Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Artistic vision takes root at Area15

Las Vegan’s mural will welcome visitors to Meow Wolf ’s otherworld­ly experience

- By Janna Karel Contact Janna Karel at jkarel@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3835. Follow @jannainpro­gress on Twitter.

Like all Joshua trees, this one came to life little by little, sprouting one fiber, needle and leaf at a time, until it reached 40 feet tall.

Unlike most Joshua trees, this one grew in eight weeks, as Las Vegas artist Eric Vozzola meticulous­ly animated it with individual brushstrok­es between the pitch-black sky and the dazzling ombre sunset that form the background of his new mural on the side of the Area15 building.

The mural, which Vozzola free-handed in collaborat­ion with

Meow Wolf, will welcome visitors into the otherworld­ly realm that the Santa Fe, New Mexico-based art collective is planning to open later this year.

The tree is one image in an otherwise abstract art piece that Vozzola hopes will engulf visitors’ peripheral vision and immerse them in the Meow Wolf experience.

“I was super nervous to begin,” Vozzola says. “It was so daunting. But it came out better than I thought. It takes my breath away.”

Vozzola visited Meow Wolf ’s walkthroug­h installati­on in Santa Fe in 2018. He was inspired by the “House of Eternal Return” and its ability to transport visitors to other worlds and juxtapose several contrastin­g experience­s.

He spent 300 hours making the “Window Into the Multiverse” look like it was emerging from behind the 16,000-square-foot wall.

Vozzola compares looking at the mural to hiking through the Southern Nevada desert.

“When you look at that vast landscape from afar, it can look breathtaki­ng,” he says. “But when you hike through it, you notice these natural elements that look different up close. I like that immersive experience.”

 ?? Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-Journal@csstevensp­hoto ?? Las Vegas artist Eric Vozzola, below, spent 300 hours making his “Window Into the Multiverse” mural look like it was emerging from behind a 16,000-square-foot wall.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-Journal@csstevensp­hoto Las Vegas artist Eric Vozzola, below, spent 300 hours making his “Window Into the Multiverse” mural look like it was emerging from behind a 16,000-square-foot wall.

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