Travels and Meditations On Our Built Environments From California's Capital City, Sacramento
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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query crocker art museum. Sort by date Show all posts

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Crocker Modern

My wife and I made our first visit this morning to the new addition to Sacramento's Crocker Art Museum. It's one of those architectural projects that's supposed to define Sacramento in a bigger way. Usually, that means you're obligated to like it - to go with the civic flow and avoid death by a vote of your peers.
  We know what we like - and often it's not modern design - and we liked this museum.
(See the guy taking a self-photo with his girlfriend and the Crocker name) 

The Crocker has forever been housed in an old Victorian mansion belonging to Edwin Crocker, attorney for the Central Pacific when it built the Transcontinental Railroad across the U.S. in Abraham Lincoln's time. The new addition opened in autumn 2010 to stories like this in The San Francisco Chronicle and Los Angeles Times and another in the Architecture Reviewed Blog.  Project architects Gwathmey Siegel & Associates have their own Crocker page.

Here's more pictures from inside: (I didn't take any in the galleries, which were open and spacious. The place was crawling with security who looked like they'd frown on that. The links above, though, have plenty).





Saturday, January 26, 2013

Room With a View



We went to the Crocker Art Museum in downtown Sacramento last Sunday and ran into a huge crowd visiting for the Norman Rockwell exhibit. It was great. So was this million-dollar view of downtown from inside the museum. Even better on a rocking chair.