Amalgama Phillips by Daniel Canogar

  • Visual arts
  • Washington, D.C.
  • Tue, Sep 14, 2021 —
    Sun, Jan 30, 2022
Amalgama Phillips by Daniel Canogar

The Phillips Collection celebrates its 100th anniversary with “Amalgama Phillips,” a project by Daniel Canogar that will be presented at the same time as “Amalgama El Prado.”

The Phillips Collection presents a Digital Intersections project by Daniel Canogar in celebration of the museum’s 100th anniversary. Amalgama Phillips will premiere on the Phillips’s YouTube channel on September 8, followed by a site-specific multichannel projection.

The Cultural Office of the Embassy of Spain joins the Phillips’s centennial celebration by presenting Canogar’s Amalgama El Prado, originally screened on the facade of the Museo Nacional del Prado to mark the museum’s 200th anniversary in 2019, and now presented for the first time in the United States at the Former Residence of the Ambassadors of Spain in Washington, D.C.

Amalgama Phillips uses images of artworks from the museum’s permanent collection to create a generative digital artwork that liquefies all the works in a seamless blend of melted imagery. Whether experienced in-person or online, the images of the artworks melt into a rich abstract animation. The piece is constantly evolving, producing new visual configurations driven by an algorithm. The word, “amalgama”, or “amalgam” in English, refers to the process of blending or melting of visuals. Conceptually, Amalgama Phillips explores how digital media is transforming our experience and understanding of art and the history of art. The swirling visual effects that have transformed the original artworks parallel our ever-changing reality as well as the ceaseless flow of information on social media that equally transform how artworks are consumed.

About Daniel Canogar

Born to a Spanish father and an American mother, Daniel Canogar (b. 1964, Madrid, Spain; lives and works in Madrid) received a masters degree from New York University in 1990, but soon after shifted his interest toward projected image, installations, and public art. Canogar’s public artworks include Constellations, the largest photo-mosaic in Europe created for two pedestrian bridges in MRío Park (Madrid, 2010), and Asalto, a series of video-projections presented on various emblematic monuments, including the Arcos de Lapa (Rio de Janeiro, 2009), the Puerta de Alcalá (Madrid, 2009); the church of San Pietro in Montorio (Rome, 2009), and Storming Times Square in Times Square (New York, NY, 2014). He has exhibited at Reina Sofia Contemporary Art Museum, Madrid; Wexner Center for the Arts, Ohio; Borusan Contemporary Museum, Istanbul; American Museum of Natural History, New York; Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; and Palacio Velázquez, Madrid, among others.

About Intersections

Intersections is a series of contemporary art projects that explores –as the title suggests– the intriguing intersections between old and new traditions, modern and contemporary art practices, and museum spaces and artistic interventions. Whether engaging with the permanent collection or diverse spaces in the museum, the projects suggest new relationships with their own surprises. Many of the projects also riff on the nontraditional nature of the museum’s galleries, sometimes activating spaces that are not typical exhibition areas with art produced specifically for those locations.

Venue

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The Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St NW, Washington, DC 20009

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Buy tickets (included with general admission)

More information

Digital Intersections: Daniel Canogar

Credits

Presented by The Phillips Collection in collaboration with the Cultural Office of the Embassy of Spain in Washington, D.C. Image by Daniel Canogar, Amalgama Phillips, 2021

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