Overslaan naar hoofdinhoud
1 Hotels Logo
Van attente extraatjes tot zinvolle donaties, ontdek een lidmaatschapsprogramma waarbij teruggeven een tweede natuur is. Word lid van Mission Membership
Breng de essentie van 1 Hotels mee naar huis. Shop onze accessoires
Ga op avontuur in de herfst met tot 40% korting op je verblijf en eetcredits. Verken Herfst Equinox Aanbiedingen
De natuur is ons ware noorden. Ontdek ons duurzaamheidsverhaal

Rachel Rose: Journey To Space

“When I first came back to Earth after 128 days in space, I thought I had ruined my life … because gravity felt so heavy.” NASA Astronaut David Wolfe

Published on: February 12, 2016


“When I first came back to Earth after 128 days in space, I thought I had ruined my life … because gravity felt so heavy.” NASA Astronaut David Wolfe

Some of us watched movies Gravity or Interstellar and walked away feeling entertained.

Others, like 28 year old artist, Rachel Rose, walked away inspired to make art that might just transport her audience to the ethereal darkness of space.

“Regardless of whether those films were good or bad, they put in relief for me the human experience on Earth in a sensorial, physical way,” she tells the Guardian. “I left the theatre feeling a looseness, a detachment from my everyday understanding of the world and how things fit together. I wanted to do something that addressed that powerful feeling, but not through spectacle. How can we get to that place, but through what is grounded here on Earth?”

Rose recently launched her first solo show, Rachel Rose: Everything and More, at the  Whitney Museum of American Art’s new downtown New York location. The exhibit’s title is a reference to David Foster Wallace’s book about infinity but inspired by NASA astronaut David Wolf’s captivating retelling of his walk over earth while at the MIR Space station in the 1990s.

The 10-minute film — which fuses together fluid footage of kitchen close-ups or EDM festivals and scaled back audio of Wolf or the tone of Aretha Franklin somehow bring order to what is chaotic or seemingly unrelated. The film is projected on floor to ceiling windows covered in scrim and the images from the out outside world weave into the visual narrative  to create a familiar yet out of world aesthetic. 

Rose has received lot of attention by art critics and the media alike. (If the The New York Times is any indication, they opening their review with: “The art world is always looking for the Next Big Thing, and right now, the video installations of Rachel Rose look set to be It.”) 

At $22, this short trip to space from the comfort of Earth seems like a good deal. So go check it out and decide for yourself. 

Meer verhalen waarvan we denken dat je ze leuk vindt

Mission Membership™: Where Giving Back Becomes Second Nature

A new chapter in mindful travel begins with an invitation to connect, contribute, and create impact...
Wellness

De kaarten omdraaien: Reflecties over helderheid en verandering

Nu het jaar ten einde loopt, overweegt tarotlezer en kunstenaar Nick Jacobs San Francisco hoe...
Duurzaamheid

Een maaltijd in het seizoen: Van grond tot tafel

Een avond vol erfstukken, regeneratieve landbouw en seizoensgebonden verbindingen, in samenwerking met Ariane...