21c Museum Hotel: Louisville, Kentucky
When Laura Lee Brown and Steve Wilson, partners in marriage and in business, decided to part with some of their $10 million contemporary art collection they didn’t store it, sell it, or donate it to a museum. Instead they built a hotel in which to showcase it. The stunning result is the 21c Museum Hotel in Louisville, Kentucky.
Laura Lee and Steve, who serve on the boards of several museums, believe in giving back to their community. Their roots are in Louisville, where they raised their family on a one-thousand-acre bison farm and where they have other business interests. In 2003, to help in the revitalization of Louisville’s downtown area, Laura Lee and Steve purchased five derelict nineteenth-century buildings—an entire city block―with the intention of converting them to a boutique hotel and museum. In their heyday these buildings housed a bank, a cast iron company, a tannery, and warehouses for tobacco and bourbon companies.
The couple retained architect Deborah Berke and Partners, who undertook a three-year restoration of the buildings. Berke exposed original brick walls and timber and steel trusses, used reclaimed wood for the lobby desk, and restored the cast iron facades. To connect unattached buildings she inserted stacked volumes to create an atrium and nine thousand square feet of museum space. Berke designed sleek minimalist furnishings for the ninety guest rooms, adding small pieces of art from the owners’ collection that reflect calm and offset the energy of the museum and hotel.
Of their 2,500-piece collection on display are paintings by David Hockney and Chuck Close, sculptures by Yinka Shonebar and Judy Fox, photography by Sam Taylor Wood and David Leventhal, and works by video artists Bill Viola and Sean Bedic. The hotel’s art is not always serious, free expression reigns in the ubiquitous four-foot red plastic penguin sculptures by Italian artist Omar Ronda, which are scattered around the hotel. Laura Lee bought the group at the 2005 Venice Biennale.
The wow factor begins in the lobby with whimsical contemporary art sprinkled around its gleaming spaces. Visitors are drawn into the art in surprising places such as the public restrooms where people are greeted by Bedic’s In the Absence of Voyeurism #6 & # 7; the artist has captured in small-screen videos the eyes of seven blind players of a dart club, embedded them in mirrors arranged to give the impression that they are looking from monitor to monitor.
The art is not just reserved for those who enter the hotel. Around the corner of 7th and Main Streets, on a gallows pole twenty feet above the pavement, hangs Untitled, an interactive six-and-a-half-foot brass chandelier designed by Austrian artist Werner Reiterer. It is connected to a bell in the hotel’s award-winning restaurant, Proof On Main; when the bell is rung, the chandelier audibly inhales and exhales and its lights pulsate.
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21c Museum Hotel is well situated for those who appreciate art. The property is part of Louisville’s Museum Row, which includes the Kentucky Museum of Art and Craft, the Muhammad Ali Center, Frazier History Museum, Glass Works studios and gallery, the Louisville Slugger Museum and Factory (home of the legendary baseball bats), and the Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts. Accessing great art has never been easier.
Frances J. Folsom is a freelance writer specializing in art and travel.
This article was originally published in the 12th Anniversary issue of Antiques & Fine Art magazine, a digitized version of which is available on afamag.com. Antiques & Fine Art, AFAmag, AFAnews, and AFA Publishing are affiliated withInCollect.com.
West Main Street
Louisville, Kentucky 40202
877.217.6400
www.21cmuseumhotel.com
Museum Row on Main
West Main Street
Louisville, Kentucky 40202
www.museumrowonmain.com