Broadway between 41st and 49th Streets
New York, NY
Start:
Dec 1, 2018
End:
Dec 30, 2018
Nightly, 11:57PM-12AM
View Public Programming
Broadway between 41st and 49th Streets
New York, NY
Start:
Dec 1, 2018
End:
Dec 30, 2018
Nightly, 11:57PM-12AM
View Public Programming
Nick Cave is a multimedia artist and educator whose practice often involves community participation, performances, textile and beaded craft, discarded materials, and fantastical decorative environments. Cave is well known for his Soundsuits—vibrant sculptural forms that fully envelop and mask the wearer. Soundsuits function as surreal and eye-catching second skins that conceals race, gender, and class, inviting observation without preconceived ideas or judgments.
Drive-by Remix (2017) features Cave’s Soundsuits in motion. Colorful textiles spin exuberantly across the screen as the Soundsuits somersault and roll, fall from the sky, bounce on pogo sticks, and dance across an endless white field. Amidst the energetic movement, a figure adorned with a stop sign appears, conveying an underlying sense of urgency in the jubilant expression of freedom.
Drive-By Remix is a new version of Cave’s film Drive-By (2011), which was originally presented in the windows of a corner storefront in Chicago, IL. Now in its Times Square debut, the work is reorganized with amplified colors to make use of this unique location’s identity as an American cultural crossroads.
“Times Square is a living representation of America as a melting pot. My hope is that by turning our collective gaze up to the city’s sky and taking in the Soundsuits in all their limitless exuberance, we can let some of that positivity seep into our own skins.”
—Nick Cave
Drive-by Remix is presented in partnership with Jack Shainman Gallery on the occasion of If a Tree Falls, an exhibition of new bodies of Cave’s work on view at Jack Shainman Gallery from November 1–December 22, 2018.
“Nick Cave is one of the great artists of our time, and it’s a privilege to share his work with the public in Times Square. This complex video braids three strands that are crucial to an understanding of this place: the celebration of diverse cultures, a history of social activism, and—particularly in the New Year season—the beautiful expression of collective joy in the public sphere.”
—Andrew Dinwiddie, Acting Director, Times Square Arts
Nick Cave is a multimedia artist and educator whose practice often involves community participation, performances, textile and beaded craft, discarded materials, and fantastical decorative environments. Cave is well known for his Soundsuits—vibrant sculptural forms that fully envelop and mask the wearer. Soundsuits function as surreal and eye-catching second skins that conceals race, gender, and class, inviting observation without preconceived ideas or judgments.
Drive-by Remix (2017) features Cave’s Soundsuits in motion. Colorful textiles spin exuberantly across the screen as the Soundsuits somersault and roll, fall from the sky, bounce on pogo sticks, and dance across an endless white field. Amidst the energetic movement, a figure adorned with a stop sign appears, conveying an underlying sense of urgency in the jubilant expression of freedom.
Drive-By Remix is a new version of Cave’s film Drive-By (2011), which was originally presented in the windows of a corner storefront in Chicago, IL. Now in its Times Square debut, the work is reorganized with amplified colors to make use of this unique location’s identity as an American cultural crossroads.
“Times Square is a living representation of America as a melting pot. My hope is that by turning our collective gaze up to the city’s sky and taking in the Soundsuits in all their limitless exuberance, we can let some of that positivity seep into our own skins.”
—Nick Cave
Drive-by Remix is presented in partnership with Jack Shainman Gallery on the occasion of If a Tree Falls, an exhibition of new bodies of Cave’s work on view at Jack Shainman Gallery from November 1–December 22, 2018.
“Nick Cave is one of the great artists of our time, and it’s a privilege to share his work with the public in Times Square. This complex video braids three strands that are crucial to an understanding of this place: the celebration of diverse cultures, a history of social activism, and—particularly in the New Year season—the beautiful expression of collective joy in the public sphere.”
—Andrew Dinwiddie, Acting Director, Times Square Arts
Jack Shainman Gallery was founded in 1984 in Washington, DC, by Jack Shainman and Claude Simard. Soon after opening, the gallery relocated to New York City occupying a space in the East Village before moving to 560 Broadway in Soho and then to its current location at 513 West 20th Street in Chelsea in 1997. In 2013 the gallery added two additional exhibition spaces, one in Chelsea at 524 West 24th Street, the other a 30,000 square foot schoolhouse in Kinderhook, New York. The focus of the gallery since its inception has been to exhibit, represent and champion artists from around the world, in particular artists from Africa, East Asia, and North America, by mounting major exhibitions of their work in the gallery, presenting artworks at important fairs, securing museum exhibitions and publishing major catalogues and scholarly essays. The gallery is a member of the Art Dealers Association of America and presents approximately twelve exhibitions a year, as well as participating in major art fairs including Art Basel Miami Beach, The Armory Show, Frieze New York, Art Basel, and Frieze London. jackshainman.com
Broadway between 41st and 49th Streets
New York, NY
Nightly, 11:57PM-12AM
Photo courtesy of Ka-Man Tse.
Learn More About
Nick Cave
Learn More About
Nick Cave
Learn More About
Nick Cave