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To Consider

Fine Art

May 14, 2008

Take Your Time: Olafur Eliasson at MoMA

New York's MoMA is an overwhelming experience, especially on a Saturday morning when, it seems, everyone in Manhattan goes out to get a little culture. My preference is to see a limited number of exhibits but to experience them deeply, so my mother and I concentrated on the Book/Shelf exhibit and an extraordinary passage of discovery that is Olafur Eliasson's Take Your Time.

Eliasson has described the viewer's experience of his artwork as "seeing yourself seeing." This statement captures my own impression perfectly; I did not look at the exhibit as much as I inhabited it. For example, in the work entitled I only see things when they move, an elaborate light-refracting mechanism occupied the center of a room, casting prismatic panes of light around the room, against which the silhouettes of museum spectators were cast in sharp outline. For example, here are my mother and myself:

Olafur Eliasson, "I only see things when they move"

Outside on the third-floor landing, another work entitled Room for One Colour involved the installation of a huge number of monochromatic yellow lights, which created a sharply-defined visual field reminiscent of sepia photographs. In fact, the light was perfect for taking photos, so I shot one of my mom:

Mom, Olafur Eliasson "Room for One Colour"

Occupying Eliasson's works compelled me to take photographs, and this is what makes his "seeing yourself seeing" characterization so apt; his work requires you to participate, not merely to stand and view. A truly remarkable experience, if you get to be in New York while Take Your Time is on exhibit, go and put yourself in the picture, too.

Other resources:

A video overview:

YouTube playlist of videos about Olafur Eliasson

May 09, 2008

I Want to Believe: Cai Guo Qiang at the Guggenheim

China's transformation into a market economy has also released the pent-up expressions of its artists. Cai Guo-Qiang's remarkable exhibit at the Guggenheim is a case in point: occupying the entire rotunda space of the famous New York structure, the exhibit displays the remarkable breadth of Cai's work. From collectively-created clay sculptures to gunpowder paintings to life-sized packs of dogs, the exhibit traces the twists and rolls of an uniquely supple mind.

Other images and resources for this exhibit:

NYT slideshow of the I Want to Believe exhibit

Guggenheim's virtual exhibit

YouTube playlist of Cai Guo-Qiang related videos, including pyrotechnic events. Check out the pyrotechnic events Cai has staged, these are truly amazing feats!