Newfields to Debut Major Digital Gallery
The Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields has unveiled what it says will
be the largest continuous exhibition space in the museum’s 137-year history.
Dr. Charles Venable, director and chief executive officer of Newfields, says
THE LUME Indianapolis will be the first permanent digital projection gallery
of its size in which the museum can display digital exhibitions from
throughout the world. The space, set to debut in June 2021, will take up the
entire fourth floor of the museum, covering nearly 30,000 square feet.
In an interview with Inside INdiana Business Reporter Reed Parker, Venable
said THE LUME Indianapolis will be a “delight for all the senses.”
“It’s also what we’ve seen abroad in Paris, in Australia, in China and
Japan,” said Venable. “This new way of looking at art really appeals to a
broader group of people and one of our big goals is to have a more diverse
and broader audience and doing this, we think, will really bring in not only
more people from the metroplex here, but will bring in more people from the
entire Midwest.”
THE LUME Indianapolis will feature nearly 150 high-definition projectors
that the museum says will be able to transform two-dimensional paintings
into a “three-dimensional world that guests can explore through all of their
senses.”
The inaugural exhibit inside THE LUME Indianapolis will focus on the works
of Vincent van Gogh, featuring about 3,000 moving images of his paintings
set to a classical music score.
“Every summer, we’ll introduce a new exhibition that will run for a year,”
said Venable. “Our business plan really is to build an audience in the
United States for this because there’s nothing like it the way there are in
other parts of the world and so we’re going to focus on great masterpieces
of the world.”
Venable says he eventually wants to utilize the new space to spotlight
contemporary art and commission artists in digital media.
THE LUME Indianapolis is being made possible through funding from
Indianapolis-based Lilly Endowment Inc. Venable says the grant stems from a
visit to a similar exhibit made by Lilly Endowment CEO Clay Robbins.
“He called me one day and said, ‘I just walked out of this experience. Have
you seen this?’ and I said, ‘Oh yeah, I’ve seen that. I’ve taken staff
there.’ He said, ‘Can we bring this to Indianapolis?’ and I said, ‘We’ve
been working on this for five years but we just determined we can’t afford
it.’ And we put in a grant application and it got funded, so Lilly has given
us the risk capital for us to be able to do the infrastructure, the
construction, get the first show up and running and we hope attendance is
high enough that it will perpetuate it on into the future.”
THE LUME was created by Australia-based Grande Experiences. Newfields says
the Indianapolis space will also be available as an event rental space.
Source: Inside Indiana Business with Gerry Dick