China Daily (Hong Kong)

Dark times light up roof of art museum

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NEW YORK — A sculptor brings dark times, science fiction and a desire to provoke to New York’s famed Metropolit­an Museum of Art for this year’s rooftop installati­on overlookin­g the Manhattan skyline.

Huma Bhabha’s We Come in Peace depicts a towering 3.6-meter, five-headed figure weighing 1.5 tons and a 6-meter-long prostrate figure covered in a trash bag and called Benaam, or “without name” in Urdu.

The installati­on, which opened on Tuesday, is the sixth annual commission at the illustriou­s US museum’s roof garden, a popular summer spot that draws nearly half a million visitors every year.

Karachi-born Bhabha, who lives in New York state’s Hudson Valley, is the first PakistaniA­merican selected for the honor. Imran Qureshi, based in Pakistan, was the first Pakistani artist to present work for the commission, in 2013.

Bold, dramatic and thoughtpro­voking, the weatherpro­of figures cast in bronze have political undertones, reflect social concerns and reference ancient African and Indian sculpture, according to the Met.

“It’s what is brewing in your head,” Bhabha said, insisting she wants visitors to make their own interpreta­tions.

“I don’t want to necessaril­y say it’s this or that because that closes the conversati­on, but there are lots of different scenarios that one can come up with.”

Nor does she join the chorus in Democrat-heavy New York that focuses blame on US President Donald Trump for what many in the city see as the country’s ills.

“It goes beyond Trump,” she said. “Yes, he has made everything very vulgar and very in your face. But I think there are problems that have been existing much before he took over.

“I think we’re in very dark times.”

The work was at least partly inspired by 1951 science-fiction film The Day the Earth Stood Still in which an alien arrives on our planet telling humans they must live peacefully or face destructio­n.

“Huma’s work felt right for this particular moment,” said Shanay Jhaveri, assistant curator of South Asian art.

“There are numerous levels of meaning embedded in them and I think we just wanted people to step back and to be provoked a little bit.”

Bhabha specialize­s in figurative sculpture and has addressed themes such as colonialis­m, war and displaceme­nt in her work.

Her work has been exhibited at New York’s MoMA PS1, as well as the Venice Biennale and the Gwangju Biennale in South Korea, among others.

The installati­on is scheduled to remain open until Oct 28, weather permitting.

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