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Apollo
Art Diary

As Long as the Sun Lasts

29 July 2022

A special summer edition of this week’s Apollo Art Diary highlights four exhibitions where art can be enjoyed in the great outdoors. 

American artist Alex Da Corte is the subject of a survey at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Humlebæk (until 8 January 2023), but before you reach the museum you are treated to a preview in the form of As Long as the Sun Lasts (2021). This 26-foot-tall sculpture takes its place on the Calder Terrace of the Louisiana in Denmark (until 23 October), temporarily displacing Alexander Calder’s kinetic Little Janey-Waney (1964–76). Da Corte’s vivid As Long as the Sun Lasts (2021) takes inspiration from Calder’s mobile structures with a hanging construction including spheres and a crescent moon. Perched on top of the hanging moon, an eccentric blue bird looks out at the skyline, acting as a comical homage to Sesame Street’s Big Bird. The sculpture was originally created for a site-specific work for the Roof Garden of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. This is the first opportunity to see the work in Europe. Find out more on the Louisiana’s website.

Preview below | View Apollo’s Art Diary here

As Long as the Sun Lasts (2021), Alex Da Corte. Courtesy Louisiana Museum of Modern Art; photo: Kim Hansen; © Alex Da Corte; Matthew Marks Gallery, New York; Sadie Coles HQ, London

As Long as the Sun Lasts (2021), Alex Da Corte. Photo: Kim Hansen/Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebæk; courtesy the artist, Matthew Marks Gallery, New York, and Sadie Coles HQ, London; © Alex Da Corte

As Long as the Sun Lasts (2021), Alex Da Corte. Photo: Kim Hansen/Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebæk; courtesy the artist, Matthew Marks Gallery, New York, and Sadie Coles HQ, London; © Alex Da Corte