The experience, which seems to take place only in red light, starts Aug 16th in LACMA's Bing Theater. It will be free for a first come, first serve ticket grab. Not time limit has been set as when it will be over, but if it lasts into October for Halloween it could only be a scary good thing.
Loris Gréaud's Sculpt
Aug 16
LACMA, Bing Theater
Free
Here's the info from the site:
Loris Gréaud Sculpt is a social science fiction movie that
depicts unprecedented shapes and experiences, along with obsessions and
fantasies. The film follows the thoughts of a man about whom we know
very little, who seems to be constantly developing the concept of what
experiencing beauty, thought, or obsession can be, despite the risks to
which the subjects are exposed in the long term.
Sculpt, produced for LACMA, is Loris Gréaud's first major exhibition project to take place on the west coast of the United States and his first feature-length film. It offers a unique experience to each viewer who sees it as an immersive environment and the film's content will be interpreted differently by each solitary visitor.
For this presentation, the Bing Theater will be reconfigured for only one audience member at a time. Screenings take place thanks to the generous loan of the film from Voodoo Queen Priestess Miriam Chamani who has permitted its distribution solely at LACMA. In this chrysalid state, the film is on loan for an unspecified time, waiting to mutate into one of the obsessions it describes in its own fiction, making the LACMA screenings a rare occurrence.
Sculpt, produced for LACMA, is Loris Gréaud's first major exhibition project to take place on the west coast of the United States and his first feature-length film. It offers a unique experience to each viewer who sees it as an immersive environment and the film's content will be interpreted differently by each solitary visitor.
For this presentation, the Bing Theater will be reconfigured for only one audience member at a time. Screenings take place thanks to the generous loan of the film from Voodoo Queen Priestess Miriam Chamani who has permitted its distribution solely at LACMA. In this chrysalid state, the film is on loan for an unspecified time, waiting to mutate into one of the obsessions it describes in its own fiction, making the LACMA screenings a rare occurrence.