This was one of the most amazing things I saw at the Seattle Asian Art Museum recently—this cube of intricately cut metal, lit from within, that turned the whole room into an artistic interplay of darkness and light.
-
This was one of the most amazing things I saw at the Seattle Asian Art Museum recently—this cube of intricately cut metal, lit from within, that turned the whole room into an artistic interplay of darkness and light. Casting all the visitors into the installation; shadows on the walls.

@alice Wicked cool, great pic too
-
This was one of the most amazing things I saw at the Seattle Asian Art Museum recently—this cube of intricately cut metal, lit from within, that turned the whole room into an artistic interplay of darkness and light. Casting all the visitors into the installation; shadows on the walls.

@alice oh wow!
-
This was one of the most amazing things I saw at the Seattle Asian Art Museum recently—this cube of intricately cut metal, lit from within, that turned the whole room into an artistic interplay of darkness and light. Casting all the visitors into the installation; shadows on the walls.

@alice plot twist- originally from Pakistan, she's been living and teaching in the US for many years. Was lucky enough to see her first solo exhibition in my state in person a few years ago. A room full of her stuff stays with you. Definitely worth a trip if her work is on display anywhere near your town.
-
This was one of the most amazing things I saw at the Seattle Asian Art Museum recently—this cube of intricately cut metal, lit from within, that turned the whole room into an artistic interplay of darkness and light. Casting all the visitors into the installation; shadows on the walls.

@alice I LOVE this piece. I think it was on tour with a show called You Are Here: Light, Color, and Sound Experience some years ago. I saw it once at the NC Art Museum.
https://ncartmuseum.org/exhibition/you-are-here-light-color-and-sound-experience/
I remember the artist statement too-- IIRC it was something to the effect of the artist was trying to find a way to capture the feeling of sacredness and immense beauty that they saw in their (masque?) growing up, and wanted to make any room feel just as sacred. I'd say this did it!
The exhibit this was on tour with also had a room with like 50 speakers, each one tied to a single singer as everyone was singing in chorus. You could kind of walk around the room and experience each unique voice during the song.
I hope that exhibit heads your way soon too! It's worth a listen.
EDIT: Upon further inspection, I can see that this is a slightlg different piece, though it may be the same artist? Not sure, but still cool.
-
This was one of the most amazing things I saw at the Seattle Asian Art Museum recently—this cube of intricately cut metal, lit from within, that turned the whole room into an artistic interplay of darkness and light. Casting all the visitors into the installation; shadows on the walls.

@alice did you catch who the artist(s) was(were)?
-
@Knitronomicon UK IP address?
-
@alice did you catch who the artist(s) was(were)?
-
@Knitronomicon we block images/video in the UK because of the poorly-worded online child safety act.
-
@alice thank you. Amazing piece! Will try to check it out in person
-
This was one of the most amazing things I saw at the Seattle Asian Art Museum recently—this cube of intricately cut metal, lit from within, that turned the whole room into an artistic interplay of darkness and light. Casting all the visitors into the installation; shadows on the walls.

@alice i used to work at an art library at a school where anila was on the faculty and she was always giving us shit, like "wheres my ILLs at? i need these books held on course reserve pronto" etc. big time library user. i really liked her a lot.
i don't think a lot of the students realized that she was kinda a big deal.
-
R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic