Seeing art in architecture and gardens in Pasadena and the Getty
by Lucy Komisar
The huge brown stone Spanish tiled roof Langham Huntington Hotel
dominates Pasadena like an historic memory. A sojourn here is not just
a place to rest your head; it's a place to get your head full of history and
also art.
Covering 23 acres in the
San Gabriel Mountain foothills, it was built as a winter resort in 1906 by
General Marshall C. Wentworth, who had served in the civil war, though
general was an honorary title. He had built a grand summer resort in
Jackson, NH, but his Pasadena venture was ill-fated. It failed after the San
Francisco earthquake, because construction workers were not available and
torrential rains flooded the building which had only a temporary roof.
Wentworth gave up and went back East.
Fortunately, Henry Huntington, a railroad tycoon, was developing the
famous Huntington Gardens and thought this would be a great place to put his
guests. He bought it, finished it, and reopened it in 1914 as the Huntington
Hotel. There were formal dinners and dances in the gilt-ceilinged Georgian
ballroom which is still there, and gilded, like the age it still represents.
A tour of the hotel is a
bit like touring a museum. A highlight is the famous picture bridge, the
only one in the United States. A picture bridge has paintings hung in
succession from its beams. The 1920s manager Stephen Royce went to Lucerne,
Switzerland, saw one there and insisted the Huntington had to have one. As
Huntington was an art collector, he couldn't object. Royce commissioned the
bridge from Frank Moore, a local artist, who painted 41 panels, all
California scenes, and finished the work in 1932.
Another stunning work of
art is the Japanese garden, also built in 1920s. A focal point is the red
bridge at the bottom. See it peaking through this photo. If you wander down,
you'll find places where you can: sit and contemplate. The adjacent lawn
holds 150 people and is popular for weddings.
During World War II, the hotel rented itself out to the U.S. Army.
Senator John F. Kennedy in July 1960 had lunch there with heads of the
Democratic party to discuss his possible nomination as Democratic
presidential nominee.
The building went through various owners, and in January 2008, it was
bought by Langham Hotels International, headquartered in Hong Kong, which
owns the Langham in London. So, it's now the Langham Huntington.
The décor is soothing and tastefully elegant, with grillwork, wood
paneling and Chinese and English paintings hung in the public rooms and
corridors. That feeling carries over to the warmly furnished bedrooms. From
our window, we could see the horseshoe garden, the original entrance where
people arrived in horse carriages.
A holdover from the
gilded age – well, actually, we have one ourselves, don't we – is the Club
Lounge available to gilded guests. It's set up with intimate groups of
tables and chairs or couches to afford comfort and privacy.
I chatted with a
businessman staying there who explained that it was perfect for him, because
he regularly came to town for meetings at a nearby medical center he owned.
With the five food and drink services -- continental breakfast, mid-day
snack (ie lunch), afternoon tea, cocktails and hors d'oeuvres (enough for
dinner), and chocolates and cordials – he never had to worry about meals.
He'd just stop at the 8th floor for the on-going shifting buffet. He was a
repeat guest.
I took advantage too,
inviting my aunt and uncle for drinks and delicious canapés, accompanied by
a charming mountain view, before we went out to dinner at one of Pasadena's
trendy fish restaurants.
Wandering around the
hotel, I discovered the Lobby Lounge, really the old lobby, because it looks
out on the horseshoe garden. Look further and you see the San Gabriel
Valley. Afternoon tea is served there Thursday through Sunday.
If the Japanese Garden reminds you that Southern California is wonderful
for gardens, don't forget the Huntington Library, Art Gallery & Gardens
practically next door. It has a superb botanical garden, with sections
highlighting the fauna of different parts of the world. But I'd been there
before and decided this time to go further afield, to the newer Getty
Museum, which opened in December 1997. Its gardens are a highlight.
We took the 45-minute
garden tour. The docent told us that the idea of installation artist Robert
Irwin was to create a counterpoint of color and texture to the buildings. He
calls the Central Garden "a sculpture in the form of a garden aspiring to be
art." See these trees that are actually sculptures. The bottoms are
bark-colored iron. The top plants are real -- pink bougainvillea when they
bloom.
We learned that there
are more than 500 varieties of plants in the garden. The shrubs and flowers
are arranged by color and texture – not the normal way such a garden would
be ordered. The rocks look attractive set among the greenery. We walked
along a path that followed down a hill.
But there's another
purpose, our docent said. "Listen." A stream flows through the rocks. And
the boulders and stones have been placed in the stream bed to create a
"sound sculpture."
If you go:
Pasadena is 16 miles from Burbank Airport, 27 miles from Los Angeles
International Airport.
The Langham Huntington
Hotel & Spa 1401 South Oak Knoll Avenue Pasadena, CA 91106
800-591-7481; 626-568-3900
www.Pasadena.Langhamhotels.com/
380 guestrooms, including 38 suites and 8 cottages. 3 lighted tennis
courts with pro; wifi; spa. 9 miles from downtown Los Angeles.
The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens 1151
Oxford Road San Marino, CA 91108 626-405-2100
www.huntington.org/ Wed-Mon
10:30 to 4:30. Admission $6 to $20.
Pasadena Convention Visitors Bureau 300 East Green Street
Pasadena, CA 91101 (626) 795-9311 (800) 307-7977
www.pasadenacal.com/
The Getty Center 1200
Getty Center Drive Los Angeles, CA 90049 310-440-7300 (English,
Spanish), 7305 TTY.
visitorservice@getty.edu www.getty.edu
Tues-Sun, free admission. Tours scheduled through the day focusing on
architecture, gardens, sculpture, collection highlights, as well as visits
to an artist-at-work and experiences for children.
Photos by Lucy Komisar
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