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Tag: James Turrell

  • Thailand’s First International Contemporary Art Museum Opens, Marking a New Cultural Chapter

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    Alicja Kwade’s Pars pro Toto (2020) in the museum’s courtyard. Courtesy of Dib Bangkok. Photographer Auntika Ounjittichai, 2025

    IT WAS HARD TO GET HERE reads a painted vinyl and plywood bench created by Finnegan Shannon and situated past the entryway of Dib Bangkok. It provides an abbreviated backstory behind a new museum that opened in the Thai capital in late December—the first of its kind in the city and the country. Stability is something the Thai art scene has lacked, and the museum’s launch marks a significant structural shift. “For the general arts scene here, the ecosystem is fast developing,” Miwako Tezuka, director of the museum, told Observer. “What we need is constancy.”

    Located in a converted industrial warehouse designed by WHY Architecture (the same firm behind the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art), the museum takes its name from the Thai word “dib,” meaning “raw” or “natural, authentic state.” The institution’s holdings are comprised of the private art collection of Thai businessman Petch Osathanugrah, amassed over the course of three decades before his death in 2023. It comprises around 1,000 works by some 200 artists, more or less equally divided between Asian and non-Asian origins. “There was no institution presenting a space that allows local artists and global artists to have equal ground [in] conversation,” Tezuka added, contextualizing the importance of the museum.

    The debut exhibition, “(In)visible Presence” (on view through August 3, 2026), is a meditation on memory curated by Ariana Chaivaranon. “It’s so important for local artists to see how they’re in dialogue with something that’s so much bigger than the nation or what’s going on right now in Thailand,” she told Observer. “These artists are all deeply intertwined with an international conversation. And yet, so often in Thailand, we only have a conversation internally, which is partly because of the collections that have been on display.” The mise-en-scène at Dib Bangkok reflects that these practices developed in different geographical regions, but Chaivaranon insisted that “visitors can actually see that they have been in dialogue for decades.”

    She further emphasized how crucial the experiential aspect of museum-going is as a cornerstone of art education, and how Dib Bangkok is filling an absence in the city’s scene. In previous decades, “for many of these [Thai] artists, they were getting their knowledge of international work from slides, from books, from magazines, and they didn’t have a chance to see international art of their time. Dib is offering a site where the artists can now see these works in person. When you see it in person… it takes on a whole new dimension that is inaccessible through just digital media, even.” She cited as a key example the Anselm Kiefer work on view, Die verlorene Buchstabe, an installation unfurling from a Heidelberg letterpress sprouting tall resin sunflowers. “The sunflowers gently move with the air, right? That’s something you couldn’t get online—and something that I’m really excited for young artists now to be able to come here and be inspired by.”

    A large sculptural installation made of hundreds of stacked black bell-shaped forms rises in a circular wall, with small golden elements suspended above it against a plain white gallery wall.A large sculptural installation made of hundreds of stacked black bell-shaped forms rises in a circular wall, with small golden elements suspended above it against a plain white gallery wall.
    Montien Boonma, Lotus Sound piece (1999-2000). Remade from a smaller 1992 version. Courtesy of Dib Bangkok. Photographer Auntika Ounjittichai, 2025

    Dib Bangkok’s 11 indoor galleries are spaced over three levels. The ground floor hosts Marco Fusinato’s work Constellations, a site-specific commission in which visitors are invited to whack a white wall with a Brooklyn Whopper Model CS38 Cold Steel baseball bat, whose sound is amplified at 120 decibels: a symbolic blow to the pristine museum space. This is followed by works from Jean-Luc Moulène and Ugo Rondinone; nearby, in the cone-shaped Chapel gallery, is Incubate, Subodh Gupta’s 2010 installation of stainless steel lunch tins (dabbas) overhung by chandeliers. (Recent sexual assault allegations did not prevent him from being featured.) Jannis Kounellis’s 1998 untitled work, comprised of four steel panels, I-beams and rolled second-hand garments—impecunious items he first used because he could not afford to buy new canvases—works well in conversation with Thai artists shown later in the exhibition, who also funneled principles of Arte Povera in their work: frugality, material simplicity.

    On the second level, visitors encounter an iron bed by Rebecca Horn, Jinjoon Lee’s two-channel video installation and 22 folios on music paper by Louise Bourgeois. These pieces are paired with work by Thai artists, including gelatin silver prints by Surat Osathanugrah—father of the collector—which feature a modest depiction of day-to-day Thai life. Also on view are Navin Rawanchaikul’s tiers of photos of elders encased in salvaged medicine bottles (1994) and Somboon Hormtientong’s 1995 installation of wrapped vihara columns laid flat amongst libation vessels and glassware. These artists sanctify the rites that shape Thai lifestyles but refresh the perspective on tradition.

    Under skylights on the top floor, the work of Montien Boonma is the star (he’s arguably the star of the whole museum). The Thai artist studied in Europe in the 1980s, and his sensitive, thoughtful work fosters a crossover between Arte Povera ideas and Thai spirituality. Lotus Sound piece (1999-2000, remade from a smaller 1992 version) stacks 500 terra-cotta bells around a gilded lotus flower, celebrating negative space, as does Arokayasala: Temple of the Mind (1996), with its herbal medicine drawers encircling aluminum lungs coated in aromatic herbal pastes. His 1998-99 installation Zodiac Houses models, at a modest scale, six existing German structures on stilts: visitors can take off their shoes, mount the platform and stand under their hollow structures, scented with cinnabar.

    A dark gallery space contains a two-channel video projection showing a domestic interior, with a single hanging lamp below casting a green circular glow onto the floor.A dark gallery space contains a two-channel video projection showing a domestic interior, with a single hanging lamp below casting a green circular glow onto the floor.
    Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Morakot (Emerald), 2007. Courtesy of Dib Bangkok. Photographer Auntika Ounjittichai, 2025

    Outdoor works create a compelling complement to the galleries. Alicja Kwade’s Pars pro Toto (2020), an installation of 11 monumental stone globes ranging from 70-250 cm in diameter, speckle the courtyard like an outsized game of boules or errant marbles; Pinaree Sanpitak’s Breast Stupa Topiary (2013), a series of stainless-steel forms, dots the upper terrace. As is his signature, James Turrell’s 1988 Straight Up installation frames the sky above; the museum hosts dedicated sunrise and sunset programs for visitors. Sho Shibuya’s 85-meter-long print on vinyl, MEMORY, was specially commissioned by the museum, hugely enlarging the Sunrise from a Small Window series, in which the artist painted the sensuous colors of daybreak over the front page of the New York Times.

    There is an emphasis on interactive and participatory works, so visitors can play. Surasi Kusolwong’s installation featuring an overturned and ceiling-suspended 1965 Volkswagen Beetle functions like a cradle in which visitors can sit and watch a video; the installation also includes TAO BIN vending machines, from which one can buy sour cream Pringles, salted cocktail nuts, Pepsi or Nescafé. “There are some works that are fragile, very sensitive, but we don’t want to make our exhibition precious,” Tezuka noted. The museum very much isn’t “a top-down institution where everything is didactically explained. … We want to make sure that we offer [visitors] the opportunity to educate themselves, to have their own creative agency and be their own active viewers.”

    The first few shows will showcase the collection, and some galleries will rotate out more frequently than others (the display of Montien Boonma works will remain on the longest because these works haven’t previously been seen in context with each other). As for the way the collection will grow in the future, Chaivaranon confirmed that the institution is “continuing to acquire work, and I would say our strategy has a few different aspects, but one is to be quite deep. It’s not just one work from the big names.” Tezuka added that the “curatorial team is continuing to do the collection research to identify which are the gaps in the collection, whether that be cultural representation or different mediums that artists globally are using or experimenting with… How can we strategically fill in those gaps, while at the same time creating opportunities for newly discovered artists to present their works?”

    Beyond the museum walls, Tezuka spoke about a “collective energy” brewing in the city’s art scene, citing the publicly funded art space BACC, the experimental programming at Bangkok Kunsthalle and the art destination of the Khao Yai Art Forest several hours outside the city. On the horizon, there will be deCentral, a space focusing on regional creative voices, and the Bangkok Biennale, which began in 2018, will return in fall 2026. According to Tezuka, “every organization is approaching art from a completely different way, bringing different perspectives.” The scene is most definitely one to watch.

    A yellow-painted metal hospital-style bed stands alone in a gallery, its frame adorned with small artificial birds and delicate mechanisms, while a framed photograph hangs on the wall behind it.A yellow-painted metal hospital-style bed stands alone in a gallery, its frame adorned with small artificial birds and delicate mechanisms, while a framed photograph hangs on the wall behind it.
    Rebecca Horn, The Lover’s Bed, 1990. Courtesy of Dib Bangkok. Photographer Auntika Ounjittichai, 2025

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    Thailand’s First International Contemporary Art Museum Opens, Marking a New Cultural Chapter

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    Sarah Moroz

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  • Gagosian Is About to Stage James Turrell’s Largest Exhibition in Europe in Over 25 Years

    Gagosian Is About to Stage James Turrell’s Largest Exhibition in Europe in Over 25 Years

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    James Turrell, Dhatu, 2010; From the series Ganzfeld, 1976–, light installation and mixed media, dimensions variable. © James Turrell Photo: Mike Bruce Courtesy the artist and Gagosian.

    If you’re making the rounds at the European art fairs this October and want to fill the gap between the London and Paris art weeks, Gagosian has you covered: the gallery just announced it will present the largest survey of James Turrell’s work in Europe in twenty-five years, opening on October 14 at its Le Bourget location in the northeastern Paris suburbs. The ground floor will feature two new mesmerizing large-scale installations by the renowned Light and Space artist: All Clear (a “Ganzfeld” piece) and Either Or (a “Wedgework” piece), both from 2024. All Clear envelops visitors in a pavilion where colored light saturates the space, creating a disorienting effect known as the “Ganzfeld effect,” where the lack of visual cues distorts depth and perspective. By flooding the room with light, Turrell overwhelms the senses, suspending the viewer in a sensory void. Meanwhile, Either Or manipulates projected light to create the illusion of architectural expansion beyond the room’s physical boundaries. Reflected off surfaces, the lights form ethereal yet tangible geometric shapes, giving the impression of a portal that appears simultaneously concrete and otherworldly.

    Image of a dormient vulcan with a rainbow over it.Image of a dormient vulcan with a rainbow over it.
    View of the rainbow over Roden Crater. © James Turrell Photo: Florian Holzherr Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

    The exhibition will also include a selection of Turrell’s seminal historical works, accompanied by archival materials that reveal the intricate engineering process behind his creations. Featured pieces include holograms, models, prints and plans for Roden Crater (1976–), his monumental project transforming a volcanic cinder cone in Northern Arizona into an immersive art experience. This masterpiece, integrating nature, technology and the cycles of geological and celestial time, is considered a culmination of Turrell’s exploration of human visual and psychological perception. After acquiring the dormant cinder cone in 1977, Turrell began constructing tunnels and apertures that interact with sunlight, working in harmony with nature to craft this unique light installation.

    The surrounding hallways will display six new in-wall “Glassworks” connected to his recent exhibition at Gagosian Athens, alongside a collection of aquatints and woodcuts inspired by his Aten Reign installation at the Guggenheim Museum in 2013. As a master of light and space, Turrell has long investigated how to manipulate and compose complex phenomena that affect our perception, bridging optics with sensory, psychological and meditative aspects of light. “My desire is to set up a situation to which I take you and let you see,” the artist said in a statement. “It becomes your experience.”

    SEE ALSO: Refik Anadol Is Launching the World’s First Museum of A.I. Art

    Focusing on the materiality of light and the possibility of painting with it, Turrell has been able to build on the sensorial experience of space, color and perception. “We usually use light to illuminate things,” he went on. “I am interested in the ‘thingness’ of light itself.” Somehow anticipating the experimental dimension of art that is so popular in today’s museum strategies, his practice combines scientific principles and cutting-edge technologies with spiritual concerns, aiming to craft experiences that inspire a deeper awareness of our interaction with light and space. “Light does not so much reveal as it is the revelation itself,” he concluded. His installations encourage viewers to contemplate the interplay of light, time and space, transcending physical limits and elevating the sensory experience into a timeless, interconnected dimension of spiritual insight and contemplation.

    Image of a purple projected light turning into a geometric shape. Image of a purple projected light turning into a geometric shape.
    James Turrell, Guardian, 2017; From the Wedgework series, 1969–, light installation and mixed media, dimensions variable. © James Turrell Photo: Florian Holzherr Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

    James Turrell, At One” opens at Gagosian’s Le Bourget gallery on October 14. 

    Gagosian Is About to Stage James Turrell’s Largest Exhibition in Europe in Over 25 Years

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    Elisa Carollo

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  • Cultural Comings and Goings: Max Hollein Joins the Andy Warhol Foundation Board and More

    Cultural Comings and Goings: Max Hollein Joins the Andy Warhol Foundation Board and More

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    From Gary Waterston’s appointment at Pace Gallery to the resignation of Phillips CEO Stephen Brooks, here are some of the most notable role changes recently announced across the arts and culture spheres.

    The Andy Warhol Foundation appoints Max Hollein to its board

    Man in navy suit stands at podium
    Max Hollein in May 2022. Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images

    Max Hollein, the director and CEO of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, has been elected to the board of directors at the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.

    He will join the group of artists, curators, museum directors and scholars on a board that includes members like Brooklyn Museum director Anne Pasternak and Guggenheim deputy director Naomi Beckwith. “The Warhol Foundation has made a tremendous difference in the art world by prioritizing artistic vision, empathy and impact,” said Hollein in a statement.

    In addition to researching and preserving Warhol’s body of work, the foundation focuses on financially supporting artists and artist-centered projects. Earlier this month, it announced plans to give out $4 million worth of grants to fifty art organizations across the U.S.

    Appointed director of the Met in 2018, Hollein also became the Met’s CEO in July of last year. Throughout his tenure at the museum, he has overseen more than 100 exhibitions and the launch of numerous capital projects, in addition to re-envisioning its educational and digital initiatives.

    Before joining the Met, he was director and CEO of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. Hollein also previously simultaneously led the Schirn Kunsthalle, the Städel Museum and the Liebieghaus in Frankfurt, Germany.

    Gary Waterston joins Pace in a newly created role

    Black and white photo of bearded man in suitBlack and white photo of bearded man in suit
    Gary Waterston will officially join the gallery next month. Michael Halsband/Courtesy Pace

    An art gallery veteran will soon join Pace to take on the new role of vice president of global sales and operations. Gary Waterston, who has spent more than twenty years working in gallery management, will assume his position on Feb. 1 and will be based in London.

    “Having stepped away from galleries, artists and exhibition making these past three years, I am beyond excited and thrilled to be joining Pace Gallery in such a transformative role,” said Waterston in a statement. He most recently worked with Atlantic Contemporary LLC, an art-focused financial services startup.

    Waterston previously spent nearly two decades at Gagosian, where he oversaw the gallery’s various expansion projects while serving as a director in London. He became the gallery’s managing director in Europe in 2011, collaborating with Gagosian directors across Paris, Rome, Geneva, Athens and Basel.

    He has organized exhibitions for the likes of Jeff Koons, Julian Schnabel and James Turrell, three of Pace’s most well-known artists. And in addition to working as a private advisor for several artists and foundations, Waterston has also collaborated on two major Picasso exhibitions organized by Sir John Richardson.

    In his new role, Waterston will work directly with Pace’s CEO Marc Glimcher and president Samanthe Rubell as he manages numerous gallery departments. “With his guidance, we will continue to strengthen and grow our business–and our relationships with artists and collectors around the world,” said Rubell in a statement.

    Marie-Anne McQuay to curate the 2025 Liverpool Biennial

    Woman in brown button up shirt Woman in brown button up shirt
    Marie-Anne McQuay will curate the biennial’s next edition. Zak Grant/Courtesy Liverpool Biennial

    The 13th edition of the Liverpool Biennial, the largest contemporary art festival in the U.K., will be curated by Marie-Anne McQuay. It is scheduled to take place between June 7 and Sept. 14 of next year.

    “I feel honored to be curating the 13th edition of Liverpool Biennial with and for the city where I live,” said McQuay in a statement. “I am so looking forward to reflecting on civic life, researching international exchanges and collaborating with the wider team on Liverpool Biennial 2025.”

    McQuay is currently the director of projects at Arts & Heritage, an English organization that works on collaborations between contemporary artists and heritage organizations and will return to her role following the festival’s completion. She previously was head of programs at Bluecoat, an arts center in Liverpool, and in 2019 was a guest curator of the Welsh Pavilion at the 58th Venice Biennale.

    Formed in 1998, the Liverpool Biennial has presented work from more than 560 artists over the past few decades. McQuay will succeed Khanyisile Mbongwa, the Cape Town-based artist and sociologist who curated the 12th edition in 2023 with an emphasis on ancestral and indigenous knowledge.

    Stephen Brooks resigns as CEO of Phillips

    Black and white photo of man wearing suit and glassesBlack and white photo of man wearing suit and glasses
    Stephen Brooks joined the auction house in 2021. Courtesy Phillips

    After leading Phillips for two and a half years, Stephen Brooks is stepping down as CEO.

    Brooks, who first took on the role in 2021, came to Phillips after spending more than a decade at Christie’s, most recently as deputy chief executive. Throughout his tenure at Phillips, he oversaw the auction house through its highest annual sale totals in company history. Brooks’ leadership additionally saw an expansion into younger audiences. Around 50 percent of buyers in 2023 consisted of first-time buyers, one-third of whom represented Millennial and Gen Z collectors.

    Brooks decided to step down “for personal reasons,” according to a statement from Phillips executive chairman Edward Dolman. “Stephen has led the company through a remarkable period of growth during his tenure and his contributions have helped to build the infrastructure for Phillips’ continued success,” he said.

    In light of Brooks’ resignation, Phillips is restructuring its executive leadership team and creating a CEO’s office. Dolman, who previously served as CEO of Phillips between 2014 and 2021, will take on a new role combining the titles of both CEO and executive chairman.

    Meanwhile, Amanda Lo Iacono will be appointed to the newly created position of deputy CEO. Joining Phillips in 2016, she has since 2022 been managing director for the 20th Century and contemporary art department and spearheaded the launch of Phillip’s Dropshop program. The auctioneer’s new leadership team will also see Cheyenne Westphal continue in her role as global chairwoman. “2024 presents Phillips with many opportunities to continue our expansion and, with the new leadership structure in place, we are well-placed to forge ahead,” said Dolman.

    Cultural Comings and Goings: Max Hollein Joins the Andy Warhol Foundation Board and More

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    Alexandra Tremayne-Pengelly

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  • Austin-Adjacent Home Reflects A Love Of Light, Geometry And Horizon-Busting Views

    Austin-Adjacent Home Reflects A Love Of Light, Geometry And Horizon-Busting Views

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    Deep in the heart of Texas, a newly finished residence suffused with boreal light and featuring miles of unobstructed Texas Hill Country views has swaggered onto the Lone Star State market.

    Located 25 miles west of Austin, the 4,100-square foot home is sited near Dripping Springs––in 2014 named the state’s first International Dark Sky Community. An evening stroll around the home’s nearly two acres––graced with oak, Ashe juniper, Mexican buckeye, madrone and other vegetation––proves that in Texas, the stars at night are indeed big and bright.

    The three-bedroom, three-bathroom home’s linear structure is oriented east and west affording views of a 700-acre conservation ranch. That land’s strictly limited development rights yield boundless Hill Country panoramas: rolling limestone hills blanketed with native vegetation.

    “There will never be high-density development out here,” says Tom Griffith, who with his wife, Dana Griffith, purchased the then-incomplete home in 2016, finishing what the original owner began in 2014. He also cites the surrounding ranch developments that are either covered by a conservation easement or will be limited to 20- to 40-acre parcels.

    A 40-foot pool fronts the $3.25 million retreat beneath an extensive shade pavilion that echoes the main house. Five apertures executed in square and rectangle shapes punctuate the structure’s roofline, revealing a cobalt sky during the day and those big bright stars at night.

    “We’re great fans of James Turrell, so those are an homage to him,” explains Griffith. “You lie in the pool and look up––it’s absolutely gorgeous. The sunlight reflects off the water and dances on the ceiling and surfaces. Just beautiful.”

    Among other works, “Light and Space” artist Turrell is known for his nearly 90 Skyspaces, chambers with ceiling apertures that open to the sky. A Skyspace termed The Color Inside is permanently installed near the Griffith residence at The University of Texas at Austin.

    Adjacent to the pavilion are six totemic sculptures: 10-foot tall railroad frogs cast in manganese steel anchored upright. When not repurposed as striking figures, the devices enable train wheels to switch tracks.

    The property’s cantilevered roof and some exterior walls are clad in seam metal baked with off-white Kynar, a resin that drastically reduces energy consumption. “It’s got a high albedo so it reflects considerable heat,” explains Webber + Studio founder David Webber who mastered the design and most recent build. Albedo is the measurement of light reflected off an object after striking it without any absorption.

    The roofing choice and the home’s optimally sited shade structure are critical given the region’s long, hot summers and short mild winters. American Fiber Cement mantles some of the exterior, completing the fire-resistant build.

    The home’s exceptional linearity is apparent upon entering. To the right are the primary suite and an office. To the left, the kitchen, living and dining rooms, two guest bedrooms and an addition to the original build.

    That sequential room lineup lends the home “reflexivity,” Griffith says. “There are little moments where you can sit in one part of the house and see another part; it’s a wonderful experience, a way to truly appreciate the lines of the house.”

    Augmenting that visual experience are the rooms’ floor-to-ceiling glass walls that lightly frame the horizon-busting views. Five sliders by Western Window Systems allow access to 4,000 square feet of deck and patio areas built of Trex or stained concrete.

    The couple, who are selling to be near their daughter in Colorado, treasure the outdoor living areas. “You hear silence, birds and wind rustling in the trees. That’s it,” Griffith says. “We start the morning with a cup of coffee on the north porch. When a storm gathers in the distance, it’s absolutely gorgeous.”

    The home’s floors are polished concrete. Cabinetry and paneling are of white oak that warms the rooms––along with the living room’s vintage-style white Malm fireplace. The walls are painted an elegant neutral gray: Benjamin Moore’s Stone. The color, along with the oak surfaces, assists in absorbing the pervading Northern light.

    Quartzite is used on working surfaces. The metamorphic rock covers a poolside cabinet station, which is plumbed and wired. It’s also used on a kitchen inset wall, on countertops and covers a black and white kitchen island. The couple, both retired geologists, favor the material for its durability, acid resistance and veining that’s similar to marble.

    All kitchen appliances are by Miele except for two built-in Liebherr refrigerator-freezer units.

    The primary suite has a corner wall window, opening the bedroom to the vast Hill Country’s northeast horizon. Both the primary and guest bath walls are finished in an elegant gray plaster.

    A recent addition leads away from the guest bedrooms. A sitting area with an adjacent terrace is sided by a wet bar with a refrigerator, sink and icemaker. Stairs behind the bar descend to a 900-square-foot conditioned garage and storage. There’s also a two-car carport and additional surface parking.

    A slatted wood divider is positioned behind the wet bar and stairs. It delineates a larger room, which the Griffiths call their music room. The room harbors a built-in ceiling projection screen and Sony projector, which convey with the home along with a quadratic residue diffuser that banks one wall. “I’m kind of a sound nerd,” explains Griffith, adding that other items in his cutting-edge sound system are available for separate purchase.

    Exterior unfinished aluminum louvers cover some of the home’s light-drenched wall windows, helping to pare heat and maximize privacy while affording generous views. Over time, the metal will develop a grayish-white patina. The design is echoed in the pavilion and other areas, helping to establish a cohesive look.

    There’s also a roof solar array, and Haiku ceiling fans are installed throughout the home.

    Edging the main living areas, a cantilevered north-facing rear deck is fronted by a shallow tray holding crushed granite and limestone. Proceeding down steps, the backyard is lined with low limestone walls. “We brought it in ourselves––120 tons, my wife and I are pretty good on a Bobcat,” Griffith says. “It was a labor of love.” The area is anchored with a fire pit and chairs.

    A 30,000-gallon rainwater catchment system screened by trees is located on the opposite side of the property.

    “There’s limited water in this region––there’s the aquifer, which is somewhat stressed,” Griffith explains. “So, we get all of our household and pool water from the sky. It falls on the roof, goes through a series of pipes into a rainwater bank and then it’s pumped through a filtration system.” The system includes particulate and activated charcoal filters as well as ultraviolet (UV) light sterilization.

    “It’s the best water I’ve ever tasted,” says Griffith. “We’ve never gone below one-third full in the tank, even during severe drought.”

    Drilled in 2017, a 586-foot well is employed for landscape irrigation, and six hydrants are distributed throughout the property.

    The well was one of numerous enhancements that the Griffiths added to the property. In 2014, the property’s original owner hired Webber to design the house and a builder to realize it but the structure was left incomplete. After purchasing the home in 2016, the Griffiths hired Webber and collaborated with his team to greatly refine and add to the residence. Webber also acted as the builder, finishing the home in early 2022.

    The Griffiths’ home is 10 miles from both Dripping Springs and Bee Cave, the latter a larger town preferred by the couple for shopping excursions. Hamilton Pool is a few minutes’ drive away––“widely recognized as the greatest swimming hole on Earth,” Griffith says. A dramatic rock grotto beneath limestone outcroppings is set with a 50-foot waterfall.

    The couple often entertains guests at a few dozen craft breweries and six wineries within 10 miles of their home. The area also excels in outdoor recreation: 2,427-acre Reimer’s Ranch Park is less than four miles away, and the 5,212-acre Pedernales Falls State Park is about 17 miles from the residence.

    Ed Hughey of Moreland Properties holds the listing.


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