Over Easter weekend, I went up to LA. While I was there we went to what has turned out to be one of the most memorable art exhibits I've ever seen. The exhibit is called Ashes and Snow and features photographs of artist Gregory Colbert. The subject of each large-scale photo is people with animals. Animals such as elephants, cheetahs, hawks, lions, whales, apes, and more. When looking at the photos it's hard to believe they were not created in Photoshop or manipulated in any way. Nor are they stills from the three films that are also part of the exhibit. There are photos of women with lions, children with cheetahs, people with elephants, and a dancer with a hawk. In none of the photos does it look like the animal is attacking or dangerous to the human. As mom said, the animals look protective of the people. The photos are not labeled to titled, so the viewer can draw his or her own conclusions. Each photo has an element of the surreal and there is something mystical about the relationship between the animal and the human.
There are also three films that are of people and animals, too. Two are shorter and one is an hour. The films are sort of extensions of the photographs. Seeing the interaction on film completely erases any lingering doubts about the validity of the photos. One of my favorite sequences is of an Egyptian dancer with a hawk. The still photographs of her are stunning and then to see the film of the dance with the bird swooping above and around her is really amazing. The entire sequence is graceful and full of unexpected beauty, with just a touch of danger because you don't really know what that bird is going to do. The dancer keeps dancing as if she is completely unaware the bird is even there. That's actually how many of the people behave in the films. The people are sitting, walking, dancing, or whatever with the animals all around them but not directly interacting with them. And everyone - the people and animals - are so calm. In one part of a film, there is a boy/girl laying down on a sand dune with his/her eyes shut surrounded by panting cheetahs.
The exhibit space for this show is equally as unusual and also demands some of the viewers attention. The space is called the Nomadic Museum. It is constructed out of "152 steel cargo containers stacked 34 feet high combined with largely recyclable and reusable materials to form the structural elements." Really do click on the link above to see photos of this structure and the inside of the exhibit. Go to "Exhibitions" then to "Nomadic Museum" then to "Santa Monica Pier" to see what I saw. The interior of the space is dark and one can't help but whisper because it resembles a cathedral. The noisy ouside world completely disappears. It's dark with only the photos lit with spotlights. The photos are not framed, but suspended in midair by wires. The museum is built on the beach right next to the pier, but we weren't walking on sand. There is a boardwalk surrounded by black stones. Extremely minimalist decor.
The Ashes and Snow website doesn't list any more US dates yet, and the show has closed in Santa Monica. It is going to Japan next. I told my friends at work about this show and one of them did go up on the last weekend to see it. She was so glad she did. She took her husband, eight year-old daughter, and in-laws. All of them loved it.
It's really an exhibit that you come out of feeling like there is something different. Actually, the reentry to civilization in the parking lot at the noisy, neon, Santa Monica pier is somewhat jarring and an interesting foil for the calm, dark, peaceful experience. Walking among the evening crowd at the pier when we had finished, I felt like I had just been part of something extraordinarily special that they had no clue about. Yet, it was so close and all they had to do was walk across the parking lot to experience it for themselves.
Maybe the Nomadic Museum will come back to the US and all of you can experience it too.
Our Newest Member of the Family, Gracie!
14 years ago
2 comments:
Wow. After that review, I regret not going on two possible occasions I had to see it. Doh! Sounds like I would have loved it.
You got as lot more out of this exhibit that I did! Your description was very good and helped me see it again in my mind.
Post a Comment