Imagine the sheer serendipity of finding a world-renowned artist's work secreted away in the back of a French luxury goods store, in the midst of a tacky oasis, and you'll have only begun to appreciate the wonder of James Turrell's "Akhob."
Las Vegas is known for aspirations of grandeur and attempting to fulfill them by any means necessary. Fueling this mentality is a plethora of luxury stores, ready to furnish high rollers and poseurs with all the accouterments necessary to play. But a visit to the Louis Vuitton outpost lets visitors in-the-know walk away with a little added value to their shopping experience: artistic fulfillment.
In 2013, Vuitton himself commissioned a permanent James Turrell installation to occupy a hidden space on the fourth floor of his City Center store. Called "Akhob," a word from Egypt's Amarna period supposedly meaning "pure water," the piece consists of circular openings leading into two huge chambers filled with slowly changing, rotating light. Turrell calls these sort of iconic installations, for which he's famous, "ganzfelds" or "light fields."
The effect created is one of giving your eyes a gentle, soothing bath in the most brilliant colors imaginable. Vibrant hues shift imperceptibly from one to another, bleeding in and out of each other on a cycle that lasts 24 minutes. At times, the precise combination of colors makes it nearly impossible to find the door through which one had just entered.
With all Turrell's artistic obfuscation, finding Akhob itself is remarkably easy; though admission is free for all, one must simply call ahead to make an appointment for admittance. Once inside the City Center Louis Vuitton store, politely inform any of the employees that've come to see Akhob. From there you'll be whisked away to their magical back room, separate from the store and completely private for a silent immersion experience.