About The Work
This Artspace edition print supports the Stanlee and Gereald Rubin Center for the Visual Arts' 10th anniversary featuring artists who engage in disruptive, alternative, and collective interactions with space and space technology.
This print by Tomás Saraceno is based on his installation project Cloud Cities, which imagines various physical and theoretical structures through which human beings could inhabit the upper atmosphere. Most notably installed on the roof of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2012, the project combines architecture, climate science and visual ingenuity. In this print, Saraceno renders enclosed geodesic structures that hold entire lakes and forests, floating in the clouds.
About Tomás Saraceno
From The Magazine
- Art 101: "What I'd Buy This October": Artspace's Advisor Hannah Parker Shares the Artworks in Her Cart
- News & Events: Head in the Clouds: Sky-Inspired Artworks by April Gornik, Nobuyoshi Araki, and More
- Art 101: Five Art Park Retreats to Beat the City Heat
- Art 101: Why Does Art History Have the Blues?
Photograph
Inkjet print
14.59 x 24.00 in
37.1 x 61.0 cm
This work comes with a Certificate of Authenticity.
About The Work
This Artspace edition print supports the Stanlee and Gereald Rubin Center for the Visual Arts' 10th anniversary featuring artists who engage in disruptive, alternative, and collective interactions with space and space technology.
This print by Tomás Saraceno is based on his installation project Cloud Cities, which imagines various physical and theoretical structures through which human beings could inhabit the upper atmosphere. Most notably installed on the roof of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2012, the project combines architecture, climate science and visual ingenuity. In this print, Saraceno renders enclosed geodesic structures that hold entire lakes and forests, floating in the clouds.
About Tomás Saraceno
From The Magazine
- Art 101: "What I'd Buy This October": Artspace's Advisor Hannah Parker Shares the Artworks in Her Cart
- News & Events: Head in the Clouds: Sky-Inspired Artworks by April Gornik, Nobuyoshi Araki, and More
- Art 101: Five Art Park Retreats to Beat the City Heat
- Art 101: Why Does Art History Have the Blues?
This work is an edition of 50+20AP
- Ships in 7 to 10 business days from New York. Framed works ship in 11 to 14 business days from New York.
- This work is eligible for return within 30 days of receipt of delivery.
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ARTSPACE EDITION