With the LongHouse Reserve, Jack Lenor Larsen exhibits unique
Transcription
With the LongHouse Reserve, Jack Lenor Larsen exhibits unique
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TK; ILLUSTRATION BY TK With the LongHouse Reserve, Jack Lenor Larsen exhibits unique works of art, such as this 33-foot fiberglass sculpture, Fly’s Eye Dome, designed by Buckminster Fuller and produced by John Kuhtik in 1997. 42 HAMPTONS-MAGAZINE.COM 042-044_H_SP_SocialStudies_SummerFashion_13.indd 42 7/3/13 9:58 AM Superlatives LE B R AT I N G CE PEOPLE, CULTURE, STYLE SOCIAL STUDIES common thread AS THE LONGHOUSE RESERVE CELEBRATES ITS ANNUAL SUMMER BENEFIT NEXT WEEKEND, THE PROPERTY’S FOUNDER, JACK LENOR LARSEN, LOOKS BACK ON HIS YEARS OF TEXTILE WEAVING, ART COLLECTING, AND INSPIRATION FOUND IN GARDENING. BY R. COURI HAY PHOTOGRAPHY BY ERIC STRIFFLER “I ’m more interested in the garden with the art in it,” says internationally acclaimed textile designer Jack Lenor Larsen of the LongHouse Reserve, a 16-acre garden and outdoor art oasis he founded in East Hampton. “Our light mold here is not to be reverent but to be relative and to change with the times.” Next weekend is the LongHouse’s annual White Night Summer Benefit, which will honor local notables Richard Meier and (in memoriam) Lisa de Kooning. Meanwhile, an exhibition by Alice Aycock facilitated by James Salomon, of Salomon Contemporary, opens July 24, followed by a show of gold-plated zodiac disks by Chinese dissident Ai Weiwei, opening on August 2. “I like his originality,” says Larsen of Weiwei. “I think his mind is freer than most, despite his captivity.” Larsen first discovered the Hamptons in 1952, his “first hot summer in New York” at the invitation of one his earliest clients, a patron who let him tag along to all of the East End’s prestigious art events. After renting a chauffeur’s quarters on Lily Pond Lane, Larsen bought the neighboring 10 or 12 acres for $2,000 an acre, where he built African houses inspired by one of his many international trips (for example, Larsen’s upcoming trip to Japan will be his 40th visit to the country). Years later, he purchased the neighboring property and built his current home, inspired by the Japanese Ise Shrine. The residence is raised off the ground to improve the view and catch the East End breeze. Born in Seattle in 1927, Larsen studied architecture at the University of Washington and received his master’s degree from Cranbrook Academy of Art. “I did not draw well, and I wanted to make models—my ideas were better than my drawing skills,” he recalls of his architectural studies. “We had to do a little weaving to understand textiles, and I was sort of a natural at it and started doing more of it on the side. There were ‘old biddies’ teaching weaving, and they found a young man interested in weaving to be intriguing, and they encouraged me.” Florence Knoll, the most influential interior designer of the ’50s, once turned down Larsen’s textiles because they were “too individualistic,” yet two years later she was ordering his fabrics; later in her life, she bought Larsen’s fabric and furniture for her own homes. “I’ll never fit her mold,” says Larsen of the Knoll furniture cofounder. “But the fact that I was too special for them wasn’t the worst thing to say.” Over Larsen’s 61-year career, he has worked with such acclaimed talents as Frank Lloyd Wright, Dale Chihuly, and Marcel Breuer, and his clients ranged from Pan Am and Braniff Airlines to Marilyn Monroe and David Rockefeller. “If you have a legendary art collection like David Rockefeller, you don’t want fabrics to compete with it but ones that were obviously expensive and practical and rather interesting,” says Larsen, continued on page 44 HAMPTONS-MAGAZINE.COM 042-044_H_SP_SocialStudies_SummerFashion_13.indd 43 43 7/3/13 9:58 AM LE B R AT I N G CE SOCIAL STUDIES Migrating Pedmarks by Lynda Benglis, 1998, is composed of bronze with black and white patina. “The fact that I was too special for Florence Knoll wasn’t the worst thing to say.” SOUTH FORK SECRETS *on his early gardens “My first decade in New York I didn’t do any gardening. Then, finally, in Gramercy Park I had a roof garden. I was weekending in the Hamptons and bringing all this plant material back. It was wonderful—I could get away from the studio, where I was used to working 100 hours a week, and work in the garden.” *on socializing with other hamptons artists “When I was first in New York, the arts club was on Eighth Street. I would go to watch de Kooning and Pollock arguing, and Motherwell was the referee. Then I would see de Kooning in the Hamptons. He was very handsome, magnetic. Hostesses would love to invite him to parties, and he would love to come.” *on students at the longhouse “We have about 2,200 come through, one class at a time. We had a wonderful art students show in June [with] first grade cinematographers, high school architects, and performing artists—I’m proud of them.” *on longhouse’s blooms ABOVE: Jack Lenor Larsen looks over the grounds from Nico Yektai’s Bench #4, 2007. RIGHT: Elefandret by Miquel Barceló, 2007, is a whimsical addition to the LongHouse gardens. 44 “I planted a couple hundred thousand daffodils over 30 years; they keep dividing. I also like tulips. I don’t know if it’s the gardening that keeps me young, but I have no complaints.” SCULPTURES COURTESY OF GALERIE BRUNO BISCHOFBERGER (ELEFANDRET ); CHEIM & READ GALLERY (MIGRATING PEDMARKS) continued from page 43 who at the height of his career was manufacturing fabrics in over 60 countries. “When Rockefeller got five new offices by five different architects [in Manhattan], they all chose the same Larsen fabrics for him,” the designer remembers. In 1992, Larsen founded the LongHouse Reserve, which is also home to the artist’s vast collection of 2,500 textiles and contemporary Japanese ceramics. Outside, visitors can roam among azalea, redwoods, and tropical blooms and discover sculptures such as Play It by Trust, by Yoko Ono, as well as works by Buckminster Fuller and Sol LeWitt. “Most sculptures that can be outdoors, look best outdoors,” says Larsen. “The hardness against the softness of foliage, and direct sunlight and shadow; it’s better than in a gallery. It’s also more alive. It changes from morning to night and from month to month and with rain on it or frost or snow.” LongHouse, which has been set up to continue in perpe—JACK LENOR LARSEN tuity, may be the 85-year-old artist’s most everlasting tapestry. “I see great similarity in that they’re time-consuming and slow,” he says of his two beloved mediums. “Whether I’m making a fabric or making a garden, it’s therapeutic. I think well when I’m using my hands. The new concepts come when I’m working. Just sitting around trying to solve a problem doesn’t work very well for me.” LongHouse Reserve, 133 Hands Creek Road, East Hampton, 329-3568; longhouse.org H HAMPTONS-MAGAZINE.COM 042-044_H_SP_SocialStudies_SummerFashion_13.indd 44 7/3/13 9:59 AM