A Met Gala installation: Heaven's Gate
Brambilla, known for other mindbending and stimulating visuals, wows viewers in this digital fantasy of movie stars, old Hollywood, and references that are nostalgic to movie lovers everywhere. There’s a hyper-realistic sense of comfort and awe, just as we had felt when watching the movies that he referenced. Presenting “Heaven’s Gate” in an elevator is a genius idea as guests are automatically drawn into the seamlessly never-ending loop of color and imagination.
office had the opportunity to view this showing at The Standard and had the opportunity to ask Brambilla questions about his latest digital masterpiece.
Continue reading for an exclusive interview below.
What was the inspiration behind this video?
I was inspired by baroque painting and the idea of re-inventing this kind of visual storytelling as a digital landscape of looping and collaged film samples. Heaven's Gate leads us upwards through a series of seven surreal landscapes. The panoramas are arranged vertically as a kind of digital totem, in which the monument of our worship questions human nature’s relationship to consumption and excess.
Why did you decide that The Standard was the perfect place to showcase Heaven’s Gate?
My first video collage piece, Civilization (Megaplex) was installed at The Standard New York when it first opened about a decade ago. The installation of my latest video collage follows the tradition of the early work. It is also a vertical video scroll in which we levitate upwards as we are physically while watching it in the elevators.
How long is Heaven’s Gate going to be available for people to watch at The Standard?
This is a long-term installation and will be shown at the Standard for many years.
What’s something that you think is an important message that viewers might miss, but you think is vital to the piece overall?
I think people will take from it what moves them viscerally, the imagery depicts an ascension while simultaneously showing a reflection of the challenges facing us as a society as we rise to the "present-day" environments near the top. It is also a pop-culture retelling of the seven levels of Dante's Purgatorio which borders on visual overload much the same way the media landscape which surrounds us today.
How has your past work influenced this one?
The technique is identical to what I created for the first piece (there are now four in museum collections around the world) However, the subject matter is clearly of the moment there are traces of the pandemic the political turmoil surrounding the 2020 elections running through the narrative.