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    • Argentinian sculptor

      • Adrián Villar Rojas (born 1980 in Rosario, Argentina) is an Argentinian sculptor known for his elaborate fantastical works which explore notions of the Anthropocene and the end of the world.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Adri%C3%A1n_Villar_Rojas
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  2. Adrián Villar Rojas (born 1980 in Rosario, Argentina) is an Argentinian sculptor known for his elaborate fantastical works which explore notions of the Anthropocene and the end of the world. In his dream like installations he uses aspects of drawing, sculpture, video and music to create immersive situations in which the spectator is confronted ...

  3. Sep 5, 2023 · As the exhibition comes to a close (on September 9), I spoke with Villar Rojas, who lives and works nomadically—most recently in Rosario, Argentina—about the multifaceted works he has shown at MoMA, and their new directions.

  4. Adrián Villar Rojas makes fantastical large-scale sculptures that confound one’s sense of time and space. Suggestive of the ruins of ancient civilizations and fossilized artifacts from the prehistoric world, his site-specific arrangements propose a poetic state of being beyond the confines of history. Villar Rojas creates these installations ...

  5. Jul 13, 2017 · The Theater of Disappearance, on view at The Met Fifth Avenue through October 29, 2017. Former intern Angelica Modabber takes readers on a tour of some of the works from The Met collection featured in The Roof Garden Commission: Adrián Villar Rojas, The Theater of Disappearance.

  6. Celebrated Argentinian artist Adrián Villar Rojas is known for his site-specific sculptural installations. For The Theater of Disappearance, the artist mines The Met’s collection, drawing on the five thousand years of world history within its galleries, to create an elaborate ahistorical work.

  7. JOIN NOW. Adrián Villar Rojas: The Theater of Disappearance. MOCA presents Adrián Villar Rojas: The Theater of Disappearance, a site-specific installation inside The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA’s warehouse space.

  8. Unfired local clay, cement. Installation view at the Argentinian Pavilion, 54th Venice Biennale, 2011. Artwork © Adrián Villar Rojas. He created similarly watery beasts in 2015, when the artist installed The Most Beautiful of All Mothers, sited in the waters of the Bosphorus in behind Leon Trotsky’s old, ruined mansion.

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