CHANGING SPACES
Rockefeller Center
Forty-Ninth to Fiftieth Sts. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Daily through September 9, free
www.rockefellercenter.com
www.jeppehein.net
changing spaces slideshow
In 2015, Jeppe Hein installed the three-part interactive Please Touch the Art across Brooklyn Bridge Park, consisting of a water sculpture, social climbing bench, and circular mirrored maze. This summer, the Berlin-based Danish artist’s Changing Spaces has been delighting adults and children of all ages in Rockefeller Center. In the plaza right above the roller skating rink, Hein has placed “liquid architecture,” four intersecting circles that shoot up water at different times and heights. Visitors are encouraged to step into the circles before the jets shoot up and stay until they go down, which will not make you get wet. However, you can get as drenched as you want to if you run through the circles willy-nilly. But unlike rAndom International’s Rain Room at MoMA, Changing Spaces is not motion activated.
The installation, in which you will certainly end up touching the art, continues through September 9; it is open seven am to eleven pm daily and till midnight on Saturday and Sunday. “My aim is to exhibit artworks that approach visitors on different levels, awaken their senses, and touch their hearts, activate various emotions, and encourage mutual exchange,” Hein said in a statement. “Ideally, my work fosters communication and empathy that people will pass on to others. The shape was meant to contrast the rectangular layout of New York, embracing people in a circle of water.”