Miami Beach, December 3: On Miami Beach, more than 60 cars sculpted out of sand are drawing attention at this year's Art Basel international festival, but the aim of their creator is as much about raising awareness of climate change as tickling art lovers' palates.
The sand cars, which form what looks like a traffic jam sinking into the world-famous beach, have proven a favorite with visitors who snap selfies in front of the installation, entitled "Order of Importance" and created by 46-year-old Argentine sculptor Leandro Erlich. Sudarsan Pattnaik Becomes First Indian to Win Italian Golden Sand Art Award 2019 (View Pic).
Erlich told reporters Monday the work is a reflection on the crisis the world is facing due to climate change and "our responsibility, our implication in the events that are starting to happen to the planet." The title "has to do with understanding what our priorities are right now and thinking about our future," he said.
The artist was walking among the sand cars with Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber, who congratulated Erlich on capturing the contradictory nature of Miami Beach, which is built on a fragile barrier island and facing numerous challenges from climate change, yet also reliant on tourism.
See Pics:
Sand cars replace sand castles at Miami Art Basel international festivalhttps://t.co/M6gVfr3G2H
📸 The temporary installation 'Order of Importance' by the artist Leandro Erlich on Miami Beach pic.twitter.com/KsnmCNr4TN
— AFP news agency (@AFP) December 3, 2019
"For someone to be able to create a confluence of these things, the environment, the urbanization, the ecology, so that a person walking by can see it and experience it and think about it in his own way is something spectacular," said Gelber. Sudarsan Pattnaik Creates Sand Art For Amitabh Bachchan's 77th Birthday on Odisha's Puri Beach, View Pic.
Erlich is best known for his work Dalston House, an optical illusion in which he placed a huge mirror at an angle in front of the life-sized replica of a house's facade, giving visitors the sense they were hanging off the building's wall.
Another work featured an illusory swimming pool that allowed people to look like they were walking, fully clothed, under water.
(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Dec 03, 2019 09:43 AM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).