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GLOBAL ARTIST OYORAM UNVEILS "TIMEPIECE" -- A DYNAMIC 3D LED INSTALLATION IN DOWNTOWN DES MOINES
GLOBAL ARTIST OYORAM UNVEILS "TIMEPIECE" -- A DYNAMIC 3D LED INSTALLATION IN DOWNTOWN DES MOINES

Cision Canada

time30-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Cision Canada

GLOBAL ARTIST OYORAM UNVEILS "TIMEPIECE" -- A DYNAMIC 3D LED INSTALLATION IN DOWNTOWN DES MOINES

GREATER DES MOINES, Iowa, July 30, 2025 /CNW/ -- Time is taking on a new form in Downtown Des Moines (DSM). "TimePiece" is an innovative 3D LED installation that displays real time by world-renowned artist Yorame Mevorach (known professionally as Oyoram). The piece creates the illusion of depth and movement, transforming a flat surface into an immersive experience. At the top of each hour, a digital mechanical arm springs to life in a captivating visual event, removing and replacing a clock face in a mesmerizing display. Blending art and technology, "TimePiece" becomes a vibrant, ever-changing centerpiece. The installation is located on The Fitch Building, facing the Pappajohn Sculpture Park. "With TimePiece, I wanted to take the traditional element of telling time and reimagine it as a moment of visual surprise. Using light, movement and depth, the work becomes part of the city's rhythm," said Oyoram. "It's not just about what you see, but how it makes you feel in the moment." "This is more than a public art piece, it's a reflection of the creative energy that defines our region," said Renae Mauk, Vice President of Downtown Development of the Greater Des Moines Partnership. "Partnering with an artist whose work spans the globe inspires new possibilities for public art in DSM. Oyoram brings international perspective with a deep commitment to Downtown DSM and Greater Des Moines community." The artist and filmmaker behind this visionary project, Oyoram, is based in Des Moines' Historic Sherman Hill neighborhood and maintains a working studio in Paris. With the addition of a gallery for immersive art installations under construction, he hopes to create a bridge between visual artists in the two cities. Known for replacing conventional media screens with sculptural, immersive visuals, his work has been commissioned by global brands including Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, Sony, Louis Vuitton and Dior. Since 2007, he has created monumental moving images known as "Moving Fresques" and "Moving Fresco." Recent international projects include installations for Cheval Blanc Spa in Paris and Tiffany & Co.'s Landmark store in New York City. Locally, his work includes Mental Banquet: Painting with Lights (2018), 7even Stories High: Immersive Elevator (2022), and the visual design for the Des Moines Metro Opera's Bluebeard's Castle (2023). "Bringing this piece to fruition has been a journey marked by years of planning and meaningful financial investment, reflecting our unwavering belief in the power of art. TimePiece brings fresh, imaginative energy to our streetscape," Angie Pfannkuch, Operation Downtown Board Chair. "Operation Downtown knows that investing in projects like TimePiece helps to elevate the identity and vision for what is possible when creativity is prioritized in public spaces." "Prairie Meadows is proud to invest in projects that strengthen and beautify our communities," said Julie Stewart, Senior Vice President of Business Development at Prairie Meadows. "Public art is a powerful example of visionary investment that enhances quality of life, connects people to places and leaves a lasting impact. TimePiece is a dynamic addition that reflects the creativity and ambition of Downtown DSM." In alignment with the Downtown DSM: Future Forward Vision Plan and Action Plan, TimePiece exemplifies a commitment to inclusive, innovative art that resonates both locally and globally, strengthening the region. The installation was made possible by Operation Downtown, Prairie Meadows, Bravo Greater Des Moines, MidAmerican Energy Foundation, Downtown DSM, Inc., the Greater Des Moines Partnership and private donors, as well as in-kind contributions from Substance Architecture, Christensen Development and artist Oyoram. See images of "TimePiece" here. About Operation Downtown Created to help make Downtown Des Moines (DSM) a safer, cleaner place to work, live and visit, Operation Downtown is classified as a Self-Supported Municipal Improvement District (SSMID). The mission is keeping Downtown DSM safe, clean, welcoming and vibrant, in support of a positive experience. Programs include trash cleanup, flower planting and visitor assistance. Operation Downtown, a 501(c)6, was formed in 1998 by business leaders to provide enhanced services that are not provided by the City of Des Moines. Today, the Greater Des Moines Partnership and Operation Downtown help to keep DSM among the highest-rated, most vibrant regions in the country. Learn more at About the Greater Des Moines Partnership The Greater Des Moines Partnership is the economic and community development organization that serves 12 counties in Greater Des Moines (DSM), Iowa: Adair, Clarke, Dallas, Guthrie, Jasper, Madison, Mahaska, Marion, Marshall, Polk, Poweshiek and Warren. Together with more than 400 Investors and an Affiliate Chamber of Commerce network of more than 7,200 Regional Business Members, The Partnership drives economic growth and talent development to advance quality of life in DSM with one voice, one mission and as one region. Through innovation, strategic planning and global collaboration, The Partnership grows opportunity, helps create jobs and promotes DSM as the best place to build a business, a career and a future. Learn more at

Review: Conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen burrows into Bartók with the CSO
Review: Conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen burrows into Bartók with the CSO

Chicago Tribune

time07-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Chicago Tribune

Review: Conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen burrows into Bartók with the CSO

It's been too long since we've seen Esa-Pekka Salonen on the podium. The conductor-composer, a youthful 66, had to bail on his annual Chicago Symphony booking last season to receive the Polar Music Prize, one of Scandinavia's highest cultural honors. Based on the pointed cheers during his Jan. 30 and Feb. 6 concerts — Salonen routinely stays for a minimum of two concert cycles — he was much missed. One especially craves Salonen's out-of-the-box programming in these long CSO seasons between music directors, which, thus far, have felt creatively rudderless. To wit, Salonen brought two nights of assiduously played cornerstones by Béla Bartók: the Concerto for Orchestra and an immersive concert version of the one-act opera 'Bluebeard's Castle.' He also programmed a piece of his own, 2022's 'Sinfonia concertante for organ and orchestra'; Latvian organist Iveta Apkalna, one of the dedicatees, soloed. In a reversal of the usual fortunes at 220 S. Michigan, the two slam-dunk repertory pieces invited along for the ride — Richard Strauss's 'Don Juan' and Beethoven's Symphony No. 2 — came off workmanlike in comparison. Salonen's Sinfonia concertante, programmed for the Jan. 30 concert cycle, turns the organ's austere timbres futuristic, like an alien anthem. In written comments, Salonen says he intended for the piece to live up to its 'sinfonia concertante' title — in other words, the organ is on equal footing with the orchestra, not above and apart from it. That much is clear. The Sinfonia's best moments nail the handoff between organ and orchestra — Apkalna inheriting a line from the piccolo at the beginning, or locking in with the low brass on the pedalboard, the organ's foot-operated keyboard. At the very end, the organ hangs over the orchestra's final B-flat chord with a quiet D-flat-minorish chord, a sonority plucked from another world. Salonen's orchestra writing, however, isn't his best — it's often blocky and meandering. On Thursday, it wasn't played with much phrasing or zhuzh from the strings, either. The best part of his 'Sinfonia concertante for organ and orchestra' is, in fact, the organ. Salonen had apparently never composed for the instrument prior to the commission, and his exuberant writing brings us right into the sandbox with him. With any luck, we'll hear more from Apkalna, too. She ended with a pealing, cascading toccata on the chorale 'Allein Gott in der Höh sei Ehr,' composed by fellow countryman Aivars Kalējs. The curtain-closer let Apkalna settle into her lyrical side rather than the stacked dissonance of the Sinfonia's cadenzas, her wrists elegantly rolling and flowing between manuals. Hearing Salonen conduct his own work is always a pleasure, but Bartók was unequivocally the man of the hour for both concerts. On Jan. 30, a resplendent Concerto for Orchestra carried all the DNA of the CSO's long relationship with the piece — the 1955 Reiner recording helped usher it into the repertoire — and embraced a dramatic pacing that eluded the Strauss. One can't heap praise on this performance without shouting out specific members of the orchestra — it's right there in the 'concerto' title. Stefán Ragnar Höskuldsson's flute solos were always passionately phrased, as was oboist William Welter's aubade-like solo in the first movement. Even sections that have seen some fitful performance in recent months sounded sterling, trombones led commandingly by Michael Mulcahy and horn solis sounding well-blended and clarion. Salonen's 'Bluebeard' on Feb. 6 managed to raise the bar still higher. Tasteful lighting design by Keith Parham plopped us right into the heart of Bartók's disturbing tale: Judith marries the reclusive duke Bluebeard, only to find out his castle — and he, by extension — is cursed. Against Bluebeard's pleas, she finds successive horrors and splendors behind seven doors. At the opera's climax, the last door opens to reveal all of Bluebeard's previous wives. 'Jane Eyre's' Mr. Rochester looks like a Teletubby in comparison. What doesn't work nearly so well in a concert version: having Bartók's thick orchestration surge directly behind the singers, rather than being curbed by a pit. Balances tended to be on the very edge of legibility. It didn't help that 'Bluebird's' singers had very different projection to begin with. Christian Van Horn was more easily heard over the din. He was a natural Bluebeard, his powerful, sepulchral bass-baritone softened by a seductive warmth. One easily understood why Judith fell in love with such a morbid figure to begin with. As his opposite, mezzo-soprano Ekaterina Gubanova had a narrower, milder vocal palette but convincingly evoked Judith's mounting horror, gasping through jagged consonant clusters. Breezy Leigh — also the narrator in Salonen's recent 'Bluebeard' at the San Francisco Symphony — intoned the poetic, introductory text with the right amount of gravitas, the hall darkened save for a single spotlight illuminating her at stage right. 'Bluebeard's' libretto is crammed with references to specific color: blood-red, blue-green, ghostly white. Parham illuminated the terrace level behind the stage with colored light throughout, sometimes lifting hues directly from the text. Other times, he set out to create his own based on the scene's feel. (That said, with the audience facing rows of closed doors on the terrace and stage level, it felt like a lost opportunity to incorporate at least some of those into the staging, however on-the-nose it might have been.) In the libretto, the opening of the fifth door casts 'bright light' into Bluebeard's darkened castle, accompanied by organ and auxiliary brass in the gallery. At that glorious, triple-forte moment, as Salonen turned to conduct the brass up above, Orchestra Hall itself flooded with light, brightening the faces of an astonished, awe-struck audience. Moments like these are what music is made of — treating the audience as part of, not mere witness to, the spectacle. Salonen understands that. Too few do. Also worth noting: Attend CSO concerts this week or last, and you'll notice two substitute first trumpets: Cincinnati Symphony principal Anthony Limoncelli and Pittsburgh Symphony assistant principal Conrad Jones, in that order. CSO principal trumpet Esteban Batallán remains on leave to play in the Philadelphia Orchestra, with a looming end-of-month deadline to decide whether he will return to his seat or remain in Philly. On Friday, the CSO also announced that concertmaster Robert Chen will withdraw from concerts Feb. 20–22 as he continues to recover from rotator cuff tendinitis. Solo violinist Stella Chen — a California-born Queen Elizabeth Competition winner — takes over. While we're talking principal players, a note of appreciation to oboist William Welter, a CSO member since 2018. His solo in Jan. 30's 'Don Juan' was one for the ages: almost imperceptibly quiet at first, and never losing its delicacy and humanity as it crested. It was pure musical magic, no visuals necessary. Hannah Edgar is a freelance critic. The Rubin Institute for Music Criticism helps fund our classical music coverage. The Chicago Tribune maintains editorial control over assignments and content. Originally Published: February 7, 2025 at 2:23 PM CST

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