"The French Artist Who Saw the Pandemic Coming," By Jason Farago, June 4, 2020, Art & Design Section, The New York Times. Six years before the coronavirus, Neïl Beloufa imagined a global outbreak of... Read full biography
"The French Artist Who Saw the Pandemic Coming," By Jason Farago, June 4, 2020, Art & Design Section, The New York Times. Six years before the coronavirus, Neïl Beloufa imagined a global outbreak of disease and digital bewilderment. Screen Talk, his new project, erases the line between fiction and... Read full biography
"The French Artist Who Saw the Pandemic Coming," By Jason Farago, June 4, 2020, Art & Design Section, The New York Times. Six years before the coronavirus, Neïl Beloufa imagined a global outbreak of disease and digital bewilderment. Screen Talk, his new project, erases the line between fiction and real life. The accomplished young French-Algerian artist Neïl Beloufa has a knack for seeing the shape of the future earlier than most. His proudly disjointed videos and sculptures, seen in this... Read full biography
"The French Artist Who Saw the Pandemic Coming," By Jason Farago, June 4, 2020, Art & Design Section, The New York Times. Six years before the coronavirus, Neïl Beloufa imagined a global outbreak of disease and digital bewilderment. Screen Talk, his new project, erases the line between fiction and real life. The accomplished young French-Algerian artist Neïl Beloufa has a knack for seeing the shape of the future earlier than most. His proudly disjointed videos and sculptures, seen in this country in solo shows at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, take the chaos of our information stream as both their subject and their medium: furniture can sprout phone chats or Google Maps indicators, and lovers and... Read full biography
"The French Artist Who Saw the Pandemic Coming," By Jason Farago, June 4, 2020, Art & Design Section, The New York Times. Six years before the coronavirus, Neïl Beloufa imagined a global outbreak of disease and digital bewilderment. Screen Talk, his new project, erases the line between fiction and real life. The accomplished young French-Algerian artist Neïl Beloufa has a knack for seeing the shape of the future earlier than most. His proudly disjointed videos and sculptures, seen in this country in solo shows at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, take the chaos of our information stream as both their subject and their medium: furniture can sprout phone chats or Google Maps indicators, and lovers and criminals talk like they learned English from reality TV. He turns a gimlet eye, too, to the workings of fake news... Read full biography
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