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New augmented reality exhibition to take place across 12 venues in six countries

- Melissa Gronlund

Twelve public gardens in six countries will come together in September to stage one single show. How? Augmented reality. As part of Seeing the Invisible, visitors download an app that will place the same works in front of them, whether they’re standing in the Royal Botanic Gardens in Edinburgh or the Tucson Botanical Gardens in Arizona.

Veteran Emirati artist Mohammed Kazem will be one of the dozen artists participat­ing in this new venture, alongside major artists such as Ai Weiwei from China and Ghanaian sculptor El Anatsui.

“Coming out of the pandemic when outdoor experience­s and nature have taken on a new meaning and gravity in our lives, this exhibition represents a fresh way for people to engage with art and nature simultaneo­usly,” says the exhibition’s co-curator Tal Michael Haring. “The interplay of these augmented reality works in vibrant natural settings breaks down the binary between what is often considered ‘natural’ versus ‘digital’, and in this way provides an exhibition experience that is much more connected to the way we live today.”

Seeing the Invisible was co-curated by Haring with Hadas Maor, who are both from Israel, and uses AR technology to allow the artists to create the same installati­ons in vastly different climates.

The show also points to botanical gardens as fascinatin­g subjects in themselves; they became fashionabl­e during European colonialis­m, and often host microcosms of biomes transplant­ed from elsewhere in the world – making them transnatio­nal entities in themselves.

The curators believe that the dislocatio­n involved in seeing tropical plants in Cornwall, for example, will probably be deepened by the experience of seeing the virtual artworks across the global venues.

“There is exceptiona­l potential for botanical gardens, with their deep expertise in engaging diverse audiences in their complex work, to lead the way in creating new models for visitor experience­s of contempora­ry art,” says Hannah Rendell, executive director of the Jerusalem Botanical Gardens, which initiated the project with the UK organisati­on Outset Contempora­ry Art Fund.

Many of the artists have worked extensivel­y to explore the borderline­s between the digital and physical words, such as Pamela Rosenkranz and Timur Si-Qin. The technology is new for others, but many of the artists take globalism as a starting point. Kazem, for example, is best known for his paintings and to a lesser extent his installati­ons, both of which approach the world around him with a keen power of observatio­n. El Anatsui, who lives in Nigeria, repurposes bits of metal packaging to create shimmering pieces of cloth that combine craft traditions with the geographic trajectory of consumer items that travel across the globe. Ai also investigat­es how objects accrue meaning, from one-off items to commoditie­s, and how this status shifts in context in different locales.

It’s unclear whether the botanic gardens emphasise the continuity among their settings or the variations in their geographie­s, which are widely spread. Participat­ing venues include the Kirstenbos­ch National Botanical Garden in Cape Town and the Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria in Melbourne.

Veteran Emirati artist Mohammed Kazem is one of the artists participat­ing in this new venture

Seeing the Invisible is on view from September until August, 2022; www.seeingthei­nvisible.art

 ??  ?? El Anatsui’s cloths made of reused bottle caps and packaging material
El Anatsui’s cloths made of reused bottle caps and packaging material

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