JUL 3 – AUG 29, 2021
A free, outdoor exhibition of augmented reality artworks
Installation view: The Looking Glass, The Shed and the High Line, New York, July 3 – August 29, 2021. Photo: Jasdeep Kang.
Two people with long braids lean over a bright blue plinth used to activate the exhibition The Looking Glass on a sunny outdoor plaza
Installation view: The Looking Glass, The Shed and the High Line, New York, July 3 – August 29, 2021. Photo: Jasdeep Kang.
A group of four people walking across a sunlit plaza at a distance from each other with bright blue plinths dotting the space around them
Installation view: The Looking Glass, The Shed and the High Line, New York, July 3 – August 29, 2021. Photo: Jasdeep Kang.
A bright blue plinth with a triangular top with an art object label on an outdoor plaza
Installation view: The Looking Glass, The Shed and the High Line, New York, July 3 – August 29, 2021. Photo: Jasdeep Kang.
An artwork label on a signpost installed along wild grasses on an overpass on the High Line with a street passing beneath and stretching into the distance
Installation view: The Looking Glass, The Shed and the High Line, New York, July 3 – August 29, 2021. Photo: Jasdeep Kang.
A green label with the words "The Looking Glass, A free outdoor exhibition of augmented reality artworks" under a transparent plastic cover that reflects some light
Nina Chanel Abney, Imaginary Friend, 2020. Augmented reality. Courtesy the artist and Acute Art.
An augmented reality avatar of a person in a red shorts onesie, high top black sneakers, and knee-high athletic socks appears on an outdoor plaza
Olafur Eliasson, Courageous Flowers, part of WUNDERKAMMER, 2020. Augmented reality. Courtesy of the artist and Acute Art.
A patch of AR purple flowers sprouting up through a concrete walkway on the High Line
Precious Okoyomon, Ultra Light Beams of Love, 2021. Augmented reality. Courtesy the artists and Acute Art.
Two tall AR flowers with cartoonlike faces standing in a patch of green grass on the High Line
Installation view: The Looking Glass, The Shed and the High Line, New York, July 3 – August 29, 2021. Photo: Jasdeep Kang.
Two people aiming their phones at an artwork label on an overpass on the High Line. Beneath them a street is visible and they are surrounded by leafy green plants.
Tomás Saraceno, Maratus speciosus, 2021. Augmented reality. Courtesy of the artist and Acute Art.
A giant AR spider with a flat purple-and-red-patterned body stands in front of The Shed
Installation view: The Looking Glass, The Shed and the High Line, New York, July 3 – August 29, 2021. Photo: Jasdeep Kang.

About this commission

The Looking Glass is a free, outdoor exhibition of augmented reality (AR) artworks viewable on The Shed’s public plaza July 3 to August 29, presented in partnership with Acute Art and the High Line. Invisible to the naked eye, these artworks come to life on your phone’s screen when you aim your camera at the right spot, appearing as real as the environment around them. Through the juxtaposition of physical and virtual worlds, the works in The Looking Glass convey a sense of surprise and wonder about the spaces we move through every day.

New commissions by artists Julie Curtiss, KAWS, and Frieze 2021 Artist Award—winner Precious Okoyomon will be on view at any hour of the day, alongside works making their US debut by Cao Fei, Olafur Eliasson, Tomás Saraceno, Nina Chanel Abney, Koo Jeong A, Bjarne Melgaard, Darren Bader, and Alicja Kwade. In addition to the artworks on The Shed’s plaza, three works will be located on the High Line as part of their arts programming.

On May 5, the first chapter of the exhibition opened in collaboration with Frieze New York at The Shed. It premiered three works, including large animated flowers that read poetry in Precious Okoyomon’s Ultra Light Beams of Love (2021), Cao Fei’s futuristic urban fantasy in RMB City AR (2020), and KAWS’s legendary HOLIDAY SPACE, which celebrated its 20th anniversary with a trip to outer space, returning to Earth as an AR version of itself (2020) whose reflective surface responds to its surroundings.

Organized by Daniel Birnbaum, Artistic Director of Acute Art, and Emma Enderby, Chief Curator at The Shed

Artists

On The Shed’s Plaza

Nina Chanel Abney
Darren Bader
Julie Curtiss
Olafur Eliasson
Cao Fei
KAWS
Koo Jeong A
Alicja Kwade
Bjarne Melgaard
Tomás Saraceno

On the High Line

Olafur Eliasson
Precious Okoyomon

To view a hidden artwork by Tomás Saraceno, take a photo of a spider/web on the High Line and share it via the Acute Art app. The location of the hidden artwork will then be revealed.

More about the Artists

A Black woman with her hair cradling her head under a wide-brimmed brown hat.
Courtesy Nina Chanel Abney.
Nina Chanel Abney
A photo of a white person's fingertip with a face drawn on it and photographed in front of person's head so it looks like the finger has short curly, brown hair
Courtesy Darren Bader.
Darren Bader
A woman with dark hair swept up behind her head stands in an artist's studio space wearing a paint-speckled apron and holding a think paint brush up in front of her.
Courtesy Julie Curtiss.
Julie Curtiss
A white man in glasses with a medium length gray beard and long hair swiped back stands in a studio space with hands on his hips.
Courtesy Olafur Eliasson.
Olafur Eliasson
A Chinese woman with short hair bleached in the front along her bangs looks at the camera with one eye highlighted by a stripe of sunlight shining on her and the gray cement wall behind her.
Courtesy Cao Fei.
Cao Fei
A white man in a dark gray baseball cap and glasses kneels to steady an iPhone that he concentrates on as if taking a photo with it.
Courtesy KAWS.
KAWS
A South Korean woman in an alleyway wearing a gray coat and blue scarf high around her neck with a bag's shoulder strap crossing her torso on a diagonal
Courtesy Koo Jeong A.
Koo Jeong A
A white woman with blond hair flowing below her shoulders and behind her back looks into the camera through a thin metal hoop in the foreground of the image. She wears a high-collared black outfit.
Courtesy Alicja Kwade.
Alicja Kwade
A man seen in profile wearing metal-rimmed aviator-style glasses and a gold hoop earring with a dark beard and combed hair cut in a fade on the sides of his head.
Photo: Ivar Kvaal.
Bjarne Melgaard
A Black person wearing a short black dress with a lace-up top over a white long-sleeve t-shirt and white leggings. They stand against a black white wall.
Photo: Sam Penn.
Precious Okoyomon
Tomas holding large balloon.
Tomás Saraceno. © Studio Tomás Saraceno, 2019.
Tomás Saraceno
Nina Chanel Abney
Nina Chanel Abney was born in Chicago and currently lives and works in New Jersey. Her paintings combine abstraction with representation to capture the frenetic pace of contemporary life. She broaches subjects as diverse as race, celebrity, religion, politics, sex, and art history. The effect is information overload, balanced with a kind of spontaneous order where time and space are compressed and identity is interchangeable. Her distinctively bold style harnesses the flux and simultaneity that has come to define life in the 21st century. Her work is included in collections around the world, including the Brooklyn Museum, the Rubell Family Collection, Bronx Museum, and the Burger Collection, Hong Kong. Her first solo museum show in 2017 travelled around the United States.
Darren Bader
Playful and plaintive, sincere and satiric, Darren Bader’s (b. 1978, Bridgeport, Connecticut) take on sculpture has been called “immodestly heterodox” and “dead-end Modernist deadpan.” Some people find his work funny. He less frequently does but can take a compliment. Bader has gained recognition for food sculpture, selling money, found-object fetish, mismanaged fauna, and failing to launch sculptures into outer space. He has worked in augmented reality since 2019. Solo presentations include: Whitney Museum of American Art; Sadie Coles, London; Blum & Poe, Los Angeles; Galleria Franco Noero, Turin; Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York; Museo Madre, Naples; Kölnischer Kunstverein; MoMA PS1, New York. Group exhibitions include: Mudam; Biennale di Venezia #58; Hammer Museum; Power Station; Kunsthalle Wien; Serralves; Palais de Tokyo; PS1; MoCA. He is the recipient of the 2013 Calder Prize. Bader is based in New York. Due to the pandemic, he’s been traveling less. He adores old master paintings and sleeping-enough.
Julie Curtiss
Julie Curtiss (b. 1982) is a French artist based in Brooklyn working in painting, drawing, sculpture, and prints. She received her BA and MFA from the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts in Paris, France. She has had solo exhibitions at White Cube, London; Anton Kern Gallery, New York; and Various Small Fires, Los Angeles, as well as participated in group exhibitions at the Mass, Tokyo; the Nassau County Museum, New York; and Clearing New York among others. Her work is in the collection of a number of museums including the MCA Chicago, the Columbus Museum of Art, the Walker Art Center, LACMA, and the Bronx Museum. She was a recipient of the Sharpe Walentas Residency program in 2019, and she and her work have been reviewed and featured in the Financial Times’s “How to Spend It,” Vogue, Artnet, Artsy, the Times (London), W, and the Los Angeles Times, to mention a few. Curtiss is represented by Anton Kern Gallery and White Cube.
Olafur Eliasson
The works of artist Olafur Eliasson explore the relevance of art in the world at large. Since 1997, his wide-ranging solo shows–featuring installations, paintings, sculptures, photography, and film–have appeared in major museums around the globe. In 2003, he represented Denmark at the 50th Venice Biennale, and later that year he installed The weather project at Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall, London. Eliasson’s projects in public space include The New York City Waterfalls (2008); Fjordenhus, Vejle (2018); and Ice Watch (2014). In 2012, Eliasson founded the social business Little Sun, and in 2014, he and Sebastian Behmann founded Studio Other Spaces, an office for art and architecture. In Berlin in 1995, Eliasson founded Studio Olafur Eliasson, which today comprises a large team of craftsmen, architects, archivists, researchers, administrators, cooks, programmers, art historians, and specialized technicians.
Cao Fei
Cao Fei (b. 1978) lives and works in Berlin. Predominantly working in film and installation, Cao Fei mixes social commentary, popular aesthetics, references to Surrealism, and documentary conventions to reflect the chaotic changes that are occurring in Chinese society today. Cao Fei’s works have been exhibited at a number of international biennials and triennials, including Shanghai Biennale (2004), Moscow Biennale (2005), Taipei Biennale (2006), the 15th and 17th Biennales of Sydney (2006 and 2010), Istanbul Biennial (2007), Yokohama Triennale (2008), and the 50th, 52nd, and 56th Venice Biennales (2003, 2007 and 2015). Exhibitions and screenings of her work have taken place at Serpentine Gallery (2006 and 2008) and Tate Modern in London (2002, 2013 and 2014); New Museum (2009), Guggenheim Museum (2011 and 2018), and MoMA in New York (2016 and 2015); Fondation Louis Vuitton (2016), Palais de Tokyo (2005 and 2017), and Centre Pompidou in Paris (2019, 2014, 2003).
KAWS
KAWS engages audiences beyond the museums and galleries in which he regularly exhibits. His prolific body of work straddles the worlds of art and design to include paintings, murals, graphic and product design, street art, and large-scale sculptures. Over the last two decades, KAWS has built a successful career with work that consistently shows his formal agility as an artist, as well as his underlying wit, irreverence, and affection for our times. His refined graphic language revitalizes figuration with both big, bold gestures and playful intricacies.
Koo Jeong A
Since the early 1990s, Koo Jeong A has made works that are seemingly casual and commonplace, yet at the same time remarkably precise, deliberate, and considered. Her reflections on the senses and the body incorporate objects, still and moving images, audio elements, and aromas. Many of her works are conceived within site-specific environments that question the limits of fact and fiction, the imaginary and actuality of our world. Koo Jeong A considers the connection of energies between a place and people, relying on chance to drive her encounters. Koo Jeong A was named 2016 Artist of the Year by the Korean Cultural Centre UK. Recent solo exhibitions and commissions of her work include: ajeongkoo, Art Sonje Center, Seoul (2017); Enigma of Beginnings, Yuz Project Room at Yuz Museum, Shanghai (2016); Koo Jeong A x Wheelscape: Evertro, Everton Park, Liverpool (2015); and Oussser, Fondazione La Raia, Novi Ligure (2014).
Alicja Kwade
Alicja Kwade lives and works in Berlin. Her work investigates and questions the structures of our reality and society and reflects on our perceptual habits in our everyday lives. Her diverse practice is based around concepts of space, time, science, and philosophy, and takes shape in sculptural objects, public installations, video, and even photography. Her work has been exhibited in multiple solo shows in museums and institutions such as the Langen Foundation, Neuss; the MIT List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge, Massachusetts; the Centre de Création Contemporaine Olivier Debré – CCCOD, Tours; the Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen; the Haus Konstruktiv, Zurich; the YUZ Museum, Shanghai; the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum, Michigan; the Museum Frieder Burda, Baden-Baden; the Whitechapel Gallery, London; and the Public Art Fund, New York City. In 2019, she was commissioned to create a site-specific work for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s roof garden. Kwade has also taken part in international events all around the world: Desert X, Coachella in 2021, the NGV Triennial 2020, the Setouchi Triennale 2019, the 57th Venice Biennale in 2017, and the Kochi-Muziris Biennale 2016. Her work has also appeared in numerous group exhibitions in major institutions such as the Hayward Gallery, London; the Musée d’Art Moderne et d’Art Contemporain (MAMAC), Nice; the Palais de Tokyo, Paris; the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo (MOT); and the Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien (MUMOK), Vienna, among others. Kwade is among the artists featured at the Helsinki Biennial, which will take place from June 12 to September 26, 2021.
Bjarne Melgaard
Bjarne Melgaard (b. 1967) was born in Sydney, Australia to Norwegian parents. In installations that include paintings, videos, and mixed-media works, the artist explores themes of substance addiction, sexuality, and self-destruction. Melgaard has exhibited extensively internationally, including solo exhibitions at Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA), London (2012), and Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo (2010). He has also participated in the Venice (2011), Lyon (2013), and Whitney (2014) Biennials. In addition to his visual art practice, Melgaard is a prolific curator, writer, film producer, and fashion designer. Melgaard lives and works in Oslo, Norway.
Precious Okoyomon
Precious Okoyomon is a poet, chef, and artist living in New York City. They make portals into new worlds. Okoyomon has had institutional solo exhibitions at the Luma Westbau in Zurich (2018) and at the MMK in Frankfurt (2020), major performances commissioned by the Serpentine Galleries, London (2019), and the Institute of Contemporary Art, London (2019), and was an artist-in-residence at Luma Arles (2020). Okoyomon’s second book, But Did U Die?, is forthcoming from the Serpentine Galleries/Wonder Press in 2021.
Tomás Saraceno
Tomás Saraceno’s (b. 1973) work envisions ethical relationships with the terrestrial, atmospheric, and cosmic realms, deepening our understanding of environmental justice and interspecies cohabitation, carried out through floating sculptures, immersive installations, and the artist-initiated projects Aerocene and Arachnophilia. Arachnophilia is a not-for-profit, interdisciplinary spider/web research community that builds on innovations arising from Saraceno’s collaborative research into spider/web architectures, materials, modes of vibrational signalling, and behavior. Through this community, Arachnophilia explores concepts and ideas related to spiders and webs across multiple artistic, scientific, and theoretical disciplines, including vibrational communication, biomateriomics, architecture and engineering, animal ethology, nonhuman philosophy, anthropology, biodiversity/conservation, sound studies, and music.

Location and dates

This event takes place in the Plaza.
July 3 – August 29

Thank you to our partners

The Looking Glass is presented with support from Blasieholmen Investment Group (BIG).

Major Support for The Shed is generously supported by the Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Commissioning Fund and the Shed Commissioners.

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