▼ Culture © 2021 Chihuly Studio. All rights reserved. Photo by Nathaniel Willson Raise a Glass The ‘Chihuly in the Desert’ exhibit blends art with architecture and the desert landscape. BY LYNN TRIMBLE P 22 urple glass forms rise up amid green saguaros at Desert Botanical Garden, one of two Phoenix-area sites showing artworks by renowned glass artist Dale Chihuly. They’re part of “Chihuly in the Desert,” a collaborative ex- hibition undertaken with Taliesin West in Scottsdale, where tall red forms inter- spersed with glass orbs ascend from a pool of water as if reaching for the desert sky. The exhibition highlights the intersec- tion of nature, art, and architecture, pri- marily through large-scale installations set outdoors and smaller-scale pieces shown in interior spaces. Several pieces were created specifically for this exhibition, which continues through June 19. “What comes through here is nature as a source of tremendous inspiration,” says Stuart Graff, president and CEO of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation. He’s based at Taliesin West, which was de- signed by Wright as his winter home and desert laboratory for organic architecture integrating built and natural environ- ments. “What we’re seeing is two masters who push their materials to the limit, and the conversations between their master- pieces,” explains Graff. Taliesin West is showing five installa- tions outdoors, where they interplay with grass, water, and desert plant materials. In- side a garden room, viewers see several of Chihuly’s basket forms. General admission tickets for a 90-minute guided tour called In a New Light: Wright and Chihuly, which includes all six installations at Taliesin West, cost $49. Beginning this month, the venue will launch a 60-minute self-guided tour held Friday through Sunday nights, which will feature five Chihuly installations with illu- mination. Select works are also visible dur- ing ticketed Sunsets and Sips happy hours at the site. Desert Botanical Garden is showing Chihuly works in several outdoor spaces, as well as an indoor gallery space. Like Taliesin West, visitors can explore these works during the daytime or at night. For each experience, general admission tickets cost $29.95 to $39.95. “It’s really like seeing two different ex- hibitions,” says Elaine McGinn, chief expe- rience officer for Desert Botanical Garden. “We’re finding that people are especially intrigued by the neon-lit tumbleweed they see after dark,” she adds. With “Chihuly in the Desert,” Taliesin West is presenting the artist’s work for the first time. For Desert Botanical Garden, the exhibit follows earlier installations of his work during 2009 and 2013. His work was first shown in Arizona Dale Chihuly, Red Reeds and Niijima Floats, 2021, Taliesin West, Scottsdale, Arizona. during 1982, when Phoenix Art Museum presented “Dale Chihuly: Glass” and Tucson Museum of Art presented “Dale Chihuly: Recent Works in Glass.” In 2002, Phoenix Art Museum mounted another exhibition of the iconic artist’s work. Chihuly’s pieces are included in more than 200 museum collections around the world, by the way. Desert Botanical Garden owns the Desert Towers artwork compris- ing a trio of tall botanical forms located near the entrance to the garden. This is just the latest collaboration for Desert Botanical Garden, and for Taliesin West. For several years, the garden has worked with Ballet Arizona to present performances on an expansive outdoor stage with desert plants and rock forma- tions as the backdrop. Recent Taliesin West collaborators include CONDER/ dance and Southwest Shakespeare Company. Realizing this particular partnership was a multi-year process, according to McGinn, who recalls that a preview team from Chihuly’s Seattle-based studio did a walk-through in September 2019. She’s es- pecially excited about how the timing turned out, given all the shutdowns that venues and patrons have experienced due to COVID-19. “We really wanted to come back with something special for the community,” ex- plains McGinn. “We know Chihuly’s work makes people happy.” “Chihuly in the Desert” continues through June 19 at Desert Botanical Garden and Taliesin West. JAN 13TH– JAN 19TH, 2022 PHOENIX NEW TIMES | MUSIC | CAFE | FILM | CULTURE | NIGHT+DAY | FEATURE | NEWS | OPINION | FEEDBACK | CONTENTS | phoenixnewtimes.com
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