Le Méridien Istanbul Etiler keycards open your world to a unique contemporary cultural experience. Each keycard is designed by the LM100™ artists such as SAM SAMORE. These exquisite collector’s pieces will grant you entrance to The Istanbul Museum of Modern Art.
Featured Artists
Haluk Akakçe
"Untitled"
In his work Haluk Akakçe explores perceptive reality as experiences and spaces mediated by the presence of technology and its dynamic aesthetic working across a range of media, works on paper, oil paintings, photographs, illusional wall paintings, digitally animated video projections, and dimensional sound elements. Recent works of Akakçe is detached to the concept of searching the norms of painting, especially the Modernist Era, via video. He is also known for his two-dimensional acrylic on wood panel works. His artworks are found in worldwide collections and institutions.
Arslan Sukan
"Untitled"
Arslan Sukan's photographs question the illusion of the concept of dimension and the consequences of the modern day with his unique abstract language. His works are about one of the basic human desires of ultimate freedom and transforming one's self and his universe into another of infinite possibilities. You can see Arslan's photographs in Le Méridien Istanbul Etiler's guest rooms.
:mentalKLINIK
"Cheater Gang"
:mentalKLINIK works bear the traces of our present time and space. In Cheater Gang, the duo makes paintings without painting, by the techniques and materials they create in this painting of the present, a deceptive relationship with the audience and the space is established, by means of shining transparent and reflective lasers on a single surface.
Mustafa Hulusi
"Untitled"
Mustafa Hulusi's diverse practice, including painting, video and installation, centers on the mining of what could be termed as the collective unconscious quoting and representing aspects of the known and familiar via different conventions, stereotypes and genres of popular culture, advertising, kitsch, photorealism - he examines our fascination with images and their potential as "devices to take you out of this world."