
BAMPFA’s new building is an absolute winner. The 82,000-square-foot home catapults Berkeley’s visual art scene into prominence — comparable to many larger, richer and better established West Coast institutions. It handsomely repurposes the former 1930s WPA UC printing plant building. Affixed to it is a brightly clad steel tube-like section that houses the new 232-seat Barbro Osher Theater, where films from its impressive archive of over 300,000 items will be regularly screened. There is also a 33-seat screening room and two film viewing booths available by appointment.
As a building that needs to serve town and gown, visual art lovers and movie goers, the new BAMPFA very successfully performs its multiple functions. And, although its steel covering, reminiscent of a Frank Gehry project, is incongruous with the neighboring buildings, it still seems to work. The design by the world-class architecture firm, Diller Scofidio + Renfro, provides an inviting, open, multilevel environment, with its share of hidden corners, and reading, art, performance and meeting places. And, of course, the Babette café and a gift shop.

On the Art Wall of the multilevel performance space that one encounters immediately on entering the museum, is an enormous ink mural, The World Garden, created in five days by Chinese artist Qiu Zhijie. It’s an ingenious and inventive work that demands a second (and third) look. Twice each year artists will be selected to produce new art for the wall.
Large windows allow passers-by to see what’s going on inside the museum. There is a huge outdoor screen with changing art displays on which films will be displayed. One can surmise that the new building was, in part, designed in contrast to BAMPFA’s former 1970 Brutalist concrete structure by Mario Ciampi, now closed because of seismic safety concerns.
BAMPFA is now presenting its eclectic inaugural exhibition, Architecture of Life, consisting of over 250 individual works of art and curated by BAMPFA’s, director, Lawrence Rinder. It’s designed to celebrate architecture as a whole, not merely the architecture of BAMPFA. The “art speak” label describes the show as “a potent metaphor for a variety of life experiences and conditions.”
The exhibition’s concept is to aid in the understanding and appreciation of the value, function and effects of architecture through various media and time periods. Many of the pieces are from BAMPFA’s collection while others are on loan for this exhibition. It’s a creatively curated show and most of the individual works are engaging, edifying and well-presented. The museum’s large white walls, high ceilings, ample natural and artificial light and generously sized galleries make the exhibition easy to view. Some of the works have a more obvious relationship to architecture than others, but that didn’t adversely affect my pleasure in wandering through the galleries.

Chris Johanson’s 2003 colorful acrylic on wood, Cityscape with House and Gray Energy explores the tension between urban environments and chaos. Two small houses, painted on separate pieces of wood, but attached to the main cityscape, represent the artist’s childhood home and “unknown weight coming into the mind.” Similarly, Georgia O’Keeffe’s attractive 1953 oil on canvas, Wall with a Green Door, is wholly architectural. Its straight horizontal lines of sky and building are contrasted with the almost square green door that floats in the center of the wall.
Stephen Kaltenbach’s’ monumental Portrait of my Father (1972-1979) deals with the architecture of the mind, rather than with physical construction. The artist’s father is revealed in the late stages of Alzheimer’s disease, which is expressed with nerve synapses spinning out of his head, accompanied by Chuck Close-like hyper-detail and filigree. It is a difficult, moving, and extraordinary artistic vision.

Off in a separate, small room are small spider web sculptures by Argentine artist Tomás Saraceno, which actual spiders created. They are fascinating in their detail, complexity and artistic merit. The late Ruth Asawa’s woven open wire sculpture make an intriguing contrast with Saraceno’s spider webs, since Asawa’s much larger biomorphic works are regular and symmetrical. They actually seem more organic than the spiders’ webs themselves.
Many internationally known 20th-century and contemporary artists are represented in Architecture of Life, including George Ault, Louise Bourgeois, Fernand Léger, Marcel Duchamp and filmmaker Ben Rivers, whereas some of works are remarkable physical objects that are thousands of years old. Think of the exhibit as an eloquent survey course on art and architecture. And, by all means, don’t wait too long for a visit.


Related:
New BAMPFA ready to open in downtown Berkeley (01.28.16)
BAMPFA builds temporary tent for its opening gala (1.22.16)
Master craftsman Paul Discoe puts his touch on new BAMPFA (12.24.15)
New museum gets ready to open in the heart of Berkeley (11.19.15)
Berkeley Art Museum’s iconic building closes after 44 years (12.24.14)
Gallery: Fans celebrate Berkeley Art Museum milestone (07.21.14)
Salvaged trees to be used in Berkeley’s new art museum (05.22.14)
On the cusp: Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive (05.01.13)
Before new Berkeley art museum can rise, a demolition (04.08.13)
Art museum chief: New space good for Town & Gown (02.13.13)
Work begins on new Berkeley Art Museum, top open in 2016 (02.12.13)
Palpable possibilities: Berkeley Art Museum’s home awaits (01.25.12)
New Berkeley Art Museum mixes old with eye-catching new (09.16.11)
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