For more than two decades, the director has crafted a unique aesthetic through quirky films like “The Royal Tenenbaums,” “The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou,” and “The Grand Budapest Hotel.”
Despite its seemingly niche brief, the cult account features everything from minimalist lighthouses to grandiose hotels, from Art Deco bathhouses to mountain cabins. All, however, are distinctly reminiscent of Anderson’s oeuvre.
“He has created these very specific worlds, these fantastical worlds that are very perfectly placed,” Koval explained in a video interview. “They feel otherworldly, to a degree. They’re real, but they’re not right. They could exist at any point in time, or any place, potentially.”
Guards at Amer Fort, a palace and former military stronghold in Rajasthan, India. Credit: Chris Schalkx
Such was the account’s success that Koval has now published a book containing 200 of his favorite images. As much a travel guide as a show of photography, the submissions are divided by geographical region and span the farthest corners of the Earth — including tiny post offices in Alaska and Antarctica, and a powder-pink metro station in North Korea’s capital, Pyongyang.
While the publication is, ostensibly, about Anderson, Koval said the director is really just a lens through which to see design and architecture around the world.
“The name brings you through the door,” he added. “But once you’re in, I don’t think you’d go anywhere.”
Unexpected places
Some of the featured locations will feel familiar to Anderson fans: a funicular in the Swiss Alps, the wooden interior of a Norwegian railway carriage, the ornate facade of a Renaissance Revival hotel in Prague. (Not Budapest, but close enough.) Others, however, demonstrate an ability to see the eccentric director’s vision in the unlikeliest of places.
“There’s this layer or level of subjectivity that comes along with each location,” Koval said. “Maybe the light or wind hit a building just right, or there’s some intangible thing that happened and (the photographer) stopped to take a photo … They’re adding substance and context to the world that we (otherwise) just walk past, or let go by in our periphery and just ignore.”
The Hotel Opera, built in Prague, Czech Republic, in the late 19th century. Credit: Valentina Jacks
“They’re the most important part of this project,” Koval said of his contributors. “Without them, this doesn’t exist.”
Power of stories
In the years since 2017, when Koval and his wife Amanda started cataloging the photos as a bucket list for their own travels, Accidentally Wes Anderson has taken on its own unique identity beyond that of the director’s work, Koval said.
Placing the project at “the intersection of distinctive design and unexpected narratives,” he encourages photographers to accompany their submissions with stories about the locations and how they encountered them.
“There are a lot of pretty pictures out there, but I think the story that exists around them is what provides real context and real meaningful impact for whatever experience you might have when you go there.”
A wooden shed on the northern end of New Zealand’s Lake Wakatipu. Credit: Frida Berg
And now the project has received the ultimate seal of approval from Anderson himself. In the foreword to Koval’s book, the director describes it as an “alluring travel guide” that “should keep me busy for several decades.”
Anderson then signs off in typical style, writing: “I now understand what it means to be accidentally myself. Thank you. I am still confused what it means to be deliberately me, if that is even what I am, but that is not important. I send my very best wishes and much gratitude to this group for discovering and sharing all these peculiar and fascinating vistas.”