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ACCIDENTALLY WES ANDERSON by Wally Koval

ACCIDENTALLY WES ANDERSON

by Wally Koval

Pub Date: Oct. 20th, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-316-49273-7
Publisher: Voracious/Little, Brown

All the world’s a Wes Anderson film, or so one would glean from this handsome book.

“Architecture should be a symphony,” said architect John Portman, quoted here in reference to the Regent Singapore Hotel he designed in 1982. One could say the same for interior and exterior design. Few artists know this as well as Anderson, one of the few cinema directors with an unmistakable style: “symmetrical lines, pastel hues, immaculate composition…idiosyncratic and beautiful.” In 2017, Koval and his wife began collecting photographs that “shared a resemblance to the look of a Wes Anderson film” and researching the histories behind them. Soon, thousands of equally passionate fans shared their photos of Anderson-ian libraries, swimming pools, coin-operated viewfinders, and more. Koval collected them first in his popular Instagram account and now in this book, with the photos arranged by continent. The result is a delight for Anderson fans and anyone else interested in a world tour of unique venues, including Prague’s Hotel Opera, a “hot-pink confection of Bohemian Neo-Renaissance style” that looks strikingly similar to Anderson’s Grand Budapest Hotel; the “sleek modern trains” from Slovenian Railways, conveyances similar to the train in The Darjeeling Limited; the “stunning blue tile mosaic windows and inlays” of the Najm al-Imam Religious School in Iraq; and the white-and-red diagonal stripes of Green Point Lighthouse, “the oldest operational lighthouse in South Africa,” a structure straight out of Moonrise Kingdom. Some exteriors, such as that of a radio station in Mirny, Russia, are too ramshackle for Anderson’s statelier buildings or too pretty for his seedier edifices. For the most part, the book is a visual treat further enlivened by engaging stories. For example, the Pittsburgh Athletic Association was modeled after a Venetian Renaissance palazzo and “was visited with near-daily regularity by America’s most special neighbor, Fred Rogers,” a Pennsylvania native who liked to use its third-floor pool.

A charming, whimsical tribute to the Anderson aesthetic.