Advertisement

Roo News

The Student News Site of University of Missouri - Kansas City

Roo News

Roo News

Amidst the festive spirit of St. Patricks Day, the iconic symbol of luck, the clover, reminds us of the rich traditions and celebrations honoring Irish heritage.
Exploring St. Patrick's Day Alternatives in Kansas City
Aydan Stigler and Grace BeshoreMarch 14, 2024

  The annual St. Patrick's Day celebration is just around the corner, and with celebration comes large crowds.    The annual city parade...

Visit the City Market to explore local vendors.
Smart Saving Strategies for a Wallet-Friendly Spring Break
Emily Wheeler, Staff Writer • March 14, 2024

  UMKC students are ready for the upcoming week-long spring break, but are their wallets?   From travel adventures to staycations, spring...

Earth Mother by Sheron Smith
Her Art/Their Art Explores the Female Experience in the 21st Century
Elyse Bredfeldt, Staff Writer • March 12, 2024

  Her Art/Their Art is a collection that aims to answer the question: “What does it mean to identify, live, navigate, or be perceived by society...

Nina Simone: Four Women” playbook.
The KC Rep’s “Nina Simone: Four Women” is both timeless and poignant.
Maisy Blanton, Staff Writer • March 5, 2024

  The Kansas City Repertory Theater (KCRep) recently performed “Nina Simone: Four Women.” The show follows musician Nina Simone as she...

Around 1 million people were estimated to be in attendance at the parade.
One Dead, Several Injured During Chiefs Parade
Zach Gunter and Jazlyn SummersFebruary 14, 2024

Update:   As of 2:30 p.m. Thursday afternoon, the number of those injured at the Union Station shooting after the Chiefs Super Bowl parade...

Immersive Van Gogh Exhibit will be held in secret Kansas City location

The+Immersive+Van+Gogh+Exhibit+will+come+to+Kansas+City+Dec.+1.+%28PR+Newswire%29
The Immersive Van Gogh Exhibit will come to Kansas City Dec. 1. (PR Newswire)

The Immersive Van Gogh Exhibit, the blockbuster show with sold-out tickets and extended runs in Toronto, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York, is coming to a secret location in  Kansas City on Dec. 1, 2021. 

Ricky Allman, professor of painting and drawing at UMKC, says he is curious to see the liberties the creative team will take.  

“It’s interesting to think if Van Gogh would want his work to be shown this way, as he obviously has no say in how this work will look in this installation,” Allman said.  “Ultimately there are other creative voices deciding what to animate, what to project.”

Van Gogh once said, “I dream my paintings, and I paint my dreams.” The designer of the exhibit, Massimiliano Siccardi, invites audiences around the world to experience his interpretations of the post-impressionist artists’ paintings through a series of installations. 

“This seems like more of a remix or a reinterpretation of Van Gogh’s paintings,” Allman said.

According to the exhibit’s website, Siccardi utilizes 500 thousand cubic feet of projections, 60,600 frames of video and 90 million pixels to captivate audiences with animated Van Gogh artworks throughout the building. 

The installation will include the Mangeurs de Pommes de Terre (The Potato Eaters), the Nuit étoilée (Starry Night), Les Tournesols (Sunflowers), La Chambre à coucher (The Bedroom) and others.

The hour-long walkthrough features a soundtrack by composer Luca Longobardi. Those interested can listen to the curated playlist on Spotify

“Despite being unknown throughout his life, Van Gogh’s artwork has created a lasting impact through its emotional richness and simple beauty,” Massimiliano Siccardi told PRNewswire. “Both myself and Luca Longobardi are very excited to visit Kansas City and once again bring Van Gogh’s legacy to life in  a way that embraces this city’s one-of-a-kind energy.”

UMKC art history professor Cristina Albu advises students to think of the projections as artworks in their own right, and not representations of Van Gogh’s paintings.

“I encourage visitors of Immersive Van Gogh to think of it as a technologically mediated experience that has its own aesthetic merits,” Albu said. “It is not meant to be a substitute for the encounter with Van Gogh’s paintings but a gateway into a fantasy encounter with the artist’s world view.” 

Safety measures will be in place to protect patrons of the exhibit from exposure to coronavirus. The team behind the Immersive Van Gogh Exhibit mentioned on their website that “it’s safe to Gogh.” 

Although the exhibit was not designed with COVID-19 regulations in mind, Siccardi remains optimistic of the impact social distancing has on the experience. 

“I did not anticipate the distancing of the viewers,” he told NewCityArt after the premiere opening of the Chicago exhibit, “but we were lucky, because the circumstances allow us to breathe with the art.” 

Allman believes exhibits like this are very impactful to the art world, especially after experiencing quarantine. 

“With a huge percentage of young people leaving organized religion, I think communal and immersive experiences with art that can offer some kind of social or spiritual connection are more important than ever to help us overcome all this isolation we’ve been through,” Allman said.

Tickets to the exhibit will start at $39.99. 

[email protected]

Leave a Comment
Donate to Roo News

Your donation will support the student journalists of University of Missouri - Kansas City. Your contribution will allow us to purchase equipment and cover our annual website hosting costs.

More to Discover
Donate to Roo News

Comments (0)

All Roo News Picks Reader Picks Sort: Newest

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *