Sabine Marcelis creates spinning pillars for High Museum of Art
Dutch designer Sabine Marcelis has created four rotating glass pillars for the plaza of Atlanta's High Museum of Art.
Panorama consists of four rectangular pillars clad in glass panels of orange and red ombre that rotate to offer visitors  "a different perspective of their surroundings" when passing through and around the installation.
Sabine Marcelis has created a rotating installation for the High Museum of Art
Located in the central Woodruff Arts Center's Carroll Slater Sifly Piazza, the installation builds upon an initiative to commission interactive, outdoor works of art and design for the space, which has included pieces by architecture studio SO-IL and Spanish designer Jaime Hayon in the past.
Similar to Marecelis's past work, which spans installation, spatial and product design ? Panorama uses light and glass to manipulate space. It is composed of four pillars clad in glass
Viewers are meant to pass around and between the rotating pillars, which sit closely together in the centre of the plaza.
"By entering the space between the pillars as they rotate, visitors are given a seamless visual experience that offers a different perspective of their surroundings," said the team.
Read: Sabine Marcelis creates furniture and lighting from same materials as Barcelona Pavilion
"As the pillars move, they will act as magnets to their surroundings, pulling light into a desaturated space to generate colorfu...
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