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Staatsbibliothek Haus Potsdamer Straße, Ibero-Amerikanisches Institut, Otto-Braun-Saal, Kulturforum, Berlin-Tiergarten, 1967–1978, Hans Scharoun & Edgar Wisniewski; Stahlplastik "Constellation", 1991, Bernhard Heiliger
The Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (MASS MoCA) occupies a converted factory building complex occupying 13-acres in North Adams, Massachusetts. It is one of the largest centers for contemporary visual art in the United States. The complex was originally built by the Arnold Print Works, which operated on the site from 1860 to 1942. MASS MoCA opened in 1999 with 19 galleries and 100,000 sq ft (9,300 m2) of exhibition space. It is large enough to put on exhibitions in individual buildings for extended periods - a Sol Lewitt building has five stories full of work conceived by him (and executed by others) on display until 2033; another building contains three large-scale installations by Anself Keifer on display until 2028.
The Boiler Room is one of the buidlings and when I was there it contained an installation of audio art. And old boiler room stuff that was highly photogenic.
Mario Ceroli, Albero della Vita, Anni ‘60, Legno pino di Russia, 300 [25] x 550 [25] x 250 [12] cm, Collezione privata
Altro titolo - Another title: L’uomo non pretenderà mica di stendere ancora la mano e prendere anche dall'albero della vita, mangiarne il frutto e vivere per sempre!?! - Man will not pretend to reach out his hand again and take from the tree of life, eat its fruit and live forever!?! (Genesis 3, 22), 2024
[Fototeca Fondazione Omeri]
A striking orange wall emblazoned with the names Basquiat × Banksy marks the entry to an unforgettable confrontation of two of the most influential figures in contemporary art. Captured at the threshold of an exhibit space, this minimalist visual moment sets the tone for a bold, conceptual dialogue between Jean-Michel Basquiat and Banksy—artists separated by decades but united by rebellious spirit and raw social commentary.
The visual intensity of the space lies in its deliberate simplicity: a pure white floor and walls lead to an unapologetically saturated orange panel, bisected by black text in stark modern typography. The juxtaposition of these two artistic giants implies a conceptual collaboration that never happened but feels urgent and electric. Both Basquiat and Banksy emerged from the streets—Basquiat from 1980s New York and Banksy from the alleys of Bristol—making this visual tribute not just a stylistic pairing but a symbolic lineage of dissent, activism, and unfiltered creative expression.
Basquiat brought the rhythms of jazz, the scrawls of graffiti, and the anguish of African American identity to fine art institutions that had previously excluded voices like his. Banksy, meanwhile, has mastered the use of irony, stealth, and anonymity to critique power, capitalism, surveillance, and war. What binds them isn’t medium or method but message: both artists use the urban canvas to provoke, disturb, and incite dialogue. Their works often appear deceptively simple, but each line or stencil is loaded with cultural ammunition.
This photo captures more than an exhibition entrance—it documents a moment of friction and fusion. It asks the viewer: What happens when two artistic revolutionaries share the same walls, even symbolically? How does one’s legacy ripple through the other’s provocations?
As the viewer stands before this wall, they are invited not just to enter a gallery, but to step into a cultural crossroads. The stark contrast between orange and white, the balance of names, and the center alignment all contribute to an atmosphere that feels simultaneously reverent and raw. The absence of any imagery from either artist ensures the focus stays on the names—their ideas, their myths, their impact.
Photographically, the image uses symmetry and bold color blocking to great effect. The simplicity allows the viewer’s imagination to fill in the blanks: crowns, rats, skulls, police officers, heroes, villains, saints, and sinners. Whether the exhibit itself presents original works or a curated dialogue, the threshold image suggests tension, excitement, and a radical approach to curation.
Ultimately, Basquiat × Banksy is a conversation that never happened—but through this image and the show it announces, it continues to evolve, expand, and echo across time.
Yayoi Kusama, Pumpkin, 2012 (signed and dated 'YAYOI KUSAMA 2012' ['Pam CONVIENE 2024'] on the side), Fiberglass-reinforced plastic [Organic], 53 1/2 x 50 1/2 x 50 ½ in - 135.8 x 128.2 x 128.2 cm, Private collection
Altro titolo - Another title: The art of empty pumpkins, 2024
Daniel Spoerri, Tableau-piège - Variante pasto mangiato da Roy Lichtenstein [Fabio e Tomas], 1964 [2022], Assemblaggio: tavolo, lampada, pentolino, piatti, ciottola di vetro con resti di tartàre di filetto di manzo, bicchiere, posate, bottiglia di vino, pancarré, barattoli di senape, tabasco, ketchup, saliera, pepiera, scatola di sigari, portacenere con mozziconi, Giornale dell’Arte, Settimana enigmistica, tovagliette all'americana del Musée Picasso, matita, ecc., 36,6 x 69,5 x 65,4 cm, Milano [Trieste], Collezione dell’autore