Not exact matches
You may want to visit the Everglades, or explore Key West, have a great time at South Beach, or
view a sunset by Biscayne Bay, experience Little Havana, enjoy the exotic
animals at the Miami Zoo, or visit the Kennedy
Space Center.
In the two videos on
view in this exhibition, Dana Levy contrasts dead specimens with intruding live
animals: released into a
space designed to contain them, butterflies flutter amid their flattened cousins and doves perch by packaged kin.
Additional works in the exhibition include Thirty - eight works by Andy Warhol, four bronze sculptures depicting figures who are part human,
animal and machine by William Kentridge illustrating social and political life in South Africa; and Olafur Eliasson's Fivefold Sphere Projection Lamp which compels us to
view ourselves in relation to
space as well as time.
A
view of Ryan McGinley's Grids on
view at Team Gallery's Wooster Street gallery in conjunction with his show
Animals at the Grand Street
space.
Janice Caswell connects swarms of colored dots with drawn lines — tracing human (and sometimes
animal) movements to create delicate, bird's eye
views of how urban
space is traversed.
I'd say it'd be more apocalyptic (as per Dr. Venkman's «dogs and cats, living together» dictum) if the
animals were migrating to environments * more * likely to result in their extinction;) Having said that, I acknowledge that a common
view is that humanity is doing exactly that — not a physical migration, but an enforced anthropogenic man - handling of the entire biosphere towards a bad neighborhood in Earth's «state
space», where we risk being stabbed by shadowy tipping points, mugged by run - away processes and distressed at the sight of an anoxic ocean vomiting over the local fauna.