By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
BublikArt GalleryBublikArt Gallery
  • Current
  • Art News
  • Art Exhibitions
  • Artists
  • Art Collectors
  • Art Events
  • About
  • Collaboration
Search
  • Advertise
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: High Line Art and Chanel Culture Fund to Partner on Film Series
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
BublikArt GalleryBublikArt Gallery
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Current
  • Art News
  • Art Exhibitions
  • Artists
  • Art Collectors
  • Art Events
  • About
  • Collaboration
  • Advertise
2024 © BublikArt Gallery. All Rights Reserved.
BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Art Collectors > High Line Art and Chanel Culture Fund to Partner on Film Series
Art Collectors

High Line Art and Chanel Culture Fund to Partner on Film Series

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 7 August 2025 14:38
Published 7 August 2025
Share
4 Min Read
SHARE


High Line Art, the art commissioning body of Manhattan’s beloved disused-railroad-turned-suspended walkway, is headed in a new direction, and it’s getting there in good company.

Beginning this September, High Line Art and the Chanel Culture Fund will co-commission rising artists working in digital and time-based media for High Line Originals, a film series hosted in the park’s covered passage at 14th Street (better known as the High Line Channel). The partnership marks a landmark shift for the program: from a biannual to an annual commissioning cycle that aims to offer a “breakthrough moment” for artists as well as passerby, Taylor Zakarin, the High Line curator overseeing this commission, told ARTnews.

Related Articles

“Encountering art in a public setting like the High Line empowers audiences who might feel out of place or intimidated by a white cube gallery,” Zakarin said. “That goes tenfold when you’re talking about a medium like video art, any time-based media really, which more so than painting or sculptures can be hard for people to approach.”

Past channel artists count Tourmaline (who inaugurated the video series in 2019 with Salacia), Zineb Sedira, Jacolby Satterwhite, and Sky Hopinka. Each cycle is a mix of solo and group presentations. Its fourth cycle officially kicks off on September 10 with the premiere of Groundless Flower – ཨ (2025) by Frank Wang Yefeng. The Shanghai-born, Brooklyn-based artist is an apt pick for the program: fresh off a residency at the Shanghai Museum of Glass and presentation at Art Basel Hong Kong, with a multimedia practice that often mines how urban landscapes can exacerbate or ease social estrangement. Sounds like the High Line; once an unruly industrial ruin darkening the sidewalk beneath, now an idyllic (if occasionally crowded) stretch of shade and greenery. 

Groundless Flower – ཨ will play daily on loop until November 2025, after which it will screen in London as part of the Window, the Chanel Culture Fund’s site-specific public art program. The work is titled after the Tibetan letter “ཨ,” and explained by the artist as “the primordial vowel signifying the ‘beginning of all things.’” Viewers can expect something like a glimpse into his deep dream, in which cultural motifs from the East and West, as well as images from the artist’s nomadic journeys through the Gobi Desert, Qingzang Plateau, and New Mexico’s Badlands, churn and collide.

Additionally, the program will feature the U.S. premieres of Cao Fei’s DUOTOPIA 2, Lu Yang’s DOKU Pieces, and Triglav of Berl Berl by Jakob Kudsk Steenson on September 8 and 9. Petra Cortright’s wet sunlight Paradis ‘pomme de terre’ 3D, which first screened at the Window, will be shown in an upcoming High Line Channel group show in November 2025. 

“Frank’s work has a technical inventiveness that really captures the experience of rootlessness, of universal themes like global fluidity and the digital change,” Yana Peel, President of Chanel Arts, Culture & Heritage, told ARTnews. “We always ask: What can artists that are commissioned by the High Line or showing at the Window, do in terms of furthering the limits of human imagination?”

You Might Also Like

Shrine Sculptor in Whitney Biennial Dies

Cesar Chavez Mural Painted Over in San Francisco After Allegations

Mexico Calls on eBay to Halt Sales of Pre-Columbian Artifacts

Art Basel Company MCH is Working On Ideas Festival to Launch in 2028

The Best Booths at the 2026 Outsider Art Fair

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Previous Article Get Your Fringe On At Summerhall Arts Edinburgh | Artmag Get Your Fringe On At Summerhall Arts Edinburgh | Artmag
Next Article Morning Links for August 7, 2025 Morning Links for August 7, 2025
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

BublikArt GalleryBublikArt Gallery
2024 © BublikArt Gallery. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Security
  • About
  • Collaboration
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?