Here’s what we know about Everything Is Terribleโ€™s new Meow Wolf L.A. installation

Here’s what we know about Everything Is Terribleโ€™s new Meow Wolf L.A. installation


When Meow Wolfโ€™s Los Angeles location opens later this year, one of its biggest residents will be a 20-foot-tall, 1,000-pound amoeba-like creature named WoWoW.

Created by the L.A.-based multimedia collective Everything Is Terrible, WoWoW is alternately described as a โ€œcosmic entityโ€ and a โ€œcartoony, root vegetable floating alien god.โ€ The multi-eyed organism will serve as the centerpiece of โ€œthe N.E.S.T.,โ€ an EIT-designed section of Meow Wolfโ€™s new 26,000-square-foot immersive exhibition space.

A pyschedelic sculpture.

In-progress detail of Everything Is Terribleโ€™s WoWoW sculpture for the forthcoming Meow Wolf Los Angeles, shown with multi-color eye lighting.

(Photo by Allyson Lupovich / Meow Wolf)

That acronym has yet to be explained, and is cloaked in Meow Wolfโ€™s intentionally mysterious messaging about its latest incarnation, which is set in an old Cinemark movie theater in West L.A. and will tackle the ephemeral joys and hardships of Hollywoodโ€™s dream factory. The L.A. location will be the Santa Fe, N.M.-based immersive art and entertainment companyโ€™s fifth outpost after Denver, Las Vegas, Houston and the Dallas suburbs.

The L.A. space boasts 45 local collaborating artists including Gabriela Ruiz, David Altmejd and more. Each is building their own unique installation featuring a variety of sculptures, dioramas and new media.

Everything Is Terrible is one of Meow Wolfโ€™s most prolific partners, creating a variety of psychedelic characters for various installations over the years. The collective dreamed up the N.E.S.T. about two years ago as a way of paying tribute to maximalist roadside attractions like Wisconsinโ€™s House on the Rock or New Mexicoโ€™s Tinkertown Museum. It also tells the story of the Noothies, a made-up community of former below-the-line film workers who stumbled upon a god โ€” and a hidden truth about the nature of reality.

The installation presents a paradox by being a Hollywood idea that is completely un-Hollywood. It may wink at the industryโ€™s unseen heroes, but who can afford to make art for artโ€™s sake in the entertainment industry anymore? That seeming contradiction makes it a very Everything Is Terrible idea.

Founded nearly 20 years ago by a group of friends who met at Ohio University, Everything Is Terrible was launched as a found-footage website that created wild and singular art pieces using thrifted VHS tapes. It found viral success with videos about cat massage, and a dancing dinosaur who warns kids about the dangers of pedophilia, as well as its lauded quest to amass as many VHS copies of โ€œJerry Maguireโ€ as humanly possible. (The group has about 45,000 at the moment, all stuffed in boxes and waiting to be unleashed on the world โ€” perhaps as a pyramid in the desert or maybe featured in some sort of coffee table book.)

โ€œI think our outlook on life has become, โ€˜look at the worlds that these people created,โ€™โ€ says EIT co-founder Dimitri Simakis. โ€œNo one asked them to do this. Someone just wanted to do a kids puppet show in some garage in North Carolina and now theyโ€™ve created a simulacra.โ€

Thatโ€™s also what the collective is doing with its Meow Wolf exhibit, adds Nic Maier, another EIT member. โ€œItโ€™s what weโ€™ve done for the last 20 years, really. Weโ€™re just a bunch of kooks who got together to obsessively make things in celebration of life and in appreciation of each otherโ€™s time.โ€

The marriage of Everything Is Terrible and Meow Wolf is a match made in heaven. The groups first met in 2009, bonded by a shared commitment to interactive art experiences that twist reality using an ornate handmade aesthetic.

A few years later, Maier was hired to work on what would become Meow Wolfโ€™s first large-scale installation, Santa Feโ€™s โ€œHouse of Eternal Return.โ€ As he spent hours sculpting large, foam trees for the group, he says he fell in love.

A fantastical, psychedelic take on a forest at Meow Wolf's Santa Fe, N.M., exhibit.

A mystical, neon-colored forest in Meow Wolfโ€™s Santa Fe, N.M., exhibition, โ€œThe House of Eternal Return.โ€

(Meow Wolf)

โ€œWe always joke that ever since then, EIT has been a barnacle on the side of the Meow Wolf ship, just hanging on but also occasionally hopping in to contribute,โ€ Maier says.

When Meow Wolf announced it was opening two new spaces, in Las Vegas and Denver, it called on EIT for ideas. Simakis and Maier threw out a few pitches for Denver and one landed: a McDonaldโ€™s-like retro freak-out known as Pizza Pals Play Zone, which went on to become one of the attractionโ€™s most talked about, photographed and beloved spaces.

โ€œPizza Pals Play Zone is super character dense,โ€ says Han Sayles, Meow Wolfโ€™s director of artist collaboration. โ€œItโ€™s just one of those spaces that feels like Meow Wolf. Thereโ€™s hundreds of different pieces of media framed all around, featuring all of these different characters they created. They even made a bible โ€ฆ that had the narrative backstory of every single character and every deliverable they wanted for that room.โ€

An immersive art installation.

Pizza Pals Playzone, created by Everything Is Terrible, at Meow Wolfโ€™s Convergence Station in Denver.

(Jess Gallo / Meow Wolf)

When Meow Wolfโ€™s Los Angeles project became a possibility, Sayles says Everything Is Terrible was one of the first groups she pitched as a potential contributor. EIT ended up being offered a custom project, in which the group used Meow Wolfโ€™s extensive production facilities and resources to create their vision for the space, weighing in on everything from the shape of their room to the merch it might inspire in the Meow Wolf gift shop.

โ€œWe had a super trusting relationship with them,โ€ Sayles says. โ€œWe recruited them as partners and negotiated a deal without knowing what they were going to put in the room. Both Nic and Dimitri have such a beautiful, strong sense of the exact genre of whimsy that we go for and they always deliver super deeply, so we knew it would be amazing.โ€

Sayles says she also thought the groupโ€™s experience of Los Angeles would lend itself well to the overall theme of the venue. Shakti Howeth, a creative director at Meow Wolf, agrees, saying that while Meow Wolf attractions are typically pretty otherworldly, theyโ€™re always built around an overarching story.

Meow Wolf's "Omega Mart" starts with a twisted take on a grocery store, complete with fake produts.

At Meow Wolfโ€™s โ€œOmega Mart,โ€ in Las Vegas, guests first enter a satiric take on a grocery store, where portals lead to otherworldly art exhibitions.

(Christopher DeVargas / Meow Wolf)

The N.E.S.T., Howeth teases, will relate to some of the L.A. attractionโ€™s character groups and themes, as well as its overall story. How audiences first encounter WoWoW and the N.E.S.T. will depend on which door they use to enter the room. From there, the points of visual interest will compound upon each other.

โ€œWeโ€™re just incorporating all the things we love,โ€ says Maier, noting that includes roadside attractions, folk art and anything โ€œoutsider.โ€

โ€œIt involves everything from the importance of dirt and worms to video games to experimental film to worker uprisings to entering literal other dimensions where you can meet what might be God, all within a [553]-square-foot space,โ€ Simakis adds. โ€œThere have been times when weโ€™ve been in the N.E.S.T. and thought we crammed in too much … but then you realize it has to be like that, because weโ€™re trying to tell the whole story of the universe in just that room.โ€

For example, Maier spent much of the last two years building 45 beautifully weird costumes for the attraction, only two of which will be physically in the N.E.S.T. The other 43, he explains, are there for โ€œworld-buildingโ€ and to make the story feel lived in. Everything in the space will have been created by Everything Is Terrible and Meow Wolf, including what seems like real found footage.

Simakis calls the groupโ€™s vision for the space โ€œunrelenting joy mixed with benevolent chaos,โ€ as well as โ€œa beautiful folk art museum thatโ€™s also a space rave.โ€ He likens what the group is doing to โ€œbuilding a puzzle out of thousands of other puzzles, gluing it together to make a new thing.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s like weโ€™re making a movie thatโ€™s not a movie,โ€ Simakis adds. โ€œItโ€™s a video game. Itโ€™s a living space. Itโ€™s all of these things, but you get to walk around in it.โ€

If thatโ€™s confusing, itโ€™s because itโ€™s meant to be โ€” at least a little. How each visitor absorbs or receives the space will be entirely up to them. And while that could be a bit terrifying for some artists, to pour everything into a piece only to have the public possibly misinterpret or even ignore it, Maier and Simakis say theyโ€™re open to whatever comes.

โ€œMillions of people are going to potentially walk through our space, so it has to be really special,โ€ Simakis says. โ€œWeโ€™ve also thought about all the different ways people could enjoy it, whether theyโ€™re a baby or a stoner or someone whoโ€™s just really into immersive entertainment or escape rooms. Even if you just go to take selfies, great. Weโ€™re pro-that. But also, if you want to keep going back or you want to spend hours there, I promise weโ€™ve made it worth your while.โ€

Meow Wolf L.A. opens later this year. You can catch both Meow Wolf and Everything Is Terrible in the Los Angeles County Museum of Artโ€™s Art Parade on June 20, marching in some of Maierโ€™s 45 costumes from the N.E.S.T.

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