You're swimming through water clear enough to see the green, brown and red branches and vines of plant life that inhabit it. It's loud in the way that water can be, like a white noise of nature, but there are no voices. You come up briefly for air, passing through bubbles and ripples as you push through and carry on down the river.
You're swimming through water clear enough to see the green, brown and red branches and vines of plant life that inhabit it. It's loud in the way that water can be, like a white noise of nature, but there are no voices. You come up briefly for air, passing through bubbles and ripples as you push through and carry on down the river.
The North Carolina Museum of Art (NCMA) will lead its spring schedule with the blockbuster exhibition Fault Lines: Art and the Environment, on view April 2 to July 17, 2022, highlighting contemporary artists’ responses to current environmental concerns through an immersive multimedia exhibition and outdoor sculpture installations. Curated by the NCMA, Fault Lines includes works by 13 artists, including John Akomfrah, Olafur Eliasson, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Allison Janae Hamilton, Richard Mosse, .
The North Carolina Museum of Art (NCMA) announces a major reinstallation of the People’s Collection. The reimagined presentation, the first complete reorganization since the opening of West Building in 2010,