Noelia Ariza

(Vacio y sin acentos hasta que sepa de que llenarlo)
Boredom+photo booth+snapseed

Boredom+photo booth+snapseed

mrkitly:

Doppelganger (gestalten)

mrkitly:

Doppelganger (gestalten)

ruineshumaines:

The obliteration room (2011) revisits the popular interactive  children’s project developed by Yayoi Kusama for the Queensland Art  Gallery’s ‘APT 2002: Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art’. In  this reworked and enlarged installation, an Australian domestic  environment is recreated in the gallery space, complete with locally  sourced furniture and ornamentation, all of which has been painted  completely white. While this may suggest an everyday topography drained  of all colour and specificity, it also functions as a blank canvas to be  invigorated — or, in Kusama’s vocabulary, ‘obliterated’ — through the  application, to every available surface, of brightly coloured stickers  in the shape of dots.
As with many of Kusama’s installations, the work is disarmingly  simple in its elemental composition; however, it brilliantly exploits  the framework of its presentation. The white room is gradually  obliterated over the course of the exhibition, the space changing  measurably with the passage of time as the dots accumulate as a result  of thousands and thousands of collaborators.

ruineshumaines:

The obliteration room (2011) revisits the popular interactive children’s project developed by Yayoi Kusama for the Queensland Art Gallery’s ‘APT 2002: Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art’. In this reworked and enlarged installation, an Australian domestic environment is recreated in the gallery space, complete with locally sourced furniture and ornamentation, all of which has been painted completely white. While this may suggest an everyday topography drained of all colour and specificity, it also functions as a blank canvas to be invigorated — or, in Kusama’s vocabulary, ‘obliterated’ — through the application, to every available surface, of brightly coloured stickers in the shape of dots.

As with many of Kusama’s installations, the work is disarmingly simple in its elemental composition; however, it brilliantly exploits the framework of its presentation. The white room is gradually obliterated over the course of the exhibition, the space changing measurably with the passage of time as the dots accumulate as a result of thousands and thousands of collaborators.