Rubell Museum re-opens two Yayoi Kusama Infinity Rooms
Yayoi Kusama, INFINITY MIRRORED ROOM LETS SURVIVE FOREVER, 2017. Photo credit Chi Lam, courtesy of the Rubell Museum.
MIAMI, FLA
.- Beginning June 23, visitors can experience the Rubell Museums two Infinity Rooms by Yayoi Kusama for the first time since March 2020. These celebrated fully immersive works create a kaleidoscopic effect that transports visitors to an alternate, limitless universe.
Where the Lights in My Heart Go, 2016 and INFINITY MIRRORED ROOM LETS SURVIVE FOREVER, 2017 are the only Infinity Rooms on view in the Southeastern United States.
The Rubell Museum is also featuring Kusamas mesmerizing, monumental Narcissus Garden, (1966 ). Composed of 700 stainless steel spheres, the work flows 200 feet along the museums central hall, creating an everchanging river of reflection that beckons and visually teases visitors as they walk through and along it.
âHere comes a fast one,â Skadal said.
Students from Napa s Silverado Middle School set up a speed lab as part of an 8th grade science project studying motion. Don t worry, they weren t giving out tickets. Jennifer Huffman, Register
Signs at the school note a 25 mph speed limit, but many vehicles seemed to be going quite a bit faster.
Kashin Adams, 8th grader, said the Speed Lab was one of the first projects heâs been able to do outside this year. âIf I was at home on Zoom, it wouldnât be as much fun.â
âItâs easier to learn in person,â said Cassidy Jones, also an 8th grader. âItâs funâ to see the reactions of the drivers once they notice kids recording them during the Speed Lab, she said.
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K ART Announces Two New Exhibitions That Address Violence Against Women
Brought to Light brings together five Native artists: Natalie Ball; Luzene Hill; Sonya Kellihercombs; Jodi Lynn Maracle; and Julia Rose Sutherland. by BWW News Desk
K Art has announced the details for its newest exhibitions. Set to open Friday, April 30, 2021, in K Art s 2,000 square-foot gallery space, Brought to Light: The Epidemic of Violence against Indigenous Women addresses devastating statistics of violence. Compared to any other group, Native American women in the United States are more than twice as likely to experience violence; 84% of Native women have experienced violence in their lifetime. In 2016 alone, there were 5,712 known incidences of murdered or missing Native women. Canada has categorized this human rights crisis as genocide and has undergone a national inquiry into murdered and missing Indigenous women and girls.