Miami International Airport (MIA) offers a quarterly screening series featuring contemporary art and image-making by South Florida-based video artists.
On view now near Gate J7 is a series of short experimental films and video art addressing themes of migration, travel, and journeys that are both physical and surreal. The work on view is by artists Carola Bravo, Claudio Marcotulli and Dinorah de Jesús Rodríguez.
Here’s a video of Migration Dreams #3, from Carola Bravo’s series of video art inspired by The Migration Series and Bravo’s own history as a Venezuelan immigrant.
Claudio Marcotulli’s feature, Remo Memories is an avant-doc short film about a journey through childhood, memory, and water.
And Casas viajantes, by Dinorah de Jesús Rodríguez, mixes handmade celluloid film with digital video and includes footage of the artist’s family’s immigration journey.
The all-access Club at MSY should open early next year and a United Airlines club lounge is promised in 2020.
Stuck at The Airport stopped into the Delta Sky Club during an opening day tour of the airport. We are delighted to report that in addition to all the features you’d expect in a lounge (comfortable seating and lots of outlets) the 2nd-floor lounge definitely celebrates the New Orleans vibe and culture.
The menu includes regionally inspired snack and meals, including oysters, gumbo and muffuletta sandwiches. Of course, the bar menu includes local beers and cocktails.
And all the artwork is by Louisiana artists.
Delta was kind enough to share images of the artwork. Here are a few more of our favorites.
By Skylar Fein Artwork by Kelly Mcgee Artwork by Kelly McgeeArtwork by Masy Chighizola
Stay tuned for more details about the amenities at the new terminal at Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport (MSY). Next up: all the food!
A new exhibit, titled Imprinted, featuring 16 images by Argentine photographer Marina Font, is on display at MIA’s gates D-22 and D-25, through February 18, 2020.
Marina Font – Dos Mundos
Font photographs objects
that evoke a particular place or personal history to explore ideas about
identity, gender, territory, language and memory
Marina Font – untitled suitcase series
And MIA recently showed off its new $324-million state-of-the-art,
fully automated baggage handling system.
The system can screen and transport more than 7,000 bags an hour,
which doubles the speed and efficiency of baggage screening and delivery for
flights in MIA’s Central and South terminals.
Phoenix is home to the Roberto-Venn School of Luthiery and right now passengers traveling through Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport are being treated to an exhibit featuring nine hand-crafted guitars, including both acoustic and electric style.
Exhibition highlights include Scott Walker’s hand-painted “patina” guitar (above), which has wood body that resembles oxidized metal. Also on display: an unusual 26-string harp-guitar by William Eaton and an electric mandolin by Joe Vallee, whose instruments are collected by prominent musicians like Steve Miller.
Visitors to the PHX Airport Museum exhibit will also find displays of the guitar-making process. Parts of a guitar are presented in an exploded view showing how a guitar is constructed. And the various stages of shaping the wood components of a guitar are explained.
Exploded view of an acoustic guitar, courtesy of the Roberto-Venn School of Luthiery
Phoenix Airport Museum’s exhibition, Shaping Sound: The Art of Guitar Making, is on view in two display cases at Terminal 4, level 2 near ticketing through May 2020.
The 30-year old Phoenix Airport Museum has more than 900 pieces in its collection. The museum presents exhibits featuring both items from the collection and from area artists in several galleries throughout the airport.
There are four new art exhibitions at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) Terminal 1. Three are the work of solo artists; one is a one group exhibition.
Here’s a preview:
“Floragalora” by Pat Warner, and “Rhizomatic Variations”, by Marianne Sadowski, are in Terminal 1 near Gate 9.
“Floragalora” by Pat Warner.
Warner’s inspiration for this installation is the spectacular wildflower superbloom Los Angeles experienced this spring.
“Rhizomatic Variations” by Marianne Sadowski features a series of 21 polymer plate variations and is “an homage to the simultaneous harmony and disorder which exists in the current landscape of Los Angeles.”
Hanaguruma” by Michiko Yao (top photo) and “Passing Rose” by Michiko Yao (bottom photo).
Michiko Yao’s “Hanaguruma”and “Passing Rose“ explore Asian and American stereotypes using symbolic materials. Both pieces make use of digitally manipulated imagery of artificial flowers and are on view to the public in Baggage Claim on the Arrivals Level.
Latitude 33° 56′” exhibit, curated by Bia Gayotto. Left to right: Fran Siegel, “Overland 17” 2014; Flora Kao “City of Angels” 2010; Peter Bo Rappmund “Topophilia” 2015; Stephen Berens “Battle of Chickamauga, September 19-20, 1863, Catoosa County and Walker County, Georgia and Love In, March 26, 1967, Elysian Fields, Griffith Park, Los Angeles, California” 2018.
And “Latitude 33° 56′”, by Gate 10, is a curated project with eight artists exploring mapping to translate an experience of a place.
The title refers to LAX’s latitude in degrees, minutes and seconds, and plays with notions of location and territorial representation.
The new exhibitions are presented in partnership with the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs.
(All photos by Panic Studio LA, courtesy of Los Angeles World Airports and City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs.)
Heading to or through the Tom Bradley International
Terminal (TBIT) or Terminal 6 at LAX?
Here’s some info about two now site-specific art installations to look for at Los Angeles International Airport, courtesy of the airport’s partnership with the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs (DCA),
“Forest, For the Trees” curated by Julie Kornblum
“Forest,
For the Trees” is an installation featuring knitted, crocheted, woven and other
fiber-based artworks made by more than 40 artists.
“This installation hopes to address the wonders and perils
of the forest by creating an environment that is at once unique and fantastic,”
said Los Angeles-based artist and project curator Julie Kornblum.
The installation is the newest iteration of Kornblum’s ongoing
partnership with the Arroyo Arts Collective and Yarn Bombing Los Angeles.
Artists independently created works in their own individual styles and techniques,
from realistic woodland creatures made of felt, to stylized tree trunks and
branches sprouting from used sweaters.
Look for “Forest, For the Trees”
at LAX in the Tom Bradley International Terminal, Customs Hallway, on the
Arrivals Level through January 2020.
The Unemployed” by Jody Zellen
“The Unemployed” is a site-specific installation by Jody
Zellen that features a large-scale, interactive digital projection and four video
monitors.
Using data culled from online sources that list
unemployment rates for over 200 countries, Zellen depicts this numerical
information as animated figures, creating an alternative way to visualize these
statistics.
Zellen created a software program that randomly cycles
through the unemployment data of the different countries and, for each country,
depicts an array of figures made of simple lines moving within a grid on the
wall.
The piece is interactive: as passersby move through the
space, their silhouettes are projected onto the wall and transformed into a
presence consisting of the ambling figures.
The installation is open to the public in
Terminal 6 on the Departures Level through September 2019 and is also available
via a free app.
All photos in this post by
Panic Studio LA, courtesy of Los Angeles World Airports and City of Los Angeles
Department of Cultural Affairs.
Hope you had a restful holiday weekend. Here are some travel tidbits from airports you may be visiting soon. Or may want to.
First: check out this nice assortment of souvenir snow globes I spotted over the weekend at the Budapest Airport. Quality-wise, these are nicer than the snow globes we come across in many airports, and these had a nice assortment of local buildings to boot!
If so, be sure to look for the exhibit sent over by the Missouri Botanical Garden (MBG) that highlights the special connection between plants and people through history. Plants and People: The Collections of the Missouri Botanical Garden is on display through November 10, 2019 in the Lambert Gallery near the C Concourse exit in Terminal 1 .
Sounds like an odd topic, but we trust the SFO Museum to bring us exhibits that not only look intriguing but teach us something as well.
Here’s the pitch on the pedestals:
“Victorian pedestals, meant to showcase sculpture, are fascinating decorative art objects to behold. The most ornate pedestals were made in the United States during the Gilded Age—a time following the Civil War until the turn of the twentieth century, when the country experienced rapid economic growth. From the mid-1860s through the 1880s, in particular, collecting and displaying sculpture led to an increased demand for pedestals. Wealthy Victorians preferred elaborate furniture on a grand scale and richly ornamented rooms. Several pedestals displaying artistic objects might adorn the drawing room or parlor. Victorians selected pedestals that suited their tastes and living interiors. Pedestals, as a result, offer an intriguing look at the design styles popular at the time.“
Courtesy SFO Museum
The Style of Display: Victorian Pedestalsis located pre-security in the International Terminal Main Hall Departures Lobby at San Francisco International Airport through January 12, 2020.
Turkish Airlines is working with the Instanbul Museum of Modern Art to display artwork from the museum’s collection in the Turkish Airlines Busines Class Lounge at Instanbul Airport.
Turkish Airlines says the 1,400 square-foot exhibition titled, “A Selection from the Istanbul Museum of Modern Art Collection” will change three times each year at year and include artworks ranging from the early 20th century landscape painting tradition to the abstract paintings of artists looking for a synthesis between eastern and western arts during the 1950s.
If you take a moment – and have access – you’ll find great artwork in airline lounges elswhere. Some of my favorite pieces are in the Delta Air Lines Sky Club at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.
This work, by Rebecca Coles, not only look great, if you look closely you’ll see that it is made entirely of recycle postage stamps.
Spotted some great art in an airline lounge? Tell us about in the comments section below.
If so,
look for the exhibition Destination Deco, by Gate D29, which is filled with cool Art
Deco objects from the Wolfsonian-FIU museum’s current
exhibition, Deco:
Luxury to Mass Market.
Here are some notes about
what’s on view:
Before
traveling to the United States and becoming a mainstay of Miami Beach’s
world-famous architecture, Art Deco was celebrated at the 1925 Paris International Exposition and then spread throughout Europe.
Designers
in the United States turned to affordable materials and used aerodynamic forms
and horizontal bands to convey speed.
From
exquisite handcraft to streamlined product design, this installation reveals
the multi-faceted character of the iconic style.
The Wolfsonian museum sits
just two blocks from the beach in the heart of Miami Beach’s Art Deco district
and explores what it means to be modern through a great collection of art,
design and everyday objects.
First up: a charming video to announce that the PIT Paws therapy dog team has joined others across the country hand out trading cards to fans.
Airport therapy dog trading cards? PIT recently hopped on the bandwagon, joining several other airports in releasing its own set of trading cards to feature the PIT PAWS therapy dog team. Read more about the latest aviation trend here: https://t.co/aF2HaOERK2#PITPAWSpic.twitter.com/UN11YdFq8k
— Pittsburgh International Airport (@PITairport) March 24, 2019
PIT Airport also shared a video about the more than 700,000 bees that reside on property:
PIT airport said goodbye – temporarily – to the statues of George Washington and former Pittsburgh Steeler Franco Harris.
— Pittsburgh International Airport (@PITairport) March 22, 2019
And the airport made room for a new – and somewhat large – piece of art.
It took a bit of extra effort to install the latest addition in the display case on Ticketing Level. See how the 24-foot-long oil painting made it from artist Mia Tarducci’s studio to PIT, and check out other new installations here: https://t.co/NxBiNIhn2Q#DestinationPITartpic.twitter.com/PR9VuRaFZw
— Pittsburgh International Airport (@PITairport) March 25, 2019