You
need to check out this installation in NYC,” reads the title card of the
TikTok post.
اضافة اعلان
“Must love
spiders,” adds a qualifier in the caption.
The video opens
onto the mouth of a white globe, around 29m in diameter, inside the McCourt
space of The Shed, a cultural center in the Hudson Yards neighborhood, where an
interactive exhibition by
Argentine artist Tomás Saraceno opened in February.
Overhead, around 12m above the ground, scattered people clamber across
wire-mesh netting. Approximately 8.5m feet below, visitors sprawl out on their
backs, limbs outstretched.
The user scored
the video to Hans Zimmer’s otherworldly instrumental track “Cornfield Chase,”
from the 2014 science fiction film “Interstellar,” adding to the ambiance.
More than 720,000
people have watched this video. A similar TikTok about the exhibition has
racked up 2.8 million views and more than 595,000 likes — this one set to the
ethereal “Forever” by “Euphoria” composer Labrinth.
(Photo: NYTimes)
Social media
posts such as these — particularly on TikTok and Instagram — seem to be driving
attendance to the exhibition, “Tomás Saraceno: Particular Matter(s),” and one
piece of it in particular: the multisensory performance “Free the Air: How to
hear the universe in a spider/web.”
Over the past few
years, and perhaps especially during the
pandemic, interactive and
experience-based art has risen in prominence and popularity. In 2019, a visit
to Yayoi Kusama’s “Infinity Room” in New York came with a wait of up to two
hours, which didn’t deter eager attendees. The “experiential art center”
Superblue drew crowds to its opening in Miami last spring. When Meow Wolf,
which creates large-scale immersive art installations, opened its third
location in Denver in September, buyers snatched up 35,000 tickets in the first
24 hours of sales.
“With the rise of
technology, the rise of being able to have more self-determinacy through
technology, through having a phone, access to information, all of that,” said
Alex Poots, CEO and artistic director of The Shed, would lead toward a number
of artworks becoming “more interactive and more immersive.”
“Free the Air” is
a concert in four movements, with recordings of the activity of various spider
species — the tropical tent-web spider, the golden silk orb-weaver, a Mexican
jumping spider, the African social spider, and the red-legged golden orb weaver
— transformed into vibrations.
Attendance is limited by the installation’s capacity
(45 people max) and the number of concerts scheduled each day. On weekdays,
there are a total of 19 sessions that begin every 20 minutes. On Fridays and
Saturdays, 26 sessions happen every 20 minutes. The exhibition is averaging
about 1,000 people daily and regularly selling out slots, except for Wednesdays
and Thursdays at midday, according to Tiffanie Yakum, a communications manager
at The Shed, which has now added Tuesdays to the exhibition calendar.
(Photo: NYTimes)
“When you create
a situation where the audience are involved, are actively participating, they
have a more engaging experience,” Poots said. “I mean, it sounds obvious. But
we still keep building places that can only do rows of seats.”
As a 20-something
newcomer to New York, I often turn to TikTok to learn about the city and map
out weekend plans. I follow the creator of that first TikTok, scored to
Hans Zimmer, and liked the video when I scrolled by. So I jumped at the chance to
check out the installation.
I arrived at
11:20am, the first time slot on Saturday, unsure of what to expect. About a
dozen of us entered a waiting room of lockers and benches, stowed our coats,
and received instructions. The concert would last eight minutes, we were told.
We climbed up
many flights of stairs to the upper level and emerged into the white globe. As
we clambered onto wire-mesh netting that recalls a giant spider web, we forgot
how to walk. The ground had a slight give to it, like a trampoline. Slowly, we
spread out across the web and settled onto it, positioning ourselves near the
white cylindrical shakers that would emit frequencies of spiders “playing their
webs.”
The giant white
ball of light at the top of the dome slowly faded to black. A light mist
emerged through the netting and the performance began. For eight minutes, I
shut off my sight and focused on my sense of touch. The mesh beneath me
vibrated and shook with sound waves. I felt, in essence, like a spider in its
web.
Afterward, I
talked to Alexandra Mount-Campbell, a teacher, and Andrea Morales, an actor,
who live in New Jersey and came into the city on a Saturday morning to see what
“Free the Air” was all about. Mount-Campbell had sent her friend a TikTok about
the exhibition. “It was just this eerie white glow,” Morales said approvingly.
Mount-Campbell
looked up the difference between the levels and selected the upper one. She
knew phones weren’t permitted on the upper level but had read that visitors had
gotten more of a sensory environment on the top.
“I didn’t really
care about putting it on social media myself,” Mount-Campbell said, adding that
she wanted to focus on the experience.
“Yeah, I’m cool
with putting my phone away,” Morales said.
Matthew Barrows,
a visitor-experience associate at The Shed, has worked there since October.
Guests often tell him that they’ve come to the exhibition after seeing it on TikTok.
“I think it’s a good way for artists to get more recognition for their art,”
Barrows said.
He has
experienced the exhibition about a dozen times now, he estimates. He prefers
the upper level and likes that, when the lights go down and the mist comes up,
he is left to reflect on his thoughts.
“I think it’s a way for
people to face their fears — overcome looking down — and I think they realize
that it’s not too bad,” Barrows said. “And really getting a grasp on what
spiders have to go through.”
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