Studio Swine presents "ephemeral tech" installation Wave Particle Duplex at A/D/O
Fog paintings and plasma-filled glass tubes are the results of Studio Swine's residency at Brooklyn creative hub A/D/O, where the designs are currently on display.
The Wave Particle Duplex installation, which opened to the public last week, showcases the work that Japanese architect Azusa Murakami and British artist Alexander Groves of Studio Swine have created during their six months at A/D/O.
Influenced by the duo's experiences of New York City's constantly changing environments, the kinetic artworks blend high-tech processes with natural phenomena.
The installation is setup within a closed, white cuboid volume in the A/D/O atrium. Visitors walk in through a doorway and along a dark, doglegged corridor before arriving in an entirely red room.
This space exhibits Dawn Particles: a series of four wall-mounted panels that hold blown-glass tubes containing plasma.
"Plasma is the fourth state of matter after solid, liquid and gas," Murakami told Dezeen. "It's the most abundant material in the visible universe. Lighting is plasma, the sun is plasma, the aurora borealis is plasma."
The plasma is formed by krypton gas held in a low-pressure vacuum. Voltages controlled by algorithms are periodically pulsed through the tubes to create varying light effects.
"We've been through laborious processes to test lots of different gases, but krypton was the only one that gave this specific effect," Murakami said.
The organic shapes of the glass also play a p...
-------------------------------- |
QUE ES PROYECCIÓN EN ARQUITECTURA |
|
Layout Plan: Transforming a Sky-Scraping Tower Apartment
07-05-2024 08:32 - (
Architecture )
G House: Contemporary Family Home Designed by Ezgi Yis
07-05-2024 08:32 - (
Architecture )