“Various shots of the visitors view artwork ‘Machine Hallucination’ by Turkish artist Refik Anadol at ARTECHOUSE in New York, United States on September 16, 2019.”
The “artwork” in question is an immersive room full of bitchin’ visuals.
That’s fantastic. I can get a bit reverse-snobby and “get off my lawn” about modern art sometimes, but this shows the real creative potential of modern technology. Stunning presentation.
I don’t want to threadshit like Bo but it was newish and impressive when Kubrick did it in 2001. Now it’s still cool and I want to go to there, but my life has been ruined by having a head crammed with a century of pop culture.
I don’t think he did so at all and I agree with him. It isn’t really new or cutting edge… unless you haven’t seen something similar be done before I guess.
It is cool looking, but the visitors didn’t look all that stunned to me. Some of those effects you could make with an old fashioned disco ball. Remember those? Them were some hot times, by cracky!
I liked some of the imagery, but found a lot of the sounds painful. What was most interesting to me was how people divided into those who sit still and absorb, those who have to move around, and those who have to view everything through their little cell phones. What did those people use as their filter before cell phones?
I seem to remember having to drag you away from a single case of Roman coins at the British Museum after half an hour by pleading that we would never make it through the rest of the museum at that rate!
Roman era, but they were Sassanian coins! Sassanian coins require at least an hour ;)!
I have to admit the British Museum in particular is peculiarly well-designed to distract me for days on end. It may be reprehensible in retrospect, but colonial looting on such a massive scale and then tightly concentrated like that is not far from heroin to me. It might be bad in general, but it feels great in the moment :p.
Yes, the tech isn’t ground breaking, but is that really the standard you judge art by? The electric guitar is about 90 years old, but people can still do amazing things with it.
I imagine this is much more impressive if you actually experience it, though, rather than watching a video.