Upcoming
Overview
When was the last time you unplugged?
Disconnect, slow down, and rediscover what it means to be present inside the BMA’s historic Spring House, where acclaimed American conceptual artist Rachel Lee Hovnanian presents the Nature Deficit Disorder immersion room this spring. The powerful installation challenges our digital dependence and rekindles our connection to the natural world.
Inspired by journalist Richard Louv’s term “nature deficit disorder,” described as a growing disconnection from nature, often linked to diminished focus and negative moods, Hovnanian transforms the Spring House into a simulated nighttime forest.
“My work has long explored how technology shapes attention, mental health, and human connection. This installation emerged from my observations of society’s growing digital dependence, alongside my own experience of it.” –Rachel Lee Hovnanian
Away from the constant ping of notifications and endless scrolling, surrender your phone, surround yourself with fir trees, and let lantern light guide you. Hear the crunch of leaves beneath your feet and watch the flicker of a campfire casting shadows across the room.
In a world where we check our phones every other minute, Hovnanian invites you to linger for at least five minutes in the immersion room and consider what is lost when we give our attention to apps and devices rather than real-life experiences.
“What do we lose when our lives are constantly mediated by screens? I hope to offer a pause—an invitation to rediscover how it feels to be fully present.” –Rachel Lee Hovnanian
Rachel Lee Hovnanian: Nature Deficit Disorder is curated by Katie Cooke, BMA Manager of Curatorial Affairs.
This exhibition is supported by the Ford Foundation.
Location: Spring House
The Spring House was designed by acclaimed architect Benjamin Latrobe in 1812 and served for nearly 70 years as a dairy, where enslaved Black men, women, and children were forced to labor. In 1932, the BMA acquired and moved the building to its current site on the West Lawn from land that formerly was a plantation north of present-day Cold Spring Lane. Now, as a house for new media at the museum, it becomes a space to interrogate history, reimagine familiar stories, and reclaim joy and creativity.
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