The artist Anne Imhof unleashes "Doom" in New York—a meditation on hope, chaos, and the blurred edges of performance.
Anne Imhof’s three-hour spectacle of moody youth at the Armory is sweet sorrow, full of moping and muttering. Still, almost despite itself, it points to true art.
Eliza Douglas, a longtime collaborator of Anne Imhof, introduces us to her fellow performers at the Park Avenue Armory.
In her new performance piece, Imhof transforms the Park Avenue Armory into a dynamic stage where audiences navigate a ...
The German artist’s new project at the Park Avenue Armory is a collaboration with the curator Klaus Biesenbach ...
Featuring performers who vape, text and perch on luxury cars, the immersive work overtaking Park Avenue Armory, New York, ...
Anne Imhof’s three-hour performance at the Park ... and tragically hollow beneath all the hype. Doom: House of Hope, curated by Klaus Biesenbach, is a Gen-Z adaptation of William Shakespeare ...
Coming-and-going is completely acceptable. All that said, DOOM is probably not Imhof’s masterpiece. But is it worth seeing? Of course. Performances run through March 12. Put some orthopedics on ...
The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 marked a turning point, expanding Germany’s artistic influence and cementing Berlin’s status as a global hotspot for artists in the 1990s.
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