Friday, April 18, 2025
26 C
Hong Kong

PST ART: “ART & SCIENCE COLLIDE”

Philippe Jacques de Loutherbourg, Iron Works of Coalbrook Dale, 1805, aquatint, 11 3⁄8 × 15 3⁄4″. From “Storm Cloud: Picturing the Origins of Our Climate Crisis,” 2024–25, Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens, Los Angeles.

Philippe Jacques de Loutherbourg, Iron Works of Coalbrook Dale, 1805, aquatint, 11 3⁄8 × 15 3⁄4″. From “Storm Cloud: Picturing the Origins of Our Climate Crisis,” 2024–25, Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens, Los Angeles.

LAUNCHED IN 2011, the Getty Foundation’s Pacific Standard Time initiative (now called PST ART) coordinates and supports the presentation of thematically linked exhibitions across Southern California. Its fourth iteration, focused on the topic “Art & Science Collide,” opened last September and continues through February 16, with work by more than eight hundred artists on display at over seventy museums and galleries. To help make sense of this vast array of programming, Artforum’s West Coast Editor Bryan Barcena introduces us to the history and institutional politics of PST, while Michaëla de Lacaze Mohrmann tackles the framework of a collision between art and science and Red Cameron addresses the subset of exhibitions devoted to ecology. Reviewers Jan Tumlir, Andrea Gyorody, Suzanne Hudson, Annabel Osberg, and April Baca look closely at a sampling of what’s on view, with more reviews to come in our next issues.

Hot this week

Recreating sports fashion styles with Tony Burch’s 2025 Spring-Summer 2025 collection

In her journey to redefine brand identity, Tory Burch...

Cai Xukun: A song of triumph from the phoenix ashes

Amid the glitzy universe of showbiz, Cai Xukun rises...

Taylor Swift and Idris Elba Should Star in The Bodyguard Remake, Says Tyra Banks: ‘Hot’

Whitney Houston and Kevin Costner led the 1992 romance...

Topics

spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_img