Impressions from the House on the Rock

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Whether you’re into automata; infinity rooms; female grotesques; pan-Asian decorative arts; antique guns; circuses; scrimshaw; sea monsters; stained glass; heavily carpeted surfaces; discordant music; winged, semi-nude mannequins; pseudo-Victorian street scenes; or carousels of dolls riding bug-eyed ponies, the House on the Rock has something for you. Dark, convoluted, and often flat-out creepy, the three-part complex located in the forests of southwestern Wisconsin is a call to imagination, a celebration of fakery, and a product of the extreme “eccentricity” of its designer, Alex Jordan, Jr. (1914–1989). Making one’s way past the indiscriminate jumbles of stuff that fill the multitude of tiny nooks and massive, elaborately constructed vignettes can feel like a journey through the mind of a mad man, but one that is as fascinating and surprising as it is exhausting and disturbing.

Jordan opened the original house in 1959 and built the more carnivalesque second and third sections over the next three decades before selling the complex in the late 1980s. The newer owners have continued to expand on the original site, adding an aviation exhibit and, in 2008, opening a welcome center and museum dedicated to Jordan’s life.

I owe particular thanks to Joshua Albers for this post, whose camera and low-light photography skills did laps around mine. Whenever possible, I’ve used his photos from our visit and supplemented the group with my own. All videos are his.

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Bonus Videos:

Beautiful mess: a visit to Brandon Anschultz’s studio in Lafayette Square, St. Louis

Brandon Anschultz in his studio, April 22, 2015. The paint objects above him each take about a year to make.

All photos by Renée DeVoe Mertz, April 22, 2015.

Gabriel Dawe’s “Plexus No. 27”

Gabriel Dawe, Plexus No. 27 (details), 2014; thread, wood, and hooks. On loan from the artist and Conduit Gallery for State of the Art: Discovering American Art Now. Photos by Renée DeVoe Mertz, November 28, 2014.