LAist: There’s Something Else Blooming in the Desert: Massive Art Installations

April 12, 2023

John Horn

Read here

Every two years, the floor of the Coachella Valley blooms with eye-catching, often colorful displays dotting the desert floor. You might be tempted to pull off on the Interstate 10 shoulder and take a look. But don’t: it’s not safe.

I’m not talking about wildflowers—even though there are now plenty of vivid displays of gold poppies and purple verbena around Palm Springs and nearby Anza-Borrego Desert State Park. Instead, it’s the biennial, site-specific art installations that are part of Desert X. 

Launched in 2017, Desert X this year features new works from 12 artists, two of them from Los Angeles. It's produced by The Desert Biennial, a non-profit whose mission is to "create and present international contemporary art exhibitions that engage with desert environments through site-specific installations by acclaimed artists from around the world." 

If you're traveling from Los Angeles, one of the first pieces you encounter is one of the most jarring. It’s called Sleeping Figure, created by L.A.-based Matt Johnson. It’s situated in a strip of arid land south of the freeway, north of busy freight train tracks, with the snow-capped summit of Mt. San Jacinto behind. 

From a short distance, Sleeping Figure doesn’t look like art; it first appears to be yet another of the train derailments that have been in the news recently—a pile of shipping containers leaning every which way. But as you draw closer, you not only realize it’s not an accident but an art installation—boxcars, welded together, which form a giant, human-like body at rest. It is constructed from 12 shipping containers of various colors from companies around the world—just like the ones on the passing trains. 

“I always wanted to position it along the freeway, the freight rail, and I wanted the mountain as a backdrop, because the figure becomes like an actor on a stage. And it becomes almost like a painting,” Johnson told me on a recent weekend. 

Johnson said he was inspired two years ago when the freighter Ever Given blocked the Suez Canal for six days, causing a global backup in the delivery of goods. 

“It was about that time that I started thinking about the shipping containers as a unit to make something with, like an object to build a sculpture from,” Johnson said. “The whole supply chain was interrupted, and it cast a real bright light on how we get things, where they come from, and the process with which goods move around the world."

I asked Johnson where you buy a used shipping container, assuming it's not on eBay. 

"There's a secondhand yard at the Port of Long Beach where you can just pull up a truck and buy them," Johnson said. He said he picked the containers based on their color and country of origin; there are containers from China, South Korea and Canada, among other nations. 

"I wanted a global representation. But I also wanted a nice color palette of a variety of colors," Johnson said. 

Sleeping Figure’s proximity to the tracks, however, can change the conversation around the work. “When we were starting to set it up, we were talking about what the train conductors must think when they're driving by,” Johnson said. “How they might think, is this some sort of sculpture or does this have something to do with the recent derailments in the country?” 

Our website uses cookies to improve user experience. Please click here to learn more.
By continuing to browse you are giving us your consent to our use of cookies.
I Accept
BLUM Tokyo is closed for installation until Saturday, May 18.