Museum Visitor Injured After Falling Into Anish Kapoor Mock Abyss Art Installation
Sometimes, you get contemporary art. And sometimes, contemporary art gets you.
Such a visitor to the Serralves Museum in Portugal learned last week after falling into an instillation by Jewish artist Anish Kapoor. “Descent Into Limbo,” Kapoor’s 1992 work, features a circle in the ground painted pitch black. Despite signs and guards warning guests not to get too close, one visitor stepped on the work and fell into what is, in fact, an 8-foot-deep hole. The man, reportedly an Italian tourist in his 60s, was hospitalized but has been released.
Sir Anish Kapoor is a renowned UK artist whose distinctions include winning the 2017 Genesis Prize, the so-called “Jewish Nobel” for which he was given $1 million to distribute to a cause of his choosing. He chose to put the money towards efforts to aid Syrian refugees, particularly through Jewish-run organizations. He is the artist behind the iconic work “Cloud Gate,” also known as “the bean,” in Chicago’s Millennium Park.
The Serralves Museum closed the Kapoor exhibit briefly to assess safety but reportedly plans to reopen soon. Now, at least, cynical art viewers can’t say of Kapoor’s eight-foot-deep, eight-foot-wide work, “My kid could make that.”
Jenny Singer is the deputy lifestyle editor for the Forward. You can reach her at [email protected] or on Twitter @jeanvaljenny
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