ML - Vegas Magazine

2014 - Issue 6 - October

Vegas Magazine - Niche Media - There is a place beyond the crowds, beyond the ropes, where dreams are realized and success is celebrated. You are invited.

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108  vegasmagazine.com It was Michele Quinn who oversaw the installation of the outdoor art of the Strip's CityCenter complex. This $40 million project includes 15 works by contemporary artists. Standouts include Nancy Rubins's brightly colored bouquet of boats, Big Edge, and the huge stainless steel sculpture by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, Typewriter Eraser, Scale X. T w o o f the site's other pieces lurk indoors, sparkling works by James Turrell, an artist obsessed with the power of light— housed, fittingly, in The Shops at Crystals. Shards of Color is i l l -served by its location, more akin to an architectural doodad than a work by one of the world's top conceptual artists. But the second piece, Akhob, is a true must-see. This enormous work sits unmarked on its own f loor inside, and above, the Louis Vuitton store. Just make an appointment, and when you arrive, you'll be whisked upstairs. Here Turrell has created one of his largest works ever, and a true masterpiece: a womblike installation, f looded with ever-changing light that's meditative and unsettling at the same time. It's sheltered from the Strip's hubbub (Bavington calls it "a sorbet to Las Vegas," a spiritual palate cleanser), and each tour is limited to four people, so the experience remains intense and private, like accessing an art-world VIP room. Cosmopolitan partnered with the New York – based Art Production Fund to create a comprehensive program of contemporary work, whether it's the eight discofied columns at check-in, shimmering with color-saturated videos, or the poppy murals on the concrete walls of the self-park garage. Called Wallworks, the garage project includes contributions by Shinique Smith, Kenny Scharf, and Shepard Fairey. Cosmopolitan's quirkiest art outpost, however, sits on the mezzanine level among the hotel's high-end restaurants: the P3 studio. This residency space has hosted artists such as Fab 5 Freddy and Shelter Serra (nephew of Richard), who live and work there gratis for several weeks. Early this year, the closing party for local artist Alisha Kerlin seemed like any other glitzy evening bash on the Strip—at least at first glance. Trays of In PlaIn SIght: On the StrIP

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