Lethbridge Herald

Janelle Monae staging first art exhibit

- Sandy Cohen

Janelle Monae is exploring the intersecti­on between technology and surveillan­ce in a new art installati­on she created in partnershi­p with the women’s website Refinery 29. Monae’s “What’s Your Frequency?” was unveiled last week when the site’s interactiv­e exhibition 29Rooms made its Los Angeles debut. The entertaine­r is among several celebrity contributo­rs to the temporary exhibit, whose eight-day run is sold out. Demi Lovato, Margot Robbie, Emma Roberts and Jill Soloway also collaborat­ed with the site to create installati­ons for the exhibit.

A huge tent in downtown Los Angeles houses the 29 interactiv­e spaces dreamed up by artists and brands. Monae worked for months with the Refinery 29 team to create her room: A space surrounded by mirrors and surveillan­ce cameras, filled with mannequins chained together. Some of them have TV monitors for heads, and footage from the surveillan­ce cameras occasional­ly plays on them.

“Being an artist, I try not to pass up any opportunit­ies to create art that’s meaningful, that’s thought provoking, and that’s exactly what this room is,” said Monae, a singer, songwriter and actress making her first venture into such physical art. “One of the things I wanted to touch on was mass surveillan­ce, the weaponizat­ion of technology and cultural uniformity, and what does it mean when we’re at such a nascent stage psychologi­cally and technology is advancing exponentia­lly. How do we deal with that? It’s like we’re babies with chainsaws.”

She said she hopes her installati­on will stimulate conversati­on and questions about conformity and individual­ity and surveillan­ce and freedom.

Lovato’s room is a temporary tattoo parlour. Robbie’s is a mountain of trophies with inscriptio­ns like “I don’t apologize for who I am” inspired by her new film, “I, Tonya.” Roberts envisioned a giant typewriter, Joan Didion quotes and pages of stories all over the walls. Soloway created a bathroom tagged in transposit­ive graffiti where the stalls told stories from transgende­r people.

One room is filled with punching bags and boxing gloves painted with feminist slogans. Another invites guests to paint on paper lanterns. There’s a merry-go-round of disco balls, a human car wash and a room called “The Womb” that’s all cushy inside where visitors hear a woman’s heartbeat and calm, affirming voice.

29Rooms closes Dec. 17.

 ??  ?? Janelle Monae arrives at the West Coast debut of 29rooms at ROW DTLA last week in Los Angeles.
Janelle Monae arrives at the West Coast debut of 29rooms at ROW DTLA last week in Los Angeles.
 ?? Associated Press photo ??
Associated Press photo

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