Books
Phaidon Has Revisited a Forgotten Art Carnival. See More Candid Pictures From the 1980s Edition of Luna Luna
See behind-the-scenes shots of Keith Haring and Roy Lichtenstein working on their projects for the 1987 artist fair.
See behind-the-scenes shots of Keith Haring and Roy Lichtenstein working on their projects for the 1987 artist fair.
Verity Babbs ShareShare This Article
Luna Luna, the ethereal art carnival, may have been launched in Hamburg, Germany, back in 1987, but its legacy has lived large in 2023. In addition to getting a major reboot in the U.S., publishing house Phaidon has reprinted the original catalogue in English.
“I dreamt up Luna Luna with the determination that art should come in unconventional guises and be brought to those who might not ordinarily seek it out in more predictable settings,” said Austrian artist André Heller in a statement. The carnival was created by Heller, who received a $350,000 grant to build the fair which he hoped would bridge a gap between “the artists who were a little snobbish sometimes and didn’t connect with the masses – and the so-called normal people”.
In June 1987, Luna Luna was visited by over 240,000 attendees during a 13-week run. Guests made their way through 30 pavilions created by cutting-edge artists and more than 200 artisans using vintage equipment. Artists involved included Salvador Dalí who created “the Dalí Dome’ house of mirrors, Keith Haring who created a carousel, Jean-Michel Basquiat who designed the Ferris Wheel, and Philip Glass who provided music for a Glass Labyrinth designed by Roy Lichtenstein.
The book, Luna Luna: The Art Amusement was first published in German in 1987 to accompany the fair. The 2023 reprint by Phaidon documents its 1987 format, and includes behind-the-scenes photographs, original sketches, and preparatory drawings made by the artists.
See a sneak piece of this 336-page tome below.
More Trending Stories:
Art Dealers Christina and Emmanuel Di Donna on Their Special Holiday Rituals
Stefanie Heinze Paints Richly Ambiguous Worlds. Collectors Are Obsessed
Inspector Schachter Uncovers Allegations Regarding the Latest Art World Scandal—And It’s a Doozy
Archaeologists Call Foul on the Purported Discovery of a 27,000-Year-Old Pyramid
The Sprawling Legal Dispute Between Yves Bouvier and Dmitry Rybolovlev Is Finally Over