Posted on 08/21/2018 8:45:02 AM PDT by Gamecock
Like a real-life version of a Looney Tunes cartoon, a visitor to a Portuguese museum was injured last week when he stepped into an art installation resembling an inky void. Currently on exhibit at the Serralves Museum in Porto, Descent Into Limbo by Anish Kapoor includes an actual eight-foot hole thats painted blackso it appears to have no depth at all.
According to Britains Times, attendees of previous showings of the work have questioned whether there really was a hole in the floor or whether it was simply a circle painted with an extremely dark black paint. Presumably there will be no doubts going forward.
Though the Descent Into Limbo installation was reportedly surrounded with warning signs and staffers warning visitors not to get too close, there was no barrier around it. How the museumgoer, whom Portugals Publico reports was an Italian man in his 60s, was able to step into the hole isnt known, but he was briefly hospitalized for the eight-foot fall. The museum closed the exhibit to assess what happened, but says it plans to reopen it soon.
In addition to being known for his over-sized installations (including the giant reflective Cloud Gate bean in Chicago), Kapoor made headlines in 2016 when he secured the exclusive artistic rights to a physics-defying material called Vantablack. Developed by a British company called Surrey NanoSystems, the material is able to trap photons in-between lab-grown carbon nanotubes, which bounce around until theyre eventually absorbed. Just a scant 0.035 percent of visible light is reflected by an object covered in Vantablack, making it impossible to see any curves or contoursor to accurately gauge the depth of a hole if you dont know what youre looking at.
Descent Into Limbo debuted years before Vantablack was announced to the public, and was instead created using a dark paint that produces the same depthless, black hole effect. For at least one hapless art lover, it seems that was enough.
I was thinking how about pushing a liberal into it....
“How the museumgoer was able to step into the hole isnt known”
Well, I Imagine he put one foot in front of the other.....what a dumb thing to write.
“”Even more ridiculous, is that there was no barrier around the 8 foot deep hole!””
Why did we get to 20 replies before that came up? It should have been the first one. Hope the museum has plenty of liability insurance.
Is that the front hole, the back hole, the top hole, or the a$$hole?
Dang, I need some of that paint for my car so I can be all “hotblack desiato”...
Turn it on Salvadore
Brutally offensive but never a bore.
Didn’t he say how he liked to paint the holes?
Time ticks away while he tries to paint the holes.
Just imagine the engineering and construction possibilities...
“It’s a trap.”
Probably on his phone.
Yes, but how many of these holes would it take to fill the Albert Hall?
hey! new concept! let’s make a hole that doesn’t really look like a hole! let’s put it in the middle of the floor without any warning signs or railings or anything...what could possibly go wrong?
thank goodness a child didn’t fall in there and get seriously injured!
I sense a lawsuit coming
Surprised nobody posted any Beetles references yet...
I’m fixing a hole.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UPBd8eHQqIw
So do you think they know how many holes it takes to fill the Albert Hall ?
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