LOS ANGELES, CA.- This October 5, 2024, from 7 PM to 11:30 PM,
LUMINEX 3.0: Landscape Frequencies will bring art and community together in an engaging outdoor exhibition using the LA cityscape as a canvas. Multimedia artists JOJO ABOT, Refik Anadol, Alice Bucknell, Nao Bustamante, Petra Cortright, Marc Horowitz, Carole Kim, Alan Nakagawa, Sarah Rara, and LAVA (Los Angeles Video Artists) will transform a five-block radius in the South Park District of downtown, with film, sound art installations, performances, and multichannel works starting from West 11th Street & Margo St, Los Angeles.
Titled Landscape Frequencies, surrealism, absurdism, fragility, voyersim and abstractions of nature aim to reframe our actions, consider the connections between us and our surroundings Alice Bucknells The Alluvials explores the politics of drought and water scarcity in Los Angeles, Refik Anadols new work, Artificial Realities: California Landscapes, incorporates a raw dataset of 153 million publicly available landscape images of Californias National Parks, Petra Cortrights surrealist scenes exude beauty, optimism, and freedom, and Carole Kims live performance and projected images dive into memory and the landscape of the mind.
On October 5, as the sun goes down, Los Angeles distinct downtown architecture will transform into an outdoor canvas.
Artwork and locations
Alice Bucknells The Alluvials 2024 is a video game and film project exploring the politics of drought and water scarcity in Los Angeles through historical research and speculative fiction. It features nonhuman playable characters and blends cinematic modding, custom diffusion models, and drone mapping. The 2024 game includes four levels, each reimagining a gaming genre with an ecological lens. This entirely new, bespoke immersive audiovisual experience of The Alluvials will be made specifically for LUMINEX and will focus on the nonhuman characters that populate the game engine worlds of the project, produced in Unreal Engine and supported by Epic MegaGrants. It will feature a brand new score by the electronic musician Ken Yama and new graphic design elements by the designer Tom Joyes.
Petra Cortright presents an environment that encourages reflection and relaxation. Inspired by the enchanting description of the Sea of Flowers in the book of Narnia, Cortright creates a surrealist landscape that resonates deeply with themes of serenity and escapism. By appealing to urban audiences, Cortright encourages viewers to immerse themselves in the work where the boundaries between reality and imagination blur. The emphasis on beauty, optimism, and possibility in this piece provides a refreshing contrast to urban life.
Cortright's work is deeply rooted in the history of painting, reflecting a continuity with artists like Caspar David Friedrich and Claude Monet, who explored nature and human fragility. Her landscapes recall the delicate and transient beauty of Monet's works and the sublime power found in Friedrich's. This Romantic sensibility permeates Cortrights filmed scenes, blending traditional influences with her unique contemporary vision.
Sarah Raras multi-disciplinary practice including video, sound, performance, and writing explores the position of witness within fragile systems. Their work in video and sound considers gender, technology, disability, and illness in connection with environmental research. ORCHIS KISS (2024) is a video and sound work that examines orchid flowers and their relationship to gender, queerness, politics, and desire. Wildly diverse, gender-bending, and found in nearly every habitat on Earth, ORCHIS KISS looks at the natural and cultural histories of the orchid as queer-coded while also wielding it as a symbol of military and economic power.
Marc Horowitz's site-specific performance, Extremely Limited, takes place in a 10'x10' room in a parking lot, featuring a large fan on one side and a serving window on the other. Horowitz must complete and package a small sculpture within three minutes and then serve it through a window. If he fails, a large fan creates chaos until the artwork is delivered. Inspired by Byung-Chul Han's critique of burnout culture, this two-hour performance explores time and productivity pressures, using humor and improvisation to challenge conventional notions of art and audience engagement.
Nao Bustamante will reprise her work Brown Disco, inviting the spectator to defamiliarize the optical trick by which a disco ball disperses light into fantasy. At once light source and spaceship, this exuberant installation interposes itself into the art historical debate over minimalisms theatricality. Bustamante has long been one of the theorists and practitioners of brownness, seen here as the uncanny and sometimes awkward alchemy that happens when bodies collide. Brown Disco is a soft memorial, emphasizing the care and comfort we find in the club.
Carole Kim's Chronicles of Touch: HOWDOESYOURMEMORYWORK is a textural/textual exploration of questions surrounding our relationship to memory, looping, tracing, and slippage. Joining Kim for this multimedia durational performance will be a stellar ensemble of dance, music, and live visual performers poised to jump into the soup of co-creation and discovery in the moment.
JOJO ABOT's Re.Member is a performance, sound/musical score, and projected video installation, a spiritual call to gather oneself and reclaim our worth by reconnecting with our true essence. It encourages integrating fragmented parts of ourselves and rediscovering lost aspects, releasing outdated beliefs for a deeper, authentic truth that nourishes life. Embedded in our DNA and cellular memory is a profound reservoir of generational wisdom, providing resources for wholeness and interconnectedness. By re.membering, we dissolve illusions of separation and uncover inherent love, recognizing the unity of all existence. JOJO ABOTs work explores the abilities of new and ancient technologies for universal healing. In her artmaking and rituals, the artist draws from her heritage as an Ewe woman from West Africa and her nomadic lived experiences across the globe.
Refik Anadol's Artificial Realities: California Landscapes is an AI Data Sculpture that explores humans relationship to nature and has been represented in countless ways throughout art history, from realist landscape paintings to expressionist depictions of earthly colors. In this new work, Anadol uses a thinking brush and paints with data to show how human-machine collaborations can help us experience nature in a new light. For this the studio worked with a raw dataset of 153 million publicly available landscape images of Californias National Parks. Refik Anadol Studio is thrilled to give back to the city that embraced their art practice. Anadols pursuit to express a new concept of AI-based art by creating digital pigments initiated his journey from Istanbul to Los Angeles and, in turn, created the grounds for this artwork. This series of dynamic, immersive landscapes offers an insight into Anadols decade-long AI-based art practice in LA through a California-focused thematic lens.
Alan Nakagawas Conical Sound: Simon Rodia/ Antoni Gaudi is an audio installation incorporating acoustics recorded from within the Sagrada Familia in Barcelona, Spain, and Watts Towers in Los Angeles. This work is an audio mash-up representing the two unique and world-renowned buildings creating a third space of invisible architecture. Six large industrial lounge recliners, bathed in pink and yellow lights, surround an existing palm tree in the South Park Commons. Participants feel the vibratory sound as sounds play, resonating throughout the recliners.
LAVA (Los Angeles Video Artists) will curate its groundbreaking artist collective at the AVEN showroom and host a BYOB (Bring.Your.Own.Beamer) at Morrison Alleyway. VIDEO FLING will showcase cutting-edge creative technology artists and artworks. The mini-exhibition features innovative audio and visual installations that captivate and inspire, exploring the dynamic interplay between sound and visuals. A key highlight is the panoramic window projections, transforming AVEN into a living canvas of light and color, inviting visitors to engage with art in a new and interactive way. LAVA will also curate an immersive outdoor video projection art show inspired by BYOB events. Rogue projection mappers, guerilla projectionists, and avant-garde artists will transform the Morrison Hotel alleyway into a dynamic canvas.
With a mission to unify and make art accessible, LUMINEX is always free and open to the public. The award-winning organization has drawn an audience of more than 40,000 in-person attendees to its previous iterations and hundreds of thousands of online impressions. It has received critical acclaim and worldwide attention. This years exhibition is organized and managed by the Los Angeles public art organization NXT Art Foundation, the non-profit arm of NOW Art.