On October 24th of 2025, my peers and I took a trip to the Guggenheim Museum. The Guggenheim Museum is located in Upper East Side of Manhattan, on fifth Avenue. The museum opened on October 21, 1959. Solomon R. Guggenheim began collecting art in the 1930s once he had retired as a mining tycoon. A German artist named Hilla Rebay helped Solomon display his collection in 1939. In 1943, Hilla contracted the architect Frank Lloyd Wright to create a museum. The design of the museum was asked to not just be a museum, but a place where people can experience art in a new way. In the article "Guggenheim Museum opens in New York City" on the website "History.com", it quotes Rebay asking Frank to build a "temple of spirit". Frank Llloyd developed the Guggenheim for the following 16 years, until he passed away, six months before the museum opening. The exterior of the Guggenheim is bowl shaped, featuring a spiraled ramp on the inside, creating one continuous floor surface. The glass ceiling is shaped like a dome, spotlighting right in the center of the museum. Floyd found inspiration in the architecture through his love of nature, the structure almost resembling a seashell. With each room connecting to one another, the fluidity of the museum mimics a fluidity in nature.
On this visit, the artist Rashid Johnson's installation called "A Poem for Deep Thinkers" was being exhibited. Rashid Johnson was born in 1977, in Illinois. He studied at the Columbia College Chicago and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. This is his first time exhibiting in the Guggenheim museum and marks his largest exhibition to date. "A Poem for Deep Thinkers" exhibits works through all of Rashid Johnsons works from the past three decades. Rashid says it feels like a family reunion, "and every family reunion is fairly complicated." He uses a variety of materials and different mediums, including mirrors, shea butter, ceramics, black soap, etc. His work reflects upon presence, identity, culture, and anxiety.
Rashids larger scaled works have a common theme of repetition. The specific work that caught my eye was the painting "Anxious Audience". His sporadic marks and sketching embodies the overwhelming feeling of panic and anxiety. Rashids works in this collection were all larger scaled and grand, creating what felt like an invitation for the viewer to step into his world of inner turmoil.

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