Mirror, marble, and mud: Desert X returns to California

Mirror, marble, and mud: Desert X returns to California

Mirror, marble, and mud: Desert X returns to California

The mysterious metal mirror, imported marble boulder piles and a 3D-mangled earthen hut appeared in California Desert on Saturday, as biennial outdoor arts festival desert x returned.

Free phenomenon, which attracted 600,000 visitors in its final version, sends contemporary art-lovers on a treasure hunting to find some 100 miles (160 km) east in the east of Los Angeles.

French-American artist Sarah Meyohus used complexly curved metal mirrors to reflect and refrain bright desert sun, which “truth comes in the truth slant beam” on the sides of the “truth 400-foot (120-meter) plaster ribbon” comes in the truth slanted beam “. The truth is certainly some that is on the world.” I try to create an art that is not baffling anyone. This is not a trick. This is light. And this is true. “

The AFP told that to convert Sun Beams into a lesson, using the “caustic” technique, “plays in the bottom of a swimming pool”, the work “speaks in a world in which we are very politically divided,” AFP said.

‘here to stay’

At a distance of twenty miles in the desert, Mexican artist Jose Davila stacked a 16-ton marble boulder in the Chihuahua desert in the country around him.

The title of the work is “The Act of Being Tuger.”

Arrangements were made to invite Mangalithic structures like Stonhenge in Britain, with huge heaven marble lumps also talk to “current climates of events” that recently increased tariffs on the US-Maxican border.

Davila said, “Such rocks remind us that things are meant to live here, and these inconveniences come and go.”

Nevertheless, Desert X Artistic Director Neville Wakefield admitted that President Donald Trump’s tariff and Mexican mutual measures organized an art program a two -hour drive from the border “very complex.”

The show brings artists from all over the world to source and create several materials from Mexico to make artists from all over the world specific to the North American desert landscape.

Other establishments include Ronald Rail’s “Adobe Oasis”, which uses a huge robotic arm for 3D-print walls made of clay and straw in the field in the region.

Rail suggested that the ancient construction material, which is a fireproof, should be re -appointed in view of the fire of Los Angeles, killing 29 people in January.

“This is the oldest construction material of Mankind,” only “the introduction of a device, modified by a robot,” he explained to AFP.

Recently the fire “burnt buildings that are made of plastic – toxic material – and people in LA still cannot drink their water,” Rail said.

Desert X lasts until 11 May.

(Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by NDTV employees and is published by a syndicated feed.)

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