March 26, 2026

Floating Installation Turns Climate Data Into Immersive Light Experience

Suspended high above the atrium of the MIT Museum, a vast, netted sculpture by Janet Echelman invites visitors to look up and think forward. Titled Remembering the Future, the installation transforms complex climate data into a luminous, immersive work that merges art, science, and engineering. Unveiled in September 2025, the monumental piece stretches across the museum’s lobby as a canopy of braided fibers in shifting hues of blue and orange.

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March 25, 2026

Cascading Tulle Installations Look Like Pink Waterfalls Indoors

Multidisciplinary artist Ana María Hernando has opened her largest solo museum exhibition in a decade. Held within the largest gallery at Denver’s Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA Denver), Hernando filled the 1,400-square-foot space with enthralling installations about strength and rebirth. Titled Seguir cantando (Keep Singing), this collection of work sees the artist reach new heights with her textile work. “I work with a lot of materials, a lot of textiles, installation work.

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March 24, 2026

Monochrome Painting of Frida Kahlo Captures Her Soulful Essence in Blue

Few artists have understood the power of color quite like Frida Kahlo did. The late Mexican painter made bright hues part of her visual language, which she used to acknowledge both her heritage and her health struggles. Artist RAH Azul’s approach to color is different, but equally alluring. The painter works in shades of blue to create ornate portraits of Mexican icons and pop culture legends.

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