James Turrell, “Raemar Pink White” (1969), Shall Space, Collection of Art & Research, Las Vegas. (all images © James Turrell, photo by Florian Holzherr, and all ...
Not many people have yet seen the temple of light he has built here, and most of it is not visible from above, for it consists of a complex of chambers and tunnels extending deep below the surface.
On 19 June 2026, ARoS will open As Seen Below – The Dome, a Skyspace by James Turrell.
"In this 'Skyspace,' the day has weight, the evening has temperature, and the change belongs to you," Turrell says.
James Turrell’s Skyspaces are known to immerse visitors in a subtle choreography of light, color, and sky. Next year, at the ARoS Aarhus Art Museum, the American artist will deliver his largest ...
LACMA is currently showing a retrospective of 50 years of work by James Turrell; the Guggenheim Manhattan is about to open a show in which the light and space artist drenches the interior of Frank ...
«[James Turrell’s] statement is unique. It’s importance lies in the way in which he uses the natural elements of the environment, light and space, to challenge our visual perceptions.»[1] In 1980, on ...
James Turrell's first exhibition in a New York museum since 1980 focuses on the artist's groundbreaking explorations of perception, light, color, and space, with a special focus on the role of site ...