Desert X 2019: Artists will tackle environmental disaster, guns, immigration
Desert X is back. The biennial that scattered large-scale artworks — including a ranch house, fully mirrored on the inside and outside — across the vast desert of the Coachella Valley in 2017 on Monday announced its artist lineup for 2019.
When the second iteration of Desert X premieres Feb. 9, the 19 works in the free exhibition will include a giant pink aluminum structure by Danish collective Superflex that’s meant to evoke a drive-in movie theater and to call attention to rising sea levels. L.A. artist Sterling Ruby has created a fluorescent orange monolith, “Specter,” that’s 20 feet long and 8 feet tall. A solar-powered marine science lab, “Terminal Lake Exploration Platform,” by Chris Taylor and Steve Badgett will explore terminal lakes and the way the Salton Sea basin reflects the ecological — and political — conditions of our time.
“In some ways there’s greater thematic depth to this one,” said Desert X founding curator and artistic director Neville Wakefield. “I think the first one was very much about the place, in the sense that the works were in response to the specific landscape. Whereas this time the big undertone is this idea of environmental themes. Global warming, climate change, is very much on people’s minds.”
In addition to “Terminal Lake Exploration Platform” and the installation by Superflex members Rasmus Nielsen, Jakob Fenger and Bjørnstjerne Christiansen, five other artworks explore environmental issues.
Irish artist John Gerrard’s “Western Flag” re-creates, as a digital simulation, the Texas site of the Lucas Gusher, which in 1901 was the world’s first major oil gusher. With his interactive installation “A Point of View,” Colombian-born, Paris-based artist Iván Argote will engrave English and Spanish messages into the steps of his concrete architectural sculptures as commentary about the landscape surrounding the Salton Sea. L.A.-based Nancy Baker Cahill’s installations “Revolutions” and “Margin of Error” employ augmented reality to explore the conditions of the desert and environmental disaster, among other things.
Paris-based Argentine performance and video artist Cecilia Bengolea’s “Mosquito Net” explores, through dance and sculpture, the hybridization of animals. Egypt-born, Berlin-based artist Iman Issa pairs a film prop and text to address oil refineries, mineral extractions and the exploitation of natural resources in her installation “Surrogates.”
This year’s exhibition will have a slightly larger geographic footprint than the inaugural Desert X, stretching from the Whitewater Preserve south to the edge of the Salton Sea and even into Mexico.
Mexico City-born multimedia performance artist Pia Camil will figuratively connect Baja California and the Coachella Valley with her “Lover’s Rainbow,” two rainbow sculptures spanning 40 feet each, made from painted rebar. The pieces center on immigration, urban development and the desert terrain.
Brazil-born Cinthia Marcelle’s “Wormhole” will position television monitors in storefronts in the Coachella Valley and in Tijuana as a way of juxtaposing the two locations and addressing the distance between them.
The artist Norma Jeane will re-release “ShyBot,” the autonomous vehicle featured in Desert X 2017, Wakefield said. “But this time ‘ShyBot’ won’t be roaming the valley but along the Mexican border, bringing back images,” he said. “I think the idea of the connection between America and Mexico is obviously on everyone’s minds at the moment.”
Jenny Holzer’s “Before I Became Afraid, 2019” explores gun violence. The artist will project text from survivors, family members and activists, as well as snippets of poetry, onto a nearby mountain face.
Coachella Valley native Armando Lerma, founder of the street art project Coachella Walls, will show his mural “Visit Us in the Shape of Clouds,” whose themes include migration.