Last week, Lala Drona brought down the house with her debut performance in French at Le Castel, a private club located in the 6th arrondissement of Paris.
Le Castel was founded by the French event coordinator, Jean Castel in 1962. Many knew Jean Castel as “le roi des nuits parisiennes” (the king of Parisian nights), Private performances, artist-types and parties continue to roll through this institution today. In the basement of the building, there are sofas and chairs surrounding a stage. On the stage last week, the painting titled “Speak of Listen” by Lala Drona was displayed. Performance artist Wenjue Zhang, placed black boxes containing peep-holes around the room. Inside said boxes, lied an image, erotic and explicit…saturated in colour. Hypnotic music began to play in the background, and Lala Drona stepped onto the stage… (video below).
Lala Drona’s performance titled “Experiment 88: Speak or Listen” recounts an artist’s (Jade Edwards’) experience in Lala Laboratories. The artist is the subject in an experiment that will result in artistic revelation (article continues below):
Sources say that this performance serves as an advertisement for the new Lala Laboratory. Since 2014, Lala has had quite a bit of trouble due to her unconventional inspiration extraction methods from muses. She has gone to Art Prison, inspired muse protests and strikes, and inadvertently caused changes in muse rights legislature. After the Lala Laboratory explosion in 2016, Lala Drona has simultaneously been looking for a place to put down roots, whilst also dodging investigations into inhumane Lala Laboratory experiments.
Since 2017, Lala Drona has been traveling the world in the form of an exhibition tour. She stated last week, “I’ve been traveling in order to look for a new place for Lala Laboratories. And finally, I’ve found it.” Lala Laboratories, formerly “The Lala Laboratory” had to change its name due to copyright issues, but according to Lala, that wasn’t the only change that took place. “Lala Laboratories no longer includes muses in their research and experiments. After the protests, the project got a bad rap. It was almost impossible to get anything done due to new bureaucracy and protections. Now, thanks to the former muse experiments, we’ve collected all the data that we need, and it’s time to open our experiments to their proper demographic. Now, Lala Laboratories serves to enhance artist inspiration and methods, through experiences catered to each individual artist. The performance at Le Castel was a simulation of that…sort of an advertisement for the new laboratory, if you will.”
When questioned about the location of Lala Laboratories, Lala explained: “It took going all over the world, and encountering every problem imaginable to get to the solution. Lala Laboratories has installed itself in the intangible: in the virtual spaces online, in every conversation, and in every collaboration and project connecting to us. If you have interacted with myself, my Drones, muses, and my community in any way, you ARE part of Lala Laboratories.”
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