![]() ![]() In a departure, or maybe expansion is a better word, there are no soundsuits in his installation at MASS MoCA in North Adams, Mass. The soundsuits brought Cave to the attention of the art world and he's created over 500 of them. That work, which Cave began after the police beating of Rodney King in Los Angeles in 1991, soon began to blend elements of African masquerade and America thrift store kitsch. Inside the suits, race, gender (and immigration status, class, etc.) are rendered moot. His ongoing project of building elaborately decorated suits (shown as sculptures or donned by performers) grew out of a desire to create body armor to defend from outside forces who would profile him based on his skin color. 1.Īdmission: $18 adults, $16 seniors/veterans, $12 students with I.D., $8 kids (6-16), free to kids 5 and under and museum members. to 5 p.m., closed Tuesdays and Christmas Day. Goldsmith Foundation, the Barr Foundation, the Massachusetts Cultural Council, the National Endowment for the Arts, Jack Shainman Gallery, Marilyn and Larry Fields, and the Robert Lehman Foundation.Where: MASS MoCA, 1040 MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, Mass. This exhibition is supported by the Horace W. This is Nick Cave from the inside out, on a grand theatrical scale. “I view this work as a theater set, or an elaborate community forum, as much as a work of sculpture,” he notes. Cave believes in humanity, celebrating possibility while also creating a forum for sharp debate and critical discussion. The aim of this is pointed, sparking discussion about important issues in a space that is at once dazzling, provocative, and-ultimately-optimistic. ![]() This is an active space where alluring kinetics and a sumptuous materiality are suddenly punctuated by images of guns, bullets, and targets, positioning us all as culpable, vulnerable, and potentially under attack. Until begins with a dense sculptural field of metallic lawn ornaments leading to a crystal cloud topped by a private garden populated with birds, flowers, and black-face lawn jockeys, finally coming to rest before a cliff wall constructed of millions of plastic pony beads. For Cave’s new MASS MoCA installation, Until-a double play on the phrase “innocent until proven guilty” or in this case, perhaps, “guilty until proven innocent”-Cave addresses issues of gun violence, gun control policy, and race relations in America today. ![]() Just as the violence of the Rodney King beating was the impetus to Cave’s early work, the death of men such as Eric Garner, Trayvon Martin, and Michael Brown drive his new imagery. Often seen as celebrations of movement and material, the first Soundsuit, made out of twigs, was a direct response to the Rodney King beating, a visual image about social justice that was both brutal and energizing. ![]() The exhibition will also be used as a performance space. Conceived as a one-year concatenation of community events, music, theater, and art, Until incorporates special appearances by dancers, singer-songwriters, pop artists, poets, and composers, together with panel discussions, community forums, and other forms of creative public debate and engagement. Instead, Cave uses MASS MoCA’s signature football field-sized space to create his largest installation to date, made up of thousands of found objects and millions of beads, which will make viewers feel as if they have entered a rich sensory tapestry, like stepping directly inside the belly of one of his iconic Soundsuits. The artist celebrated for his wearable sculptures called Soundsuits turns expectations inside out at MASS MoCA in a massive immersive installation opening October 16, 2016, where not a single Soundsuit will be found. If you think you know Nick Cave, think again. “And then I wondered: Is there racism in heaven? That’s how this piece came about.” Read the full profile in The New York Times. “A paradisiacal landscape where jockeys appear - made from the crystals that would normally go into chandeliers, on a raised platform accessible via four ladders - is the heart of “Until.” “I had been thinking about gun violence and racism colliding,” Mr. RSVP to 413.664.4481 x8112 or join us afterwards for a concert in the Hunter Center with Benjamin Clementine at 8:30pm. ![]()
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