
I see Jean Nouvel’s gorgeous Chelsea building every time I walk along Highline Park but I didn’t realize it was officially finished. It stands opposite Frank Gehry’s in a rare corner of complete architectural splendor. I’ve written previously, albeit briefly, about my admiration for Nouvel, his adventurousness and risk-taking. It seems appropriate that it should face Frank Gehry’s who, in an excellent New York Times Magazine profile, explained Nouvel’s genius:
As his close friend the architect Frank Gehry told me last month, Nouvel was “long overdue” to win it, but the inconsistency of his work got in the way. “He’s precarious,” explained Gehry, who was on the awards jury until last year. “He tries things, and not everything works. There’s a mixture of things that are extraordinary, things that are experiments, things that don’t come off aesthetically. But Jean is willing to jump in and take on things and try. That’s a great quality.”
(I remember reading this profile in 2008 sitting in the Starbucks at the corner of Chapel Street and High Street in New Haven. It’s another of those corners of complete architectural splendor. Sitting against the window I faced one of the most beautiful parts of Yale’s historically inaccurate Gothic campus, to my left were Louis Kahn’s British Art Center and University Art Center with Paul Rudolph’s controversial monolith peering over. On my right was probably Robert A.M Stern, the aesthetically conservative, but pedagogically open-minded dean of the School of Architecture, who, with his brightly colored socks, shared my morning ritual of Starbucks + New York Times. This is why Yale is so magical. )
I think Gehry gets Nouvel or at least distills what I admire about him. “There’s a mixture of things that are extraordinary, things that are experiments, things that don’t come off aesthetically. But Jean is willing to jump in and take on things and try. That’s a great quality.” It’s almost like Gehry, who seems condemned to endlessly repeat himself is just a bit jealous of Nouvel’s erratic genius.
I like this quote too:
I never imagined I could do a building like Branly,” he replied. “But with a question like Branly, you have to have a building like Branly.”

Increasingly, I’m convinced that what bores me with American music in general, and the contemporary music scene in New York, specifically is that far too many people seem to be providing the same answers to same questions, namely, “How do “we” save classical music” or “How do we create a broader audience for classical music and thereby make it relevant?” If these aren’t the exact questions asked, they undergird a great many other ones. Nouvel, in contrast, seems willing to entertain a new question for each work. That is radical.
And this, about my new “hometown”
“I will keep the idea that Vegas has to talk about Vegas, and not about Brazil, Egypt, Paris,” Nouvel said. Instead of arbitrarily replicating some tourist mecca, he wanted his simulacrum to be of Las Vegas itself — or at least of Las Vegas before it became “Vegas.” The arid landscape appealed to him. He was also intrigued by the programmatic inclusion of an aquarium. “For me there is something paradoxical about the aquarium and the desert,” he told his team. “It could be poetic. I want to play with that.” He emphasized that the hotel complex must “exist in a universe of ‘wow’ objects but create a difference, a strong difference.” He envisioned a wall of towers and lower buildings that stretched for four-tenths of a mile and resembled a canyon.
And this:
“I like to play with the story of the city,” Nouvel told me. Having carefully studied the text, he is ready to write his own chapter.
A profile like this makes my heart sing; it’s just so inspiring.
Nicolai Ouroussoff began his review of the new Chelsea building with this:
During the past few years Chelsea became a one-stop-shopping destination for high-style contemporary architecture as well as high-end art, and the results can be depressing. For every significant building that went up, the neighborhood seemed to produce a half-dozen or so inferior knockoffs. The feeling on the streets now is the same as it is in most of the galleries: the sheer amount of work, and the mediocrity of most of it, can make the effort of sorting out the good from the bad too painful to contemplate.
Man! Why can’t we have NYT coverage of the contemporary music scene like that? Can you imagine anyone beginning a review like that? Tony, Alan, Steve and Vivian, meet Nicolai. Nicolai, meet Tony, Alan, Steve and Vivian! My friend Timo suggests that the NYT’s current type of criticism might be a misadventure in advocacy. I tend to agree but would extend it to his buddy at the New Yorker who tends to set precedents in this town. Oh for the days of Ada Louis Huxtable!
Some more Nouvel:


UPDATE: It seems Timo’s prays have been heard. Vivian Schweitzer can’t take it anymore, reviewing Scelsi thusly:
Scelsi (an Italian count who died in 1988) suffered a mental breakdown, after which he would play the same note on the piano repeatedly throughout the day. Much of his music uses only one pitch, and his abrasively tedious Fifth Quartet centers on F.