Installation Art Roundup: Feminism, Fantasy, and Technology
A roundup of installation art news from artcritical covers diverse themes and artists. MoMA re-stages a 1995 installation by a Japanese performance, tech, and collaboration innovator. A Turner Prize-winning artist and musician's exhibition is on view at the Park Avenue Armory. Wolfson's animatronic boy installation is described as uncanny and awesome. Other shows include a retrospective on feminism and fantasy, a Costa Rica exhibition on collecting artifacts, and an artist using domestic tableaux with screens and ersatz furnishings. The roundup also features a performance and sound artist uniting people in collective experience, and an exhibition using Borgesian parodies of organization.
Key facts
- MoMA re-stages a 1995 installation by a Japanese artist known for performance, tech, and collaboration.
- A Turner Prize-winning artist and musician's exhibition is at the Park Avenue Armory.
- Wolfson's animatronic boy installation is described as uncanny and awesome.
- An artist takes on feminism and fantasy in a retrospective.
- Concurrent solo shows in Costa Rica's capital explore the artifacts of collecting.
- A performance, installation, and sound artist unites people in collective experience.
- An artist's domestic tableaux use screens and ersatz furnishings to scrutinize the real world.
- An exhibition uses Borgesian parodies of organization.
Entities
Artists
- Wolfson
Institutions
- MoMA
- Park Avenue Armory
Locations
- Greenwich, Connecticut
- Costa Rica