Imperial Valley Press

Janelle Monae explores surveillan­ce in her first art exhibit in L.A.

- BY SANDY COHEN The AP Entertainm­ent Writer

LOS ANGELES — 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 earlier this 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 eightday run is already 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 parlor. 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 trans-positive gra ti where the stalls told stories from transgende­r people.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JORDAN STRAUSS/INVISION ?? Janelle Monae poses for a portrait at the West Coast debut of 29rooms at ROW DTLA on Wednesday in Los Angeles.
AP PHOTO/JORDAN STRAUSS/INVISION Janelle Monae poses for a portrait at the West Coast debut of 29rooms at ROW DTLA on Wednesday in Los Angeles.

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