Parties

St. Vincent Performed in a Room Filled With Artists at the 2024 MOCA Gala

Image may contain Guitar Musical Instrument Adult Person Electrical Device Microphone Concert and Crowd
St. Vincent
Owen Kolasinski/BFA.com

For this year’s gala, Burton collaborated with Los Angeles-based artist Max Hooper Schneider, who created a series of sculptures and site-specific installations for the party titled World Without End. Schneider’s alchemic, kaleidoscopic work imagines detritus from the present as it might be found in the future—one such sculpture, “Tide Piepool,” consists of a tidepool-like collection of neon-colored sea life and trash (“I make worlds in boxes,” Hooper Schneider told Vogue. “So I kind of conceive of a pie shell as another world in a box, a container”). The MOCA Gala dinner of chicken pot pie was coordinated to be on theme.

“Everything I do is imagining speculative situations of things that come out of a collapsed environment,” said Hooper Schneider. “I imagine this is something that could come out of a future landfill or something like that. But you have to kind of brace your thinking for a larger timescale, meaning that something may seem disastrous upfront, but then a hundred or 200 years from now, maybe it s something more miraculous and hopeful. So I think of my work as radically hopeful in that sense, and not dystopian.”

In addition to Hooper Schneider’s sculptures and installation (an eerie phosphorescent crater), guests at the gala—including Keanu Reeves and girlfriend Alexandra Grant, Ava DuVernay, Kenny Scharf, Jordan Wolfson, and Catherine Opie—could take in two current MOCA exhibitions, Paul Pfeiffer’s Prologue to the Story of the Birth of Freedom and MOCA Focus: Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio. After the St. Vincent performance, everyone headed to the museum lobby and courtyard for an after-party, featuring DJ sets from Kilo Kish and Kitty Ka$h. The crater continued to glow.