| Watch a video about "Babel." |
But this time, two big art installations stood out to me.
Firstly, I appreciated the National Covid Memorial Wall. Adorned with hand-painted hearts and an open invitation to write the name of a lost loved-one, it is maintained by volunteers. What are other countries doing to commemorate the 7 million+ people who died during the pandemic?
Secondly, I loved the Tate Modern Art Museum. Mostly free, it features artworks by Matisse, Dali, Picasso, Warhol, Lichtenstein, but the one that completely captured my attention was "Babel" by Cildo Meireles.
Entering the room from around the corner, the 8 meter behemoth at first seems like any other antiquated busted tower, inviting you to look up, but then you notice the materials—stacks of radios arranged upward from large to smaller, old to newer technology, and then you discover these radios are ON, tuned to different stations!
If you know the biblical story of the Tower of Babel, its meaning is obvious and then you slowly realize it is simultaneously meaningless as it floods the room with quiet and scratchy radio nonsense—discordant sounds, and voices, and languages from throughout the world. In other words, it's trippy and clever. Although constructed in 2001, it's also very 2020s.
Dear friends, art sometimes uses technology to ask us humans big questions: are we truly so advanced if we still can't understand each other?
Your concluding line says it all, and says it well!
ReplyDeleteThanks Debra. Glad you're back.
DeleteIt's what we kind of do with our blogs -- Babble on.
ReplyDeleteIt sure is.
DeleteI would like to check out the Tower of London, so much history packed into this city, have a nice week.
ReplyDeleteDespite it's violent history, it's a beautiful spot. I most enjoyed watching school kids on field trips being entertained by the costumed interpreters.
DeleteA trip to London is definitely on my bucket list.
ReplyDeleteIf people can't listen then how do they communicate?
ReplyDeleteI have been to London twice, and I loved it both times. Two of my favorite places are St. Paul's Cathedral and the Tower of London.
ReplyDelete