Montreal Gazette

Rooms with A VIEW

More hotels make galleries part of guest experience

- BAILEY BERG

The first thing you notice when you walk into the Graduate Nashville hotel is a 2.5-by-5.5-metre portrait depicting the Grand Ole Opry star Minnie Pearl. Although images of country favourites aren't out of the ordinary in Music City, the medium used for her likeness in this case is. She's a latch-hook rug with a shaggy bubble gum pink background.

“It's definitely surprising,” said general manager Greg Bradley.

It's hardly the only unexpected art piece on the property. The art adds a storytelli­ng element to the hotel. Its design is inspired by a fictional female singer-songwriter's journey trying to make it big in Nashville, from crashing on a friend's couch (hence the multitude of mismatch, vintage-inspired sofas in the lobby) to the top of the charts (depicted by the all pink, Dolly Parton-inspired fever dream that is White Limozeen, the rooftop bar).

Though it may seem over the top to those used to crashing in hotels where each room features the same mass-produced painting or print, the Graduate Nashville is actually in line with a growing trend. More and more hotels are striving to bring the gallery into the guest experience, in an effort to share and start conversati­ons, to make art accessible, to educate and to inspire.

Many of the art-forward hotels, such as the Art in Denver and the Alexander in Indianapol­is, work with local artists either to showcase their portfolio for a specific amount of time or commission one-of-a-kind pieces to display on-site indefinite­ly.

Lifting local talent has also been part of the lifeblood for Saint Kate, a hotel in Milwaukee. Curator Samantha Timm said the owners have long been patrons of the area's art scene and that they wanted to share their passions with others.

“We believe that the arts encourage conversati­ons with others and that everyone should be able to find something that they connect with,” Timm said, adding her job is to make the art in the hotel fun, exciting and accessible for everyone, including both hardcore fans and casual observers.

Timm said Saint Kate tries to celebrate the visual arts, the performing arts and everything in between. In addition to the permanent collection, found in all public spaces on the first and second floors, six gallery spaces rotate in new art every three months or so, all of which are free and open to the public.

Although there are works from very establishe­d artists, such as sculptor Deborah Butterfiel­d, many exhibits are meant to showcase and uplift early-career Midwestern artists, such as exhibitor Anwar Floyd-pruitt.

For a deeper dive into the collection, guests can opt to stay in one of the four “canvas rooms.” Each was commission­ed to a local artist to decorate as they saw fit. (Lon Michels' Leopard Room, for instance, has floor-to-ceiling animal prints in various patterns and colours.) Whenever a guest stays in one of the canvas rooms, the hotel donates a percentage of the profits to local art organizati­ons.

Although actual museums can carry a hefty price tag, most art hotel collection­s are free and open to the public. The Aspen Meadows Resort, like Saint Kate, also has curators on staff to oversee its numerous art pieces within the hotel (including various outdoor sculptures) and help answer questions.

Guests can arrange for a private tour with a curator or take a self-guided tour of the open galleries, as well as the outdoor art installati­ons spread throughout the campus in Aspen, Colo.

Much of the resort's Resnick Art Gallery focuses on the work of Herbert Bayer, who also designed Aspen Meadows in the 1950s, whereas the Paepcke Art Gallery displays a rotating collection. Constructi­on is also underway on the Resnick Center for Herbert Bayer Studies, scheduled to open in 2022 with 11 galleries spread out over approximat­ely 7,500 square feet.

Other hotels that help make art appreciati­on more attainable include Hotel Indigo in Santa Barbara, Calif., which serves as a satellite space for the Museum of Contempora­ry Art, and 21c Museum Hotels. (There are nine of these in the U.S., with two more in the works.)

Perhaps what is most notable about the art hotels is that, very often, there aren't the “do not touch” signs you would see in a traditiona­l museum. (That's not always the case, especially with fragile pieces.)

“When we were coming up with the concept for what the Gordon guest experience would be like, I wanted the hotel to be a place where art could not only be displayed but made,” said Brian Obie, president and principal owner of Obie Companies, which includes the Gordon Hotel in Eugene, Ore. “I believe anyone can be an artist if they just have a chance to tap into their creativity and are given the tools, and sometimes the permission, to sit down and make something.”

One of the ways that manifests at the Gordon Hotel is in the lobby Art Bar. Hotel visitors can create their own masterpiec­es. The bar isn't just stocked with Jack, Jim and Jose, but also myriad supplies, such as pencils and watercolou­rs, along with an all-important industrial sink for cleaning up afterward. Similarly, each of Saint Kate's 200-plus rooms contains a ukulele, a record player and coloured pencils.

Also in the lobby of the Gordon Hotel is the large-scale digital art installati­on titled The Great Wall. That installati­on is actually 21 constantly changing pieces (they're on TV screens) and was undertaken in partnershi­p with the Harmonic Laboratory, an award-winning art collective also based in Eugene. Many of the works displayed were created by art students from the University of Oregon. There are also more than 160 pieces from 84 local artists, along with 75 pieces created by Obie Companies employees.

 ?? STEVE FREIHON ?? A 2.5-by-5.5-metre portrait of Grand Ole Opry legend Minnie Pearl greets guests at the Graduate Nashville hotel. It’s a latch-hook rug with a shaggy bubble gum pink background.
STEVE FREIHON A 2.5-by-5.5-metre portrait of Grand Ole Opry legend Minnie Pearl greets guests at the Graduate Nashville hotel. It’s a latch-hook rug with a shaggy bubble gum pink background.
 ?? THE GORDON HOTEL ?? Behind the stairs in the lobby of the Gordon Hotel in Eugene, Ore., is the Great Wall, a large-scale digital art installati­on.
THE GORDON HOTEL Behind the stairs in the lobby of the Gordon Hotel in Eugene, Ore., is the Great Wall, a large-scale digital art installati­on.
 ?? NOAH WOLF ?? Guests at the Saint Kate in Milwaukee can stay in a canvas room, including Lon Michels’ Leopard Room.
NOAH WOLF Guests at the Saint Kate in Milwaukee can stay in a canvas room, including Lon Michels’ Leopard Room.

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