‘Gustav Klimt: Gold in Motion’ Exhibit Dazzles in New York

"Gustav Klimt: Gold In Motion" immersive exhibition at the Hall Des Lumieres, the former Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank, in New York, NY, US August 29, 2022. (Reuters)
"Gustav Klimt: Gold In Motion" immersive exhibition at the Hall Des Lumieres, the former Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank, in New York, NY, US August 29, 2022. (Reuters)
TT

‘Gustav Klimt: Gold in Motion’ Exhibit Dazzles in New York

"Gustav Klimt: Gold In Motion" immersive exhibition at the Hall Des Lumieres, the former Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank, in New York, NY, US August 29, 2022. (Reuters)
"Gustav Klimt: Gold In Motion" immersive exhibition at the Hall Des Lumieres, the former Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank, in New York, NY, US August 29, 2022. (Reuters)

Austrian Symbolist artist Gustav Klimt's masterpieces are coming to life in an immersive exhibit in New York, inaugurating a new museum that merges technology, art and music.

"Gustav Klimt: Gold in Motion," which opens on Wednesday, enfolds visitors in 30-foot (9-meter) high images of his works in the Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank building in Manhattan, now the 33,000-square-foot Hall des Lumières.

A version of Klimt's most famous work, "The Kiss," painted in 1907-8 during the height of his golden period, seemingly drips off the new museum's marble walls onto the floor.

"When you put this not on the canvas but on the wall, you can see it's like a new world every time," said Gianfranco Iannuzzi, the year-long show's creative director.

"You are not in front of something like a cinema screen or in a museum like a painting, but you are inside and you have a different kind of situation with the way you look, but also hear and also move around," he added. "All of this is a special... sensitive and emotional experience."

Iannuzzi, who created the "Van Gogh, Starry Night" show currently at the Atelier des Lumières in Paris, hopes such exhibitions will make traditional artworks more popular.

"It's very important to open the art and the culture to a large audience," he said.

New York's new digital art center is jointly owned and operated by French museum manager Culturespaces and IMG, a global events, sports and talent management company.



'Dark Oxygen' in Depths of Pacific Ocean Prompts New Theories on Life's Origins

Relicanthus sp, a new species from a new order of Cnidaria collected at 4,100 meters in the Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone (CCZ) that lives on sponge stalks attached to nodules - AFP
Relicanthus sp, a new species from a new order of Cnidaria collected at 4,100 meters in the Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone (CCZ) that lives on sponge stalks attached to nodules - AFP
TT

'Dark Oxygen' in Depths of Pacific Ocean Prompts New Theories on Life's Origins

Relicanthus sp, a new species from a new order of Cnidaria collected at 4,100 meters in the Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone (CCZ) that lives on sponge stalks attached to nodules - AFP
Relicanthus sp, a new species from a new order of Cnidaria collected at 4,100 meters in the Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone (CCZ) that lives on sponge stalks attached to nodules - AFP

Scientists have discovered that metallic nodules on the seafloor produce their own oxygen in the dark depths of the Pacific Ocean. These polymetallic nodules, generating electricity like AA batteries, challenge the belief that only photosynthetic organisms create oxygen, potentially altering our understanding of how life began on Earth, AFP reported.

In the total darkness of the depths of the Pacific Ocean, scientists have discovered oxygen being produced not by living organisms but by strange potato-shaped metallic lumps that give off almost as much electricity as AA batteries.

The surprise finding has many potential implications and could even require rethinking how life first began on Earth, the researchers behind a new study said on Monday.

It had been thought that only living things such as plants and algae were capable of producing oxygen via photosynthesis -- which requires sunlight.

But four kilometres (2.5 miles) below the surface of the Pacific Ocean, where no sunlight can reach, small mineral deposits called polymetallic nodules have been recorded making so-called dark oxygen for the first time.

The discovery was made in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ), an abyssal plain stretching between Hawaii and Mexico, where mining companies have plans to start harvesting the nodules.

The lumpy nodules -- often called "batteries in a rock" -- are rich in metals such as cobalt, nickel, copper and manganese, which are all used in batteries, smartphones, wind turbines and solar panels.

The international team of scientists sent a small vessel to the floor of the CCZ aiming to find out how mining could impact the strange and little understood animals living where no light can reach.

nodules in the CCZ next year.