RESONATING CAVITY

Artist: Louisa Clement

SOLO SHOW ZAZ10TS GALLERY
March 1st - April 30, 2021
10 TIMES SQUARE | 1441 Broadway, New York, NY 10018


Resonating Cavity is a video installation that’s based on the concept of an inner push between human and human as well as human and space. The installation includes Green Room, Circling Head, and Not Lost in You videos. Each video is a response or a reaction and action, which connects the different works that are shown.

Featured on ZAZ Corner’s In Between | March 2021

Part of the exhibition features Not Lost in You and Circling Head video series on ZAZ Corner’s In Between Programming throughout March. The artwork is displayed for 15 seconds at a time on a large LED billboard in the heart of Times Square.

Location: 41st Street and 7th Avenue, New York, NY

 

ZAZ Corner Billboard: Louisa Clement, Not Lost in You & Circling Head

Green Room on ZAZ10TS Gallery Wall


PRESS ABOUT LOUISA CLEMENT’S PAST EXHIBITION

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September 16, 2016
by Hilary Moss

Three Young Photography Stars, Tapped by Gursky

We always discussed the relevance of an idea, and I learned to defend my opinion, to find my own way.” Clement uses a very modern device, her iPhone 5, and shoots in series instead of striving for a single, perfect photo. Her portraits of mundanities (she captures mannequin limbs and free Wi-Fi kiosks, alike) underscore the potential of form and color “behind the supposedly succinct snapshot of reality,” as she puts it. “Being a photographer is more than using a camera or a smartphone — technology is not the key. You need an eye to see the potential photo in the world around you. — New York Times

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January, 2019
by Noemi Smolik

Louisa Clement: Remote Control

SPRENGEL MUSEUM HANNOVER, HANNOVER | Curated by Stefan Gronert

Then there were the sleek and sometimes disjointed mannequins she photographed with her iPhone, which possess a similarly terrifying allure, counterbalanced by their lifelessness and artificiality. This antagonism is the young artist’s guiding theme. For her exhibition in Hannover, which will include nearly one hundred works, she has teamed up with the respected VR-production company Acute Art to construct a virtual space in which visitors will be able to engage digital avatars in dialogue. The setting will be elegant but suffused with mystery, blurring the boundary between the virtual and real worlds—at once terrifying and fascinating! 

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