I liked DOOM: House of Hope, German artist Anne Imhof’s hotly anticipated but now widely panned immersive-performance spectacular at the Park Avenue Armory. I know that judgement is either going ...
Anne Imhof’s three-hour spectacle of moody youth at the Armory is sweet sorrow, full of moping and muttering. Still, almost despite itself, it points to true art. The experience of “Doom” is ...
In her new performance piece, Imhof transforms the Park Avenue Armory into a dynamic stage where audiences navigate a visually stark reinterpretation of Shakespeare’s "Romeo and Juliet" set among ...
Eliza Douglas, a longtime collaborator of Anne Imhof, introduces us to her fellow performers at the Park Avenue Armory.
The artist Anne Imhof in the drill hall of the Park Avenue Armory in Manhattan, designed to resemble a school gym, for her newest work, “DOOM,” opening March 3.Credit...Tess Mayer for The New ...
Imhof’s signature visual language remains intact in DOOM, where seemingly weary and disaffected performers stand, stroll, skate and dance through a three-hour, loosely structured performance.
Featuring performers who vape, text and perch on luxury cars, the immersive work overtaking Park Avenue Armory, New York, ...
As everyone’s social media feeds can attest, it’s Anne Imhof week in New York City ... Avenue Armory for the debut of her latest opus, Doom: House of Hope—a maximalist performance art ...
Anne Imhof’s DOOM at Park Avenue Armory. Photo: Nadine Fraczkowski. Courtesy the artist, Galerie Buchholz, Sprüth Magers, and Park Avenue Armory. Beyond the dimmed lights and the gloomy ...