This is the entrance to a previously hidden set of underground chambers, the former power station’s giant oil tanks, which are being unveiled to the public this week as gallery spaces devoted entirely to performance, sound, moving image and installation. It was most recently on view from July 2012 - January 2013, for Fifteen Weeks of Art in Action, the inaugural exhibition of The Tanks at Tate Modern, the world’s first museum galleries dedicated to live art.Upon descending the grey, scarred slope of the Turbine Hall, Tate Modern, a new and unfamiliar opening in the wall reveals itself to the right. The Crystal Quilt is now part of the Tate Modern's permanent collection. A loon cry or thunderclap rang through the space in ten minute intervals, signaling the women to change the position of their hands on the table, thus changing the design of the quilt. An accompanying soundtrack by composer Susan Stone mixed the voices of 75 women talking about aging. Speakers mixed personal observations and reminiscences with social analysis about the unutilized potential of the elderly. The performance featured 430 Minnesota women over the age of 60 seated at tables on an 82-square-foot rug designed by painter Miriam Shapiro to resemble a quilt. Her research process culminated in a large-scale performance installation on Mothers Day in the middle of a shopping center with a crystalline roof. The project was developed over a two year period during which Lacy created a lecture series, film screening, and media campaign in collaboration with Minneapolis College of Art and Design (MCAD), The Humphrey Institute for Public Affairs and the Minnesota Board of Aging, Walker Art Center and At the Foot of the Mountain Theater. The Crystal Quilt (1985-1987) is one of several works by Lacy that explore the experience of aging, and specifically how aging women are represented in media and public opinion.
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