MOSCOW.- Garage Center for Contemporary Cultures acclaimed Art Experiment will run until 23 January in Garage's new pavilion in Gorky Park.
The annual event, which began in 2010, enables visitors to interact with art in new and unexpected ways. Last years Art Experiment - which attracted over 6,000 visitors - invited participants to take over Garage for two days of painting, sticking, drawing, carving and baking, filling the space with their own ideas and creative energy. Participants were offered a series of surprising and surreal encounters with the magical and bizarre.
Taking inspiration from the universe and exploring the relationship between the microscopic and the macroscopic, artists from around the world have created installations that help visitors discover new ways of seeing. On entering Garage, visitors are met by the magical and incandescent CLOUD. Created by artists Caitlind r.c.Brown and Wayne Garrett and made from over 6,000 light bulbs, CLOUD allows visitors to control its illumination; collectively creating a storm, which flickers like lightning above. CLOUD provides the start of a fantastic journey, propelling the visitor through a series of dream-like encounters, discovering the secrets of the cosmos. What lies ahead will be both unexpected and wonderful; visitors are instructed to be imaginative, be creative and be prepared.
Activities
Fantasy Forest Visitors explore the magical forest within Garages entrance; transforming the trees with their own drawings and illustrations. This installation encourages visitors to start thinking creatively and make their own mark before entering Art Experiment.
Portrait Studio Visitors are encouraged to be daring and creative, inventing a new identity using performance to become a dreamer, an icon, an explorer or even an astronaut.These images are digitally layered with imagery by artist Nat Urazmetova and transformed into a photographic artwork to share with friends.
CLOUD This large-scale interactive installation by Canadian artists Caitlind r.c. Brown and Wayne Garret invites visitors to stand beneath the cloud and collectively make it flicker and pulsate by pulling on cords to dim and illuminate thousands of individual light bulbs.
ADA A large helium filled ball, studded with charcoal, floats in the gallery space as part of an interactive work created by artist Karina Smigla-Bobinski. Visitors can try to control the playful inflatable installation and experiment with the marks the ball creates on the surrounding walls, which accumulate with each collision.
PODS Singaporean artist Danielle Tay has created an extraordinary universe of pods, each offering the visitor a completely otherworldly experience. This immersive installation engages the senses of touch, smell and sound.
Micro-Worlds Visitors can let their imaginations run free as they design and create their own miniature worlds inside a half-sphere. In this workshop, participants are given the chance to imagine and build their own pods, each containing a micro universe. These are then exhibited, so that hundreds of individual worlds fill the gallery space.
Aquarius This labyrinth of tunnels and glowing chambers invites audiences to enter the Age of Aquarius. Artist Jason Hackenwerths ethereal installation takes the viewer on a symbolic journey, beyond the mind, to a place where time is suspended so that sound,movement and light may inform the heart.
Marble Fashion Artists Hsiao-Chi Tsai and Kimiya Yoshikawa have created A Sunshine, an installation where colorful moving images are superimposedonto mirrored and white sculptural surfaces. The work offers a powerful visual experience, which at once suggests both exotic flowers and infinite, cosmological formations. Visitors are invited to create their own marble fashion responding to the installation; experimenting with light, color and pattern.
Fruit Weather The fantastic duo Bompas & Parr return to Art Experiment with Fruit Weather, a fruit-based weather system for your tongue. The installation explodes fruit to the scale of buildings, spatializing flavor to become an immersive and inhabitable cloud.
Artists and practitioners:
Bompas & Parr (British food artists), Caitlind r.c. Brown (Canadian artist and filmmaker), Danielle Tay (Singaporean artist), Hsiao-Chi Tsai (Taiwanese artist), JasonHackenwerth (American artist), Karina Smigla-Bobinski (Polish-German artist), Kimya Yoshikawa (Japanese artist), Nat Urazmetova (Russian-British artist and media creator) and Wayne Garrett (Canadian artist and musician)
Bompas & Parr
Bompas & Parr's work focuses on theinterrelationship between synaesthesia, performance and setting. From just Sam Bompas and Harry Parr in 2007, when Bompas & Parr was founded, the studio has slowly grown to its current structure in response to the possibility ofgenerating a wide-range of projects. The studio now consists of a team of about 10 people, from cooks and specialized technicians, to architects, graphic designers and administrators. In addition to the projects realized in-house, Bompas & Parr contract structural engineers and other specialists, and collaborate with curators, cultural practitioners and scientists. They havepreviously created works for the Barbican Art Gallery; Institute of Contemporary Art, London; London Design Festival; Selfridges; San FranciscoMuseum of Modern Art; Serpentine Gallery; Victoria & Albert Museum and the Wellcome Collection.
Caitlind r.c. Brown and Wayne Garrett
CLOUD is co-created by Canadian artists Caitlind r.c. Brown and Wayne Garrett. Based in Calgary, Brown and Garrett collaborate frequently, working with diverse mediums and materials, ranging from 16mm celluloid to re-appropriated architectural waste. The duoexplores themes of public interaction, art in unexpected spaces, re-use of domestic waste and community collaboration. Their work CLOUD was first shown as part of the Nuit Blanche festival in Calgary in 2012. The artists are presently creating a second edition of CLOUD on-site at Garage Center for Contemporary Culture for Art Experiment in 2013. This will be the first time CLOUD has been shown outside of Canada.
Danielle Tay
Danielle Tay (b. 1990) is a Singaporeanartist who completed her Diploma in Fine Arts at Lasalle College of the Arts in 2010 and is currently pursuing her Bachelors degree at Slade School of Fine Art (UCL). Her entry for the Sovereign Asian Art Prize was selected and exhibited under the next 20 best Singaporean artworks section for the 2010 Sovereign Asian Art Prize exhibition in 2010. Her first solo exhibition was at TriSpace and entitled Disposable Cities.
Hsiao-Chi Tsai and Kimiya Yoshikawa
The work of internationally acclaimed London-based artists Hsiao-Chi Tsai (b.1981, Taiwan) and Kimiya Yoshikawa (b.1980, Japan) derives from a fascination with color, shape and form, together with an appreciation of intricate detail and pattern. Working with modern materials and techniques, they create dynamic works that are vibrant and engaging by daylight yet take on an entirely different character in the dark. Recent sculptural commissions include the award-winning public sculpture The Lion for London Chinatown, a series of large-scale window installations for the department store Harvey Nichols, London, UK and most recently, an outdoor sculpture for Hamamatsu City, Japan. Exhibitions include a solo show at PM Gallery & House, London, as well as group shows Very Fun Park at the Fubon Art Foundation, Taiwan and Origin, shown as part of London design week.
Jason Hackenwerth
Jason Hackenwerth was born in 1970 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA, and he currently lives and works in New York. In 2011, he received the Pollock-Krasner Foundation grant. Hackenwerths sculptural practice incorporates non-conventional and ephemeral materials, notably the use of balloons. He has held solo shows at the Guggenheim Museum, Art Basel Miami Beach, the Hong Kong Art Fair and the Victoria & Albert Museum, London.
Karina Smigla-Bobinski
Karina Smigla-Bobinski was born in Stettin, Poland and currently lives and works as a freelance artist in Munich and Berlin, Germany. She studied painting and visual communication at the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow, Poland and Munich, Germany. She is an inter-media artist working with both analog and digital mediums and has exhibited internationally, at venues including FILE Electronic LanguageInternational Festival in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; FACT Foundation for Art and Creative Technology in Liverpool, UK; Festinova - InternationalFestival of Contemporary Art, Georgia; VideoAKT Biennal in Berlin, Germany;LOOP Video Art Fair in Barcelona, Spain; Busan Biennale, South Korea; Museo al Aire Libre in Ciudad de la Escultura in Mérida, Mexico and La Biennale di Venezia, Italy.
Nat Urazmetova
Nat Urazmetova is a London-based visual artist and communicator, media creator and entrepreneur, born in Ufa, Bashkortostan, former USSR. A graduate of Goldsmiths College, Master of Arts in Digital Media, Urazmetovas practice includes video and photography, multi-projection environments and live audio-visual performance. Her previous clients include Action Film, Afisha Industries, Artchronika, Barclaycard, Billboard, Domino Records, Leo Burnett, Millennium Images, Rough Trade, Roundhouse and Virgin Atlantic.