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    We Took a Preview Tour of the Immersive Van Gogh Experience Opening in New York. It Was Actually Pretty Spectacular

    A throng of reporters filed into New York’s Pier 36, also known as Basketball City (and a former site of the NADA art fair), this week as organizers of “Immersive Van Gogh” opened up the space for a preview of their experience extravaganza.
    Amid hammering by construction workers building platforms and sets throughout the 70,0000-square foot space, the press donned custom-painted hardhats with distinctive Van Gogh designs (swirling Starry Night patterns and brightly colored sunflowers) for a walkthrough and demonstration of the event.
    Special viewing platforms under construction inside Immersive Van Gogh at Pier 36 in New York City. Photo by Eileen Kinsella
    With nearly 100 projectors splashing colorful and intricate moving images of Van Gogh’s night skies, stars, wheat fields, crows, and numerous self portraits across every possible surface (all of which is enhanced by strategically placed mirrors and soaring classical music), the experience is truly “immersive” and—to be honest—pretty incredible.
    Anticipation is running high after the Van Gogh experience made a big-time appearance in the Netflix hit Emily In Paris. The exhibition, which has already been a wild success in Paris, Chicago, and Toronto, is already selling like wild in New York: the organizers said 250,000 advance tickets have been sold thus far.
    Speaking to reporters, producer Svetlana Dvoretsky described it as “the largest and most elaborate” presentation yet.
    Pier 36 on the Lower East Side is the site of the New York City version of Immersive Van Gogh. Photo by Eileen Kinsella.
    The show was designed by Massimiliano Siccardi, with original music by Italian multimedia composer Luca Longobardi, who provided a score that combines experimental electronic music with ethereal piano.
    Vittorio Guidotti is the art director and Broadway producer David Korins, who created the sets for Hamilton and Dear Evan Hansen, was brought on board as creative director. His mark on the show is already indelible. 
    Korins called the experience a “runaway train smash hit in every city that it has been in,” adding that he was thrilled to join the team in New York. His own research, undertaken during lockdown, involved video tours of the shows at other venues.
    The “letter station” at Immersive Van Gogh New York. Photo by Eileen Kinsella.
    He also delved into the life of the artist, including research into the artist’s synesthesia. It’s generally accepted that Van Gogh had a special form of the condition known as chromesthesia, in which he was able to hear color and see sounds.
    “I wanted to try and humanize Van Gogh so that you see him as a man and as an artist,” Korins said.
    Installation view of Immersive Van Gogh in New York. Photo by Eileen Kinsella
    One of his additions to the show is a swirl of papers frozen and suspended in mid-air. It was created from digital scans of over 1,000 letters that the artist wrote to his brother, Theo, during his lifetime.
    The booth allows guests to ask questions of “Vincent” and get answers from artificial intelligence designed to speak on the artist’s behalf.
    Another exhibit offers visitors a closer look at one of the artist’s most famous subjects, sunflowers, while the ceiling of the entrance way, inspired by The Starry Night, and was created with more than 7,800 paint brushes dipped in multiple colors. 
    So, all in all, there’s a lot to see.
    Installation view of Immersive Van Gogh in Chicago. Photo by Michael Brosilow.

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    The World’s Hottest Instagram Backdrop Is the Optical Illusion Artist JR Created Underneath the Eiffel Tower—See Images Here

    French street artist JR has become something of a master of illusion, and his latest work just might be his most striking yet, with a photographic collage installation showing Paris’s beloved Eiffel Tower precariously perched atop a gaping canyon with a city below.
    Visitors to the Eiffel Tower can pose with the artwork, appearing to leap across the gap, to straddle the cliffs, to fall into the chasm, or to peer down at the city far below. (And, as you’ll see below, they have done all of these things!)
    The project is something of a followup to JR’s 2019 installation at the Louvre Museum, also in Paris, celebrating the 30th anniversary of I.M. Pei’s glass pyramid. The artist used 2,000 sheets of paper to create the illusion that the pyramid was rising not from the Louvre’s Cour Napoléon courtyard, but from a deep rock quarry. This fall, he’ll take the same technique to the  Pyramids of Giza in Egypt for a project with Art d’Egypte.
    JR’s installation at the Louvre in 2019 on the occasion of the pyramid’s 30th anniversary. Photo courtesy of JR-art/Perrotin Gallery.
    All of the projects feature the artist’s signature black and white imagery with anamorphic photography—a distorted version of the image that appears normal when viewed from a single point. Stand in the right spot, and the 132-year-old Eiffel Tower perfectly aligns with JR’s photo backdrop, creating both a stunning optical illusion and an incredible photo op.
    The 2019 Louvre installation lasted for just a single day before it was destroyed by visitors, but the Eiffel Tower piece, on the Place du Trocadéro near the Palais de Chaillot, is slated to remain on view for a month.
    The public artwork was unveiled just days before the opening of “JR Chronicles,” the artist’s blockbuster Brooklyn Museum retrospective, touches down in Europe at the Saatchi Gallery in London. (Pace is also staging concurrent JR exhibitions in New York and London.)
    JR, The Wound (La Ferita (2021) at the Palazzo Strozzi in Florence. Photo courtesy of JR.
    JR has not given any interviews about the new piece at the Eiffel Tower, but a similar trompe-l’oeil pasting currently on the façade of the Palazzo Strozzi in Florence is a commentary about the closure of cultural institutions under lockdown restrictions, and how people have been cut off from art. (Similarly, the Eiffel Tower remains closed to visitors until July 16.)
    “Without being able to enter a museum, to attend a concert or spend time at an exhibition, we realize that it is culture that gives life its color and that the beauty of our city is activated by the people that pass through it,” JR told CNN Style.
    See more photos of the installation, alongside Instagram shots of people making the most of it, below.
    JR’s Eiffel Tower public art installation. Photo courtesy of JR.
    JR’s Eiffel Tower public art installation. Photo courtesy of JR.
    JR’s Eiffel Tower public art installation. Photo courtesy of JR.
    JR’s Eiffel Tower public art installation. Photo courtesy of JR.

    “JR: The Wound” is on view at Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, March 19–August 29, 2021.
    “JR: Chronicles” is on view at Saatchi Gallery in London, Duke of York’s HQ, King’s Rd, London SW3 4RY, with major support from Art Explora, June 4–October 3, 2021.
    “JR: Eye to the World” is on view at Pace, 6 Burlington Gardens, London, June 4–July 3, 2021; and “JR: Tehachapi” is on view at Pace, 540 West 25th Street, New York, June 4–August 21, 2021. 
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    From Julie Curtiss at White Cube to a Birthday Party Gone Wrong, Here Are 10 Shows to See During London’s First-Ever Gallery Weekend

    Hoping to signal culture’s emergence from lockdown and inject sales momentum as we head into the usually sleepy summer season, London is premiering its first ever gallery weekend this week, aiming to offer a comprehensive overview of the scene across the capital.
    To tackle London’s vast geography, the weekend has been split into three broad areas. A glut of more than 100 central London galleries will take center stage on Friday, and gallery devotees will be spoiled for choice—a well-planned itinerary might include a pitstop to the street outside Pace Gallery to catch a capsule performance from Jean Dubuffet’s Coucou Bazaar. Saturday is South London’s time to shine, with some 20 galleries taking part over a more spread out area so visitors are advised to plan their map accordingly, and nearly 30 galleries in edgy East London will be the focus on Sunday. 
    Here are our picks of what to see on each of the days. 

    Friday: Central London

    “Lost in Italy” Luxembourg + CoThrough July 3, 2021
    Installation view of “Lost in Italy,” 2021. Courtesy of Damian Griffiths Photography.
    Curated by former Venice Biennale curator Francesco Bonami, “Lost in Italy” examines Italy’s unique role in the international artistic exchange of the 1950s and ’60s. The exhibition presents historical works by Alberto Burri, Marcel Duchamp, Yves Klein, Jannis Kounellis, Cy Twombly, and others, alongside a new and startling work by Maurizio Cattelan, which is visible from the street outside.
    “Lost in Italy,” Luxembourg + Co., 2 Savile Row, London

    “Tala Madani: Skid Mark”Pilar CorriasThrough July 10
    Tala Madani, Five our of Six (2021). Courtesy of the artist and Pilar Corrias, London
    The Iranian artist’s new show is not made for the squeamish. For “Skid Mark,” Madani has created new paintings from her ongoing “Shit Moms” series, depicting female figures that appear to be made out of excrement. An animation of one of the shit moms shows her passing through upscale interiors leaving brown stains on surfaces and furniture, and growing frustrated with the limitations of her amorphous and semi-solid form. Other new paintings include the character of a fully grown Pinocchio with a wooden penis, and series of ominous-looking ceiling fans.
    “Tala Madani: Skid Mark,” Pilar Corrias, 54 Eastcastle Street, London

    “Julie Curtiss: Monads and Dyads”White Cube Mason’s YardThrough June 26
    Julie Curtiss, Interstice (2020). © Julie Curtiss. Photo: © Theo Christelis, White Cube.
    For her first exhibition in London, Julie Curtiss’s new show of paintings, sculptures, and works on paper continues in the veins of cartoonish, humorous, and cheeky tableaux that riff on tropes of pop culture. The show’s title is a reference to organizing principles of the monad, denoting the individual, and the dyad, referencing a pair, in association or opposition. The works on view reference the dualism of these principles with allusions to symmetry and opposition, contemporary and historic, obvious and subtle.
    “Monads and Dyads,” White Cube, 25–26 Mason’s Yard, London

    “Kapwani Kiwanga: Cache”Goodman GalleryThrough June 12
    Installation view at Goodman Gallery. Courtesy Goodman Gallery.
    For her exhibition “Cache,” Kiwanga presents a new body of work that continues her research into power, society, and resistance, where she unearths the overlooked histories of materials. Take her ceramic work Semence, which looks at how red rice was brought from West Africa to Suriname and Virginia, US, via the slave trade—the small grains were individually sewn into clothing or braided into hair in order to provide food if and when that person found the means to escape. Some 15,000 of these delicate pieces are arranged into a large sculpture.
    “Cache,” Goodman Gallery, 26 Cork Street, London 
    Saturday: South London

    “Jade Montserrat: In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens”Bosse & BaumThrough July 24
    Jade Montserrat, She made her fall glorious (2016). Courtesy of the artist and Bosse & Baum.
    For her first solo with Bosse & Baum, Jade Montserrat’s show title is drawn from text by Alice Walker, drawing a through line between nature and Black women’s bodies in her exquisitely detailed work. Montserrat undertakes extensive research that balances her personal historical experience with that of a larger group to address questions of systemic racism and other forms of discrimination.
    “In Search Of Our Mothers’ Gardens” Bosse & Baum, Unit BGC, Ground Floor, Bussey Building, 133 Rye Lane London,
    “Tom Lovelace: Bathers”Sid Motion GalleryThrough June 12
    Bathers (2021).Image courtesy of Sid Motion Gallery and the artist.
    Lovelace will present an installation that brings together photography and performances as the latest iteration of his ongoing “Living Pictures” series. Performers will activate photographs presented as reflective pools on the floor, transforming the gallery into a contemplative environment. Performances will take place daily over London Gallery Weekend, and RSVP is essential.
    “Bathers,” Sid Motion Gallery, 24a Penarth Centre, Hatcham Road, London
    “Christopher Hartmann: In and Out of Touch“Hannah Barry GalleryThrough July 31, 2021
    Christopher Hartmann, What could we do about it anyway (2020). Courtesy of Hannah Barry Gallery.
    Christopher Hartmann paints figures caught in tenuous moments of vulnerability and internal reflection against vague backdrops. These images, primarily of men, pay special attention to the facial expressions from body shapes and capture the contemporary longing for touch and connection amid the emotional intensities of our time.
    “In and Out of Touch” Hannah Barry Gallery, 4 Holly Grove, London
    Sunday: East London

    “Tobias Spichtig: Nothing”FreehouseThrough July 17
    Exhibition view of Tobias Spichtig’s “Das Böse im Dunkeln” in 2018 at FREEHOUSE, London. Courtesy the artist and the gallery.
    The Berlin- and Zurich-based artist will present a series of new paintings that continue to explore his recurring interest in themes of emptiness as well as vacuous icons or symbols. It is his second show at the London gallery.
    “Nothing,” Freehouse, 54 Three Colts Lane, London

    “Tosh Basco: Portraits, Still Lifes and Flowers”Carlos/IshikawaThrough July 3
    Tosh Basco, Safi still life (2021). ©Tosh Basco 2021, courtesy the artist and Carlos/ Ishikawa, London. Photo by Damian Griffiths.
    The artist Tosh Basco (formerly known as Boychild) will present a new body of works for her second solo show with the gallery. Though best known for her performance work, the exhibition will forefront another dimension to the artist’s practice that has informed her performances: photography. The exhibition presents never-before-seen images chronicling Basco’s daily life over the past two years. The 12 photographs on view each capture a pile of hundreds of still shots that have been printed and stacked together, which Basco describes as akin to memory banks.
    “Portraits, Still Lifes and Flowers,” Carlos/Ishikawa, Unit 4, 88 Mile End Road, London

    “Shannon Cartier Lucy: Cake on the Floor”Soft OpeningThrough July 31
    Shannon Cartier Lucy, A Soft Rein (2021). Courtesy the artist and Soft Opening, London. Photo by Theo Christelis.
    The Nashville-based artist Shannon Cartier Lucy presents 11 new paintings in the first London solo presentation of her work. Lucy’s disturbing paintings of women among the trappings of a party carry violent undertones, and add an uncomfortable dimension of objectification to her chosen medium of traditional figurative oil painting.
    “Cake on the Floor,” Soft Opening, 6 Minerva Street, London
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    Here’s a Guide to Every Single One of the Nearly 50 Immersive Van Gogh Experiences Blanketing the U.S., and What Each Promises

    As far as we can remember, there has never been a phenomenon like the immersive Van Gogh craze currently sweeping America
    Maybe it’s the enduring popularity of the Dutch artist. Maybe it’s the hunger for in-the-world experiences after a year of quarantine. Maybe it’s that one scene in Emily in Paris… but whatever it is, the hunger to venture into a giant animated projection of a Van Gogh painting is real, and it’s everywhere.
    Ads with “Gogh”-themed puns (“Gogh with Mom,” “It’s Safe to Gogh,” “Don’t Wait to Gogh,” etc.) are blanketing nearly 40 different cities across the U.S. and saturating social media feeds. In some cities, such as selfie-crazed L.A., upcoming immersive Van Gogh exhibitions are all but sold out well before they open.
    Installation view of Beyond Van Gogh Image courtesy Beyond Van Gogh.
    Some are already open. Others are about to open. Some don’t even have announced venues yet, but are selling out fast.
    No fewer than five different corporate entities are currently dueling it out across the map for supremacy in the Van Gogh space, causing the Better Business Bureau to issue an alert to consumers to make sure they get the Van Gogh light show that they want. In cities like Detroit, one company has snapped up the website VanGoghDetroit.com while its nemesis owns DetroitVanGogh.com.
    So what’s the difference between all these experiences? Here’s a breakdown.
    Installation view of Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience. Image courtesy Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience.
    —Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience is the vision of Mathieu St-Arnaud, creative director of Montreal-based Normal Studio, a projection-mapping outfit that has previously worked with the Montreal symphony and brought the Diary of Anne Frank to life. Beyond Van Gogh promises “300 of Vincent Van Gogh’s iconic artworks,” brought to life with music and “the artist’s own dreams, thoughts, and words.”
    —Imagine Van Gogh: The Immersive Exhibition claims to employ a signature technique of immersive projection so visceral that they do not show videos on their website, because this would fail to capture the experience. Conceived by Annabelle Mauger and Julien Baron, associated with the immersive attraction known as the Cathédrale d’Images in France, Imagine Van Gogh is an animated projected collage of some 200 paintings from the final two years of Van Gogh’s life, all accompanied by classical hits by Saint-Saëns, Mozart, Bach, Delibes and Satie. There is also a “pedagogical room,” conceived with art historian Androulla Michael.
    —Immersive Van Gogh is the brainchild of Italian film producer Massimiliano Siccardi. It promises, via 100 projectors, an hour-long experience completely bathing visitors in Vincent Van Gogh’s greatest hits, accompanied by “experimental electronic music with pure, ethereal and simple-seeming piano” by composer Luca Longobardi (for the New York incarnation, Hamilton production designer David Korins has been brought on for extra oomph). Siccardi and Longobardi are the team behind the Van Gogh, Starry Night experience at Paris’s L’Atelier des Lumières seen in the Netflix show Emily in Paris, if that’s important to you.
    —Van Gogh Alive comes courtesy Grande Experiences, also the braintrust behind such exhibitions as Monet & Friends and Planet Shark. Focusing on the period between 1880 and 1890, it promises “more than 3,000 Van Gogh images at enormous scale” via 40 projectors, augmented to show the Dutch artist’s sources of inspiration and set to “a powerful classical score.”
    —Finally, Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience, a partnership between producer Exhibition Hub and “entertainment discovery platform” Fever promises to wrap you in more than 400 Van Gogh works using a trademarked video mapping technology. On top of the light show, there is a drawing studio, galleries that offer info about Van Gogh’s life and work, and an (optional) 10-minute VR experience called A Day in the Life of the Artist in Arles.
    Phew!
    Now, if you’re wondering whether a Van Gogh show is coming to your region (it probably is), here’s a round-up of nearly 50 U.S. shows based on the best available information.

    Alabama

    Birmingham
    Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TBDDates: TBD

    Arizona

    Phoenix
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: July 29–November 28, 2021

    California

    Los Angeles
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: September 30, 2021–January 2, 2022
    San Diego
    Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: Wyland Center at Del Mar FairgroundsDates: From January 2022
    San Francisco
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: SVN West San Francisco (Formerly the Fillmore West)Dates: March 18–September 6, 2021
    San Jose
    Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TBDDates: TBD

    Colorado

    Denver
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: September 30, 2021–February 6, 2022
    Van Gogh AliveLocation: The Hangar at Stanley MarketplaceDates: July 9–September 26, 2021

    Connecticut

    Danbury
    Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceDates: TBDLocation: TBD

    Florida

    Miami
    Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: Ice Palace StudiosDates: May 27–July 11, 2021
    Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: Olympia TheaterDates:  May 8–August 30, 2021
    Orlando
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: October 6, 2021–February 6, 2022
    St. Petersburg
    Van Gogh AliveLocation: The Dali MuseumDates: November 21, 2020–June 13, 2021

    Georgia

    Atlanta
    Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: Pullman YardsDates: May 19–September 26, 2021

    Hawaii

    Honolulu
    Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: Hawai’i Convention CenterDates: July 2–August 15, 2021

    Illinois

    Chicago
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: Lighthouse ArtSpace at Germania ClubDates: February 15–November 28, 2021

    Indiana

    Indianapolis
    Van Gogh AliveLocation: Indianapolis Museum of Art at NewfieldsDates: Summer 2021–Fall 2021

    Massachusetts

    Boston
    Imagine Van Gogh: The Immersive ExhibitionLocation: SoWa Power StationDates: December 21, 2021–February 20, 2022
    Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TBADates: September 24, 2021–January 30, 2022

    Michigan

    Detroit
    Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TCF CenterDates: June 25–August 15, 2021
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: October 21, 2021–February 6, 2022

    Minnesota

    Minneapolis
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: August 2–October 31, 2021

    Missouri

    Kansas City
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: December 1, 2021–February 6, 2022
    Van Gogh AliveLocation: Nelson-Atkins Museum of ArtDates: October 23–December 31, 2021
    St. Louis
    Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TBDDate: TBD

    Nevada

    Las Vegas
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: July 1–September 6, 2021
    Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: Area 15Dates: May 27–July 5, 2021

    New York

    Buffalo
    Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: Eastern Hills MallDates: August 10–October 3, 2021
    New York City
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: Pier 36Dates: June 4–September 6, 2021
    Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceSkylight on VeseyFrom: June 4–September 6

    North Carolina

    Asheville
    Van Gogh AliveLocation: BiltmoreDates: November 5, 2021–March 5, 2022
    Charlotte
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: Camp North EndDates: June 17–September 12, 2021

    Ohio

    Cleveland
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: October 1, 2021–February 6, 2022
    Columbus
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: October 28, 2021–January 2, 2022

    Oregon

    Portland
    Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TBDDate: TBD

    Pennsylvania

    Philadelphia
    Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TBDFrom: August 2021
    Pittsburgh
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: September 23–November 28, 2021

    Tennessee

    Nashville
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDFrom: November 4, 2021–February 6, 2022

    Texas

    Austin
    Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: The Starry Night Pavilion at Circuit of The AmericasDates: June 18–August 8, 2021
    Dallas
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: June 17–September 6, 2021
    Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TBDDates: July 5–November 28, 2021
    Houston
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: August 12–October 10, 2021
    Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TBDDates: August 30, 2021–January 2, 2022
    San Antonio
    Immersive Van GoghLocation: TBDDates: November 18, 2021–February 6, 2022

    Utah

    Salt Lake City
    Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TBDDates: TBD

    Washington

    Seattle
    Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TBDDates: September 10, 2021–January 30, 2022
    Tacoma
    Imagine Van Gogh: The Immersive ExhibitionLocation: Tacoma ArmoryDates: December 18, 2021–January 30, 2022

    Washington, D.C.

    Van Gogh: The Immersive ExperienceLocation: TBDDates: July 23, 2021–January 26, 2022

    Wisconsin

    Milwaukee
    Beyond Van Gogh: An Immersive ExperienceLocation: Wisconsin CenterDates: July 21–September 19, 2021
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    Celebrated Photographer Deana Lawson Takes an Unexpected Turn in Her New Guggenheim Show—and It Involves Holograms

    A peculiar object sits on a plinth at the center of Deana Lawson’s new exhibition at the Guggenheim: it’s a hologram of a torus, or a geometric ring formed by a circle rotated around a central axis. Stand in front of it and you might see a bagel, but walk around and it comes alive like something otherworldly—a portal, perhaps, perpetually rotating in on itself. 
    A spectral sculpture made from the same technology that brought Tupac to Coachella is perhaps the last thing you’d expect from Lawson, an artist known for her naturalistic portraits of diasporic Black culture that draw on the visual language of documentary and vernacular photography. But there it is, very much at the heart of “Centropy,” the show awarded to the artist along with the 2020 Hugo Boss Prize. 
    That was Lawson’s choice, said Katherine Brinson, one of two Guggenheim curators who organized the show. During the installation process, “Deana spoke about how, in relationship to the photographs surrounding it, [the torus] becomes a force that both draws on and reinforces the power and the potential represented in her subjects,” the curator explained.
    Installation view, “The Hugo Boss Prize 2020: Deana Lawson, Centropy,” Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, May 7–October 11, 2021. © Deana Lawson. Photo: David Heald.
    There’s a lot of power to go around. Lawson’s subjects—all Black people in domestic settings—radiate it.
    That has a lot to do with the artist’s careful staging, which recalls the stuff of both family photo albums and art-historical masterpieces, and her eye for light. In a 2018 New York profile—one of the most memorable pieces of photographic writing in recent years, to be sure—author Zadie Smith spoke of how Lawson’s lens liberates her subjects from the earthly constraints of capitalism and colonial histories, turning them into gods.   
    “Deana Lawson’s work is prelapsarian—it comes before the Fall. Her people seem to occupy a higher plane, a kingdom of restored glory, in which diaspora gods can be found wherever you look: Brownsville, Kingston, Port-au-Prince, Addis Ababa,” Smith wrote. “Outside a Lawson portrait you might be working three jobs, just keeping your head above water, struggling. But inside her frame you are beautiful, imperious, unbroken, unfallen.”
    Deana Lawson, Barrington and Father (2021). © Deana Lawson. Courtesy the artist and Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York.
    The torus isn’t the only hologram in the show; you’ll also find them embedded in several large-scale photographs. For those who have followed Lawson’s career, the juxtaposition may come as a surprise. But the two media inform each other, said Ashley James, who curated the exhibition with Brinson. 
    “The holography allows us to reflect back on the photographs,” James explained. The former asks us to consider how the latter “can both reflect the real and approximate the superreal. I think that’s a question that guides the work.”
    Both holography and photography also require harnessing the power of light, a central concern of the artist—for reasons beyond those that occupy most photographers’ minds. 
    Installation view, “The Hugo Boss Prize 2020: Deana Lawson, Centropy,” Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, May 7–October 11, 2021. © Deana Lawson. Photo: David Heald.
    Light, for Lawson, is “an index of the divinity of human beings,” Brinson said. In other words, it alerts the viewer to the presence of a spiritual force. “There’s a relationship between what is visible and what is unseen. Although the images might show an everyday environment with the familiar contour of domestic life, there are often what the artist calls portals that indicate the presence of this more spiritual realm.”   
    Brinson points to the little halo on the wreath of roses above a woman and her three grandchildren in Young Grandmother (2019), for instance, or the billowing curtains behind a crowned, seated man in Chief (2019).
    “When I make a picture, it is about being in communion or trying to access an unseen truth,” Lawson said in a short film produced for the exhibition.  
    Deana Lawson, Chief (2019). © Deana Lawson. Courtesy of Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York; and David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles.
    “Centropy” takes its name from the thermodynamic theory of how particles are stimulated into a system of organization by electricity. It’s how the chaos of matter is codified into life, some say. In Lawson’s world, a similar phenomenon takes place.  
    “I think for Deana there’s a metaphoric relevance of centropy in the organizing gaze of the camera as her medium,” Brinson said. It’s also about “bringing renewal to social disorder through the creative act.”
    Sure enough, “Centropy” has a powerful energy to it. It’s the energy that’s produced when an artist at the top of their game pushes their practice one step further, into the unknown. 
    “The Hugo Boss Prize 2020: Deana Lawson, Centropy” is on view now through October 11, 2021 at the Guggenheim in New York.
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    Police Detained Artist John Sims Without Warning in the Middle of the Night. He’s Taking His Power Back With a New Body of Work

    Last week at around 2 a.m., multidisciplinary artist John C. Sims was awoken by the sound of intruders storming his home. 
    Sims quickly grabbed his phone to call 911, jumping into the bathroom of his apartment, one reserved for the artist in residence at the 701 Center for Contemporary Art in Columbia, South Carolina. Sims’s solo exhibition, “AfroDixia: A Righteous Confiscation,” was in the adjacent building and features deconstructed, distorted, and reimagined presentations of Confederate symbols—including a lynching of the Confederate flag. 
    As an artist showing a body of work in the South centered on a critique of revisionist historical materials, Sims immediately feared that “some white supremacist mob or the KKK had come for my life,” he told me over Zoom this week. “I didn’t want to disappear in some underground torture chamber.” 
    When the intruders revealed themselves to be cops, Sims had to switch fear gears. He was taken back to his mother’s and every Black mother’s survival lesson. He prayed that the clanky radiator wouldn’t echo loudly enough to suggest that he had a gun. 
    Exhibition view, John Sims’s “AfroDixia: A Righteous Confiscation” at the 701 Center for Contemporary Art. Photo: courtesy of the artist.
    After multiple pleas for an explanation, and multiple attempts to identify himself as the artist in residence, he was seized, handcuffed, and detained for nearly eight minutes. “Why are you here?” one officer asked. 
    For Sims, this question was particularly gutting. “Black people are always in a defensive stance when we want to take up space. ‘Why are you here?’ they ask you. ‘What gives YOU license to do and say what you do?’”
    After the police ran his license, confirmed he was in fact the artist in residence, and released him from handcuffs, he felt the pendulum swing in his favor. He was lucky to be alive when the alternative could have been a death marred by a media narrative suggesting he had asked for trouble by staging a show disrespecting the Confederate flag in South Carolina. 
    Before the police drove off, he took a picture of their squad cars through the window. Immediately, he felt called to tap into his creative self—time was of the essence. He needed to translate his experience into art in order to stake a claim to the narrative before his voice got drowned out. 
    John Sims, A Near Death Residency: Reflections of a Black Artist/Space (2021). © John Sims
    The result is a new body of work that has already begun to take shape under the title “A Near Death Residency: Reflections of a Black Artist/Space, 2021.” So far, it consists of two parts: the only photo he was allowed to take as documentation of what happened on May 17, 2021, and an Artist Report he drafted in response to the police’s official incident report. This account will also provide the basis for a future film, a dramatic reenactment meant to turn the villainizing crime-show format on its head.
    Sims’s booming laughter rang through my speakers as we spoke. “The police may beat my ass, but once I’m robbed of the opportunity to tell my story, my trauma of how they beat my ass?” he said. “If you squash people at that level, you don’t have a democracy. You can’t have a democracy. If people don’t have the space to express their own voice, that is evidence of the American sham.” 
    ***
    The police department’s press release recounted a “police-citizen encounter” in which officers “noted an open door at the side of a building which is normally locked.” They entered with firearms drawn, the release stated, and “repeatedly identified themselves” as they pursued footsteps on the second floor of the building, where they placed “the man…in handcuffs to determine why he was in the building.” 
    Sims’s answer to the police’s statement, which he drafted hours after the intrusion, reclaims his personhood and respect by replacing the sanitized label of “citizen” with Artist Sims. “I mimic the energy” of the original report, he explained. “I’m saying, ‘You will respect me.’” 
    The document is styled like the one released by the authorities, with his “John Sims Projects” artist logo in place of the Columbia police department’s emblem and a case number of 3.14159265 (pi out to eight decimal points), a figure that Sims has been using in his art for years. 
    In the official incident report, the Columbia police chief referred to the refusal of the supervising officer to allow Sims to take a photograph of the cops in his home as “the only misstep” committed by law enforcement that night. Sims is determined to transform the police department’s reductive statement of “accountability” into an indelible body of work.
    The artist sees a clear line between his show, “AfroDixia,” which is about remixing artifacts of the Confederacy, and his new series, which comes out of a desire to drain law enforcement, which he calls the “cousins” of the KKK, of their power to intimidate, smear, and subjugate Black folks, stripping them of agency. 
    John Sims, A Group Hanging. Photo: courtesy of the artist.
    “I’m sure there are plenty of people who thought I’d shut up and just be an artist,” Sims said. Instead, he plans to start work on the next chapter: a film that brings together what happened to him, the significance of his art, and the precarious nature of his life as a Black artist. 
    “The writing paints the pictures and brings the bullets,” he said. “The film will create heat and drama around the boundaries of our sense of respect and respectability.” 
    ***
    The anniversary of George Floyd’s death has come and gone, along with calls for community reconciliation after John Sims’s encounter with police. Since the incident, the 701 Center has invited the Columbia city mayor, police chief, and city council members to Sims’s “AfroDixia,” which now radiates with heightened significance. 
    In a statement released on May 28, the 701 Center noted that “this was not the first occasion in which a resident of… the 701 Whaley Street building encountered a law enforcement officer searching the premises for a possible intruder.” But it was the first time, the statement noted, that “such an encounter led to hostile confrontation, detention, cuffing, and a records check.”
    While previous encounters “resulted in courteous apologies from officers,” there was a key difference: “Mr. Sims is a Black man; the other incidents involved a white man.”
    John Sims, Drag Flag. Photo: courtesy of the artist.
    Earlier this week, while showing the mayor, a Black man, Stephen K. Benjamin, around the gallery space, Sims was assured that he would be able to address the city council directly on Tuesday, June 1. 
    At the meeting, Sims will read his Artist Report to both the city council and representatives from community organizations who have pledged their support, including Black Lives Matter South Carolina and the National Action Network. 
    The reading will serve as the next phase of the “Near Death Residency” project, continuing the act of blending art with life, an artistic foray that Sims says was brought about by the cosmic combination of “AfroDixia,” his residency, the Southern city with its cotton-mill grounds, and the police—all players in a production for which life set the stage. 
    “I couldn’t have planned this,” he said. “The experience is now part of the work.”

    Read Sims’s Artist Report in full below.

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    17 Marvelous Highlights From the 2021 Venice Architecture Biennale, Where Hope and Optimism Abound

    After a year’s delay, the 17th Venice Biennale of Architecture opened last week with a sprawling series of exhibits, including a central exhibition, 61 national pavilions, and more than a dozen collateral events.
    And despite the difficulties of the past 18 months, the show (titled “How Will We Live Together?” and curated by Hashim Sarkis, dean of the School of Architecture and Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) remains upbeat.
    “At this moment, we are tired of dystopias,” Sarkis told Architectural Record. “We were looking for signs of hope and optimism, and we found a lot of it.”
    Here is a round up of some of the biennale’s highlights.

    Exhibits From the International Exhibition
    Studio Other Spaces, “Future Assembly”
    Studio Other Spaces, “Future Assembly” at Venice Architecture Biennale. Photo by Andrea Avezzù, courtesy of Atudio Other Spaces.
    Studio Other Spaces, founded by artist Olafur Eliasson and architect Sebastian Behmann, has put together an installation with work from 50 participants in the central pavilion in the Giardini. The presentation sits atop a massive carpet woven from recycled ocean plastic, and imagines a “Future World Assembly” where legislation protects the rights of entities beyond human beings, such as trees, fungi, and even rocks.

    Aerocene Foundation, “Museo Aero Solar for an Aerocene Era”
    Aerocene Foundation, “Museo Aero Solar for an Aerocene Era” in the international exhibition at the Venice Architecture Biennale. Photo by Marco Bertorello/AFP via Getty Images.
    The Aerocene Foundation is a nonprofit founded by Argentinian artist Tomás Saraceno. Its team of 200 spent the past two years stitching together the Museo Aero Solar, an inflatable floating sculpture that can fly without fossil fuels. It’s made from used plastic bags, thousands of which were collected from 30 countries around the world. The project’s hope is to usher in a new epoch free of fossil fuels to follow on the heels of the Anthropocene.

    Superflux, “Refuge for Resurgence”
    Superflux, “Refuge for Resurgence” at the Sylva Foundation in Didcot, Oxford, ahead of the Venice Architecture Biennale. Photo by Mark Cocksedge.
    Superflex welcomes visitors to a post-Anthropocene banquet where plants and animals have a seat at the table (made a massive slab of oak), with chairs made to seat 12 different species, including humans, reptiles, farm animals, birds, insects, and even rats and wasps. It’s part of an imagined future where wildlife has reclaimed our cities.

    Tomas Libertiny, “Beehive Architecture”
    A visitor views “Beehive Architecture” by Tomas Libertiny at Slovakia’s pavilion, on a press day at the 17th Venice Architecture Biennale in Venice on May 20, 2021. Photo by Marco Bertorello/AFP via Getty Images.
    “Beehive Architecture” is an exhibition of honeycomb sculptures created by swarms of more than 60,000 honeybees that take the shape of iconic forms, like Nefertiti’s bust, as well as more abstract figures. Tomas Libertiny provided the bees with 3-D printed armatures and let the bees go to town. He calls the process “slow manufacturing,” allowing for minimal intervention to the natural process. Debuting just after World Bee Day on May 20, the works are meant to raise awareness to the threats to the species, an essential pollinator.

    National Pavilions
    Dutch Pavilion, “Why Is We?”
    A visitor views “Why is We” by Afaina de Jong and Debra Solomon at the Dutch pavilion of the 17th Venice Architecture Biennale in Venice on May 19, 2021. Photo by Marco Bertorello/AFP via Getty Images.
    In response to the question posed by this year’s biennale exhibition, “How Will We Live Together?” architect Afaina de Jong and artist Debra Solomon want to know “Who Is We?” The Dutch pavilion, from the Het Nieuwe Instituut, offers a critique of architecture that is created with only a small group of mind, calling for design that is more inclusive of diverse identities.

    Swiss Pavilion “oræ – Experiences on the Border”
    Swiss Pavilion “oræ – Experiences on the Border” at the Venice Architecture Biennale. Photo by Keystone, Gaetan Bally.
    One of the most prescient international issues addressed at the biennale is that of borders: how they are drawn, who they keep in, and who they are meant to keep out. (The title, oræ, is Latin for borders.) In completing the project, the curators of this pavilion traveled to visit those living on the Swiss border, and invited them to construct an imagined or real place. A raft of border restrictions triggered by the global health crisis prompted the organizers to revisit original interview subjects to see how their perceptions had changed.

    Spanish Pavilion, “Uncertainty” More

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    The Artist Who Dumped 31 Tons of Carrots at Goldsmiths Last Year Is Back With a Museum Show (and, Yes, It Involves Many Perishables)

    The artist Rafael Pérez Evans, who gained notoriety for dumping 240,000 carrots (plus some potatoes) outside of Goldsmiths College, his alma mater, has just opened his first museum show—and while there’s nary a root vegetable in sight, there are several grain silos and a lake of milk.
    Greeting visitors at the entrance of the Henry Moore Institute in Leeds are two full-size grain silos, sourced from a manufacturer in Northern Ireland. The installation, titled Mountain, is inspired by the E.U. practice of stockpiling grain—which can send prices plummeting and threaten farmers’ livelihoods.
    “Since the 1970s, [there have been] policies of stocking masses of grain, butter, powdered milk—ridiculous amounts of food. They became known as grain mountains,” Evans told Artnet News.
    Rafael Pérez Evans, Mountain (2021). Photo courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.
    “This idea of food security and food protectionism is something that shakes the whole market. When such large quantities of food are stocked, it devalues food products and farmers get very upset,” he said. “I’ve always been very interested in how these fluctuations from the central government cause deep wounds for small-hold farmers.”
    Presented empty in the exhibition, “the silos become almost a metal carcass of excess,” Evans said. “It becomes a monument to that unsustainable, postindustrial way of thinking about food production.” (The silos are expected to go to a farm after the exhibition, but the artist will also entertain acquisition offers if there’s interest.)
    Rafael Pérez Evans, Handful (2021). Photo courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.
    A tiny pile of grain displayed inside the galleries, titled Handful, stands in stark opposition to the massive scale of both the silos and Evans’s infamous carrot pile.
    “During the lockdown, it has been important for me to become aware of what fits in my mouth and my stomach and my hand,” Evans said, and to work in opposition to this monumental, monstrous scale that is the industry of food.”
    Evans became an internet sensation with his contribution to Goldsmith’s annual MFA exhibition, which arrived at the school via truck and was unloaded in dramatic fashion: an orange tidal wave of 31 tons of root vegetables dumped on the school courtyard.

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    The piece, titled Grounding (2020), was intended as a condemnation of global food waste, using vegetables that had been deemed unfit for human consumption. It mimicked the farmer protests of dumping produce that are common in Spain, where Evans grew up on a farm.
    “It produced a lot of different conversations, and that’s a good thing,” Evans said. “That’s what protests are for, to open up conversations and dialogues about things that people don’t necessarily want to look into.”
    Now, Evans has again borrowed a popular farmers’ protest action by flooding one of the Henry Moore galleries with about an inch of milk for a work titled Lake. (It’s heavily cut with water and laced with preservatives to keep it from turning sour during the show.)
    Rafael Pérez Evans, Lake (2021). Photo courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.
    “The farmers dump milk in roads in city centers, and it it becomes a temporary lake of this white substance,” Evans said. “Small-hold farmers have no voice. So the milk becomes the voice. The dumping becomes the scream. They use produce to disturb the city.”
    The effect is somewhat different in a white cube space, where the pooling liquid “is staining the floor, making it white,” Evans added. “It becomes a meditative state.”
    The artist plans to bring in farmers from nearby Yorkshire for programming related to the exhibition, allowing them to speak directly to the issues that have inspired his work. “What can we learn from soil workers, from voices outside of the city?” Evans asked.
    He hopes to encourage conversations about what food production might look like in the future, such as Spanish writer Jaime Izquierdo Vallina’s notion of an “agripolitan city.”
    “It is reimagining a future in which agricultural production is integral to the running of the city,” Evans said. “Having the silos outside the Henry Moore Institute is a bit of a hint toward that imagined future.”
    See more photos from the exhibition below.
    Rafael Pérez Evans, Mountain (2021). Photo courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.
    Rafael Pérez Evans, Lake (2021). Photo courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.
    Rafael Pérez Evans, Handful (2021). Photo courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.
    Installation view of “Rafael Pérez Evans: Handful” at the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds. Photo courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.
    Rafael Pérez Evans, Lake (2021). Photo courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.
    Rafael Pérez Evans, Mountain (2021). Photo courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.
    Rafael Pérez Evans, Mountain (2021). Photo courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.
    Rafael Pérez Evans, Mountain (2021). Photo courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds.
    “Rafael Pérez Evans: Handful” is on view at the Henry Moore Institute, 74 The Headrow, Leeds LS1 3AH, May 18–August 29, 2021. 
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