An Occupation of Loss

An Occupation of Loss, an installation and performance piece designed by OMA/Shohei Shigematsu in collaboration with artist Taryn Simon, runs at New York's Park Avenue Armory from 13 to 25 September 2016. 

Photo: Naho Kubota

World premiere at Park Avenue Armory, NY: "Each night at sundown, more than thirty professional mourners populate Simon’s sculptural installation, broadcasting their lamentations. The status of the lamenters as professionals—performing away and apart from their usual contexts—underscores the tension between authentic and staged emotion, spontaneity and script. Open during the daytime, visitors are invited to activate the sculpture of inverted wells with their own sounds.  A subtle drone created from distilled recordings of the mourners’ rituals provides a white noise that echoes the evening performances.

The resulting work blends sculpture, sound, architecture, and performance in a monumental exploration of the boundaries of grief between living and dead, past and present, performer and viewer."

Christo and Jeanne-Claude: The Floating Piers

Amazing work of art! Such a free spirit! Floating Piers is the latest poetic work of Christo and Jeanne-Claude. In this entry I will include articles and images from the artist's official web site, journalists and photographers, ordinary people and friends, artists and admirers, all enjoying Christo's walk over the water. Cannot wait to visit it at Lago D'Iseo, Italy; June 18th-July3, 2016 

And for my Bulgarian friends, here is a great article. За всички приятели от Бьлгария препорьчвам тази великолепна статия: Защо обичат Кристо.

Easter Island Heads....Have Bodies!

The Easter Island heads have bodies! It's not known exactly why the bodies were buried or if they are buried on purpose. The figures were carved between years 1250 and 1500 by the Rapa Nui people. Archaeologists have documented 887 of the massive sculptures, known as moai, carved on the Chilean Polynesian island of Easter Island. The Easter Island bodies were news to us, but apparently archaeological research on the island located 2,000 miles west of Chile began over century ago, in 1914.

Photo: courtesy the Easter Island Statue Project.

Photography

Two great artists are showing their work in Chelsea this week. Don't miss them!

JOSEF KOUDELKA at Pace Gallery

Julian Cox observes:  There is something somber and disquieting about Koudelka’s panoramas. On the one hand, they are statements of fact and unstintingly particular in what they describe, but, on the other, they also function as a system of ideas as well as a ravishing feast for the eyes. Their beauty captivates, even if they do not provide an entirely hopeful picture for today or tomorrow. . . .

ERWIN OLAF at Hasted Kraeutler 

Describing Olaf’s work, the gallery’s website explains, “A compelling frisson is generated in the space between his superficially sleek surfaces and the depth of emotion they convey; between their expressive power and their formal silence. Every work Olaf produces is characterized by an almost overpowering energy of potential and poise, hovering in a place where all action is merely suggested or insinuated”.