was surprised to find curtains had been hung in its iconically transparent lobby.
Installed between the 2017 and 2018 Streetview updates, the curtains entirely block the view of Radiant I, Richard Lippold’s perfect lobby art, a sculpture of webbed wire, steel, gold and copper, hovering above a reflecting pool. But I suspect that is just collateral visual damage, and they were really installed to block the view of the massive cast glass jumble of Frank Gehry’s security desk. Or perhaps they’re really just to give the security guards a bit of privacy in which to check their websites, and blocking the view of Gehry’s desk is just a bonus.
I thought the 2017 Streetview just happened to have better lighting for the Gehry, but looks like the suspended ceiling over the Lippold was removed sometime after August 2016. That panel, whose dimensions mirrored the reflecting pool, also contained Lippold-optimized spotlights. [n.b.: proactive degradation of its presentation does not bode well for a Lippold sculpture; just ask the one they ripped out of Lincoln Center.]
The Gehry desk came to the building in the summer of 2013, and was considered to be provocative enough to warrant a review of its own by the Chicago Tribune’s legendary architecture critic Blair Kamin. Kamin did not take credit for the desk’s nickname, Icehenge, which Lynne Becker’s extended, well-illustrated blog post about the desk attributes to a Facebook commenter.
Gehry, it turns out, was part of an ownership group that bought the Inland Steel Building in 2005. The desk, parts of which look like cleaved, fractured shards, is all cast glass, made by the John Lewis Glass Studio [now Christison Lewis, after a retirement/mgr handoff]. Kamin uses terms like “careless” and “clutter” to describe the desk, which, given the intense production process, is literally impossible. More apt is the way Gehry’s explicitly non-linear forms clash with the SOM grid. The lobby and the Lippold are both elegantly defined voids, while the Gehry, in ostensibly the same material, is all chaotic solids. It’s all industrial luxe. And tbqh, the lobby without the Gehry now looks kind of boring.
Previously, related; Look at this scooter/bench in Frank Gehry’s house