Travel magazines challenge each other to represent the different cities of the world in the most truthful and at the same time evocative way possible. Between breathtaking views and alleyways, the idea we have of the world’s capitals before travel is always highly idealized and reflects the best possible reality. Interior designer Andrés Reisinger in his own way wanted to create a collection of 3D designs for some of the world’s most important cities, abandoning the real dimension in favor of a more dreamlike one, linked to dreams, shrouded in mist and light that is that of dawn, but also of dreams.
Amsterdam, Rome, Tokyo, London, New York, Paris-these are the cities in which Andrés Reisinger presents his virtual installations. They consist of drapes and cloths, but also soft furs, that wrap around corners of buildings or facades of typical stores.
The artist from Buenos Aires (Argentina) recreates the architecture of individual localities; exposed bricks are enough to suggest that we are in London, or an elegant sign to take the viewer directly into the heart of Paris. The dramatic effect of the sheets is strong, the pink color breaking the tranquility of the city created by Andrés Reisinger, creating a dynamic similar to that of Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s land art, more playful and gentle probably, thanks in part to the choice not to intervene on recognizable places in the different cities but on more anonymous and familiar ones.
Reisinger calls himself an unclassifiable artist; in fact, his works are site-specific installations that exist but only virtual, referencing known landscapes but idealized or perfected by our minds as if they were settings in a dream. The theatricality and the chromatic aspect guide the viewer, curious to enter those doors, to find out what is behind that cloth falling softly on the sidewalk, to discover what is on the other side of those theatrical wings.