This year, it's up to the famous Argentine artist Tomás Saraceno. Waterproof shoes are strongly recommended.
With a perhaps unintended pun, you can go from the cisterns to Cave in a matter of kilometers. In fact, Copenhagen is offering one of the most interesting and original exhibitions of the year, which involves one of the musicians who best knew how to transform himself into a cultural icon: Nick Cave.
The imposing Black Diamond building ("Den Sorte Diamant," in Danish) extends from the ancient Danish Royal Library that emerges from the Slotsholmen Island. It hosts "Stranger Than Kindness: The Nick Cave Exhibition,"
which is a journey into the creative world of the Australian performer. More than 50 years of Cave's life, work, and inspiration are presented in a spatial and multi-sensory exploration of his many real and imaginary universes. Original works of art, handwritten texts, literature, photography, videos, scenography, and personal works are shown in an engaging and multi-sensory narrative through eight rooms. The curator, Christina Back, with the Royal Danish Library and Janine Barrand of the Arts Center Melbourne collected and cataloged over 300 objects. Soundscapes were composed and recorded specifically for the exhibition by Nick Cave himself with Warren Ellis, his historical collaborator
Author : The Slowear Journal