Jul 29, 2014

빙그르


지금 해가 동산 너머로 돌아가는 시간
구름보다 높은곳에 꼼짝없이 앉아 작은 네모 화면 위로 조그맣게 떠있는 비행기모양 아이콘이 느릿하게 둥근 능선을 그리는걸 아아주 지루하게 바라보면서 너는 지구를 역주행하고 있을것이다
지금 내가 어두워진 방 바닥에 딱붙어 앉아 사방에 흩어진 머리카락들을 줍는 이 순간에도 바로 이 순간에도 나와 너사이에 점점 더 많은 땅덩어리와 시간들이 생겨나고 있다는 것이 나에겐 여간 이상한 일이 아니다
이와중에 스피커에서 들리는 플레이리스트 하나가 넘어갔고 땅바닥에 놓인 동그란 선풍기는 탈탈탈 회전한다

Jul 27, 2014

research for Inflatable

"Complicated Pile," 2007
Vinyl-coated nylon fabric, fans and rigging, 620 1/8 x 1318 7/8 x 622 inches
Installation view at Middelheim Museum, Antwerp, Belgium
Photo by Philip de Gobert
© Paul McCarthy
Courtesy Hauser & Wirth, Zürich London
"There is something about being able to make a giant object that is ephemeral, in that it blows up, it’s full of air, and exists for a short period of time and then disappears."

-Paul McCarthy
(http://www.art21.org/images/paul-mccarthy/complicated-pile-2007)


"White Head Bush Head," 2007. Vinyl-coated nylon fabric, fans, and rigging, 299 1/4 x 360 1/4 inches. Installation view at Foundation The Hague Sculpture, The Hague, Netherlands. Photo by Gerrit Schreurs. © Paul McCarthy. Courtesy Hauser & Wirth, Zürich London.
McCarthy says that making videos is like making paintings, but he distinguishes

(http://www.art21.org/texts/paul-mccarthy/activity-hands-on-paul-mccarthy)








Burning Man inflatable balloon field
Illusion is a light art installation of 64 large weather balloons. The size of the field installation creates a feeling of immense undiscovered desert space as visitors walk through an area of couple football fields. Light effects are programmed to simulate different moods with soft, fading, glimmering or dancing lights.
(http://www.dusttoashes.com/all-burning-man-photos/illusion-sunset-by-benson-trent/)

=> Go to : http://eyetrap.com/category/events/







"Überorgan," 2000
Woven polyethylene, nylon, net, cardboard tubing, various mechanical components, dimensions variable
Installation view at Ace Gallery, New York, 2002
Collection of Ace Gallery
Courtesy Ace Gallery, Los Angeles
"Using the materials- just these thin membranes filled with air- had a very attractive quality for me. Thinking of sculpting with air (in a lot of my work I use transparent materials, especially in mechanical pieces, because I like to be able to see what’s going on) had an ethereal quality that really appealed to me."

- Tim Hawkinson
(http://www.art21.org/images/tim-hawkinson/%C3%BCberorgan-2000)


Tim Hawkinson, "Überorgan" (2000), installed at Ace Gallery, New York, 2002. Production still from the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" Season 2 episode, "Time," 2003. © Art21, Inc. 2003.
Tim Hawkinson, "Überorgan" (2000), installed at Ace Gallery, New York, 2002. Production still from the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" Season 2 episode, "Time," 2003. © Art21, Inc. 2003.
ART21: Can you tell me about the process of making Überorgan?
HAWKINSON: Well, there isn’t really a set process. Lately the pieces have been all different from each other, so each one takes on a different process. Like, with the larger-scale pieces, it’s often the case where I don’t even have an idea for something of this size unless there’s already a venue set up for it. I would have a specific space in mind already, and I start visualizing the work in that space. I’m talking more about the Überorgan, specifically. That process involved being approached by MASS MoCA, and they wondered what I would do with a space that was basically the size of a football field. Using inflatables is really an economical way of filling up that much space and also something that makes sound to really engage the viewer. So, I came up with this extrapolated organ and went from there. It just seemed really natural for that space.
But other pieces involve more of a quirky kind of process, especially depictions of the body. For instance, there was a series of works that I did based on research that involved taking a bath in this black paint—filling the bathtub slowly with this black opaque liquid that would block out my skin. And Patty would photograph it every couple of seconds as it crept up and covered me over. Then, layering the photos together resulted in this kind of topographical depiction of the body. And so, I used that mapping as the basis for some drawings that I made and also realized three-dimensionally in the figures that are in the piece Pentecost, the big tree piece with the figures tapping on the tree.
ART21: Did you have to invent things to make it possible to make Überorgan?
HAWKINSON: Yeah, when I first started thinking about Überorgan and putting it in the space at MASS MoCA . . . I just said that I never make preliminary studies or anything, but I did make models of balloons. and I think I was just a little nervous about filling—what was it—fifteen thousand square feet. I didn’t want to get caught shorthanded. So, I felt much better seeing these little models in the space and having a basic idea of what it would feel like in there. So, I made really basic shapes and then really crude drawings or patterns of the shapes. It’s good that they were so crude because it really allowed for a lot of play in the actual fabrication when we started sewing them together. I mean, these balloons are huge, like the size of a small school bus. To sew them, there was one person on the sewing machine and two other people that were there just to feed the material through. There was a lot of mass to deal with just in their un-inflated state.
So, going back to using models and making little drawings based on those—what I conceived the patterns would be like . . . It’s taking a little bit of a jump because you’re taking a three-dimensional model and thinking about it in terms of planes and how you could make that just in flat surfaces that are then bent around each other. I really like the feel of and the look of the bags, the balloons being constrained by netting. That was really part of the process of creating the shapes. Once the bags were sewn and inflated, I used fishing net and tailored that around the balloons, and I was able to further define and cinch them in and let them out in different areas. So, it was neat. It was a really quick way of controlling a huge volume, a physical volume.
Tim Hawkinson, "Überorgan" (2000), installed at MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA, 2000. Production still from the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" Season 2 episode, "Time," 2003. © Art21, Inc. 2003.
Tim Hawkinson, "Überorgan" (2000), installed at MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA, 2000. Production still from the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" Season 2 episode, "Time," 2003. © Art21, Inc. 2003.
ART21: But did you have to invent tools for yourself?
HAWKINSON: Not for the balloons, maybe for some of the mechanical things. The balloons were all made with a fabricator, outside of my studio. You saw pictures of the studio; it’s not super huge. We needed, you know, thousands of square feet. So, I did all of the mechanical work in my studio—the player mechanism and different switches that reinterpreted the score and so forth.
ART21: Tell me about the sound in Überorgan.
HAWKINSON: For Überorgan, I felt that I was going to have a real strong physical presence, but I felt like it needed to also have this kind of audible component. They look like these, kind of, whales suspended in the air and hovering about you. And the sound is really biomorphic and sounds kind of like a bleating or a whaling sound. But it’s all based on a score that I put together, using lots of old church hymns. I have to refresh my memory—what did I use?—“Sailor’s Hornpipe” and “Swan Lake.” And there was an improvisational piece that I invited a guest composer in for—a friend that just kind of messed around with the keyboard. So, there was this score. And then it’s constrained to just a scale of twelve tones. You’re used to hearing a melody played in something that reaches up into other octaves. But in this case, anything that would go up into the next octave has to drop back down, and it further abstracts the original score and removes it further from certain recognizable melodies. So, then there were also a series of switches that filtered or reinterpreted the initial score.
ART21: Where does the interest in music come from?
HAWKINSON: Using the hymns . . . I did grow up going to church. I still go to church. We’re trying to find a church that we like in the area but are having a little bit of a problem finding something that really feels right. I grew up hearing these old Protestant hymns, and some of them are really beautiful, and they bring really strong connotations and memories back and also reflect faith and other issues. I was interested in using those, but really directly. Like I said, it’s really hard for most people to even recognize them. I can kind of catch passages, and I get an idea of where we are in the score. I was interested in using some of that as material. I mentioned earlier that the switches reinterpret the score. One would kind of flip-flop the orientation of the notes to the keyboard, so that what’s normally played at the high end is played at the low end. Another switch is the key that it’s played in. All these switches are being activated, kind of spontaneously, just by viewers going through the space, so there’s no telling when it’s going to shift. And so, it really is played out a different way each time someone passes through.
Tim Hawkinson, "Überorgan" (2000), installed at Ace Gallery, New York, 2002. Production still from the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" Season 2 episode, "Time," 2003. © Art21, Inc. 2003.
Tim Hawkinson, "Überorgan" (2000), installed at Ace Gallery, New York, 2002. Production still from the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" Season 2 episode, "Time," 2003. © Art21, Inc. 2003.
ART21: And you can also play it, right?
HAWKINSON: Yeah, you can also stop the playing score at a blank space to expose the keyboard. The keyboard consists, basically, of these photosensitive switches. So, by covering one of the switches, blocking out the light, you’d trigger one of the notes. So, you can stop it at a blank space and play it like a piano, like a light-sensitive piano.
ART21: Were you fascinated by doing a piece out of air, or was it just economy?
HAWKINSON: Well, using the materials, just these thin membranes filled with air—it had a very attractive quality for me. Thinking of sculpting with air. In a lot of my work, I use transparent materials, especially in mechanical pieces, because I like to be able to see what’s going on and keep everything very light and visible. This had kind of an ethereal quality that really appealed to me. And also, it was a really economical way of filling the space. And I liked the idea of traveling light—this thing that could really go up in a week, and it’s just so expansive and organic also.
ART21: What about the adaptability of Überorgan, how it changes from place to place?
HAWKINSON: I was actually thinking about this last night because I’m going to be installing Überorganagain, this time in San Diego. And it’s a smaller space. I was thinking about how I’m going to be dealing with this big installation piece for some time, and it’s going to be important to keep it alive to myself and be able to see it as a new thing each time it’s set up. And so, I think it’s really good that it can be reconfigured, and it just naturally extends to being reconfigured into each different space because of the different physicalities of different venues. I’d like to see it in more of a square, really symmetrical space—more of a classical setting for it. And also, I think it would be interesting to use it more vertically, in a really vertical space.
ART21: Tell me about the installation in New York.
HAWKINSON: When I installed the piece in New York, the gallery was obviously really different from MASS MoCA, which was one big, open space—one long, narrow space. The gallery in New York was divided into six rooms: one gigantic room, and a couple of giant rooms, and then some slightly smaller rooms, but they are all pretty big. But I wanted to see it as this thing that was growing into the different gallery spaces—real biomorphic, in that way. I was afraid that the sound quality might be lost, that you might lose a sense of the score because it was divided up into the different rooms. But in the end, I was really happy with the sound. There are so many reflective surfaces in that space that when you’re out in the hallway, you can still hear the further reaches and put things together. But it was definitely different than in Massachusetts.
Tim Hawkinson, "Überorgan" (2000), installed at Ace Gallery, New York, 2002. Production still from the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" Season 2 episode, "Time," 2003. © Art21, Inc. 2003.
Tim Hawkinson, "Überorgan" (2000), installed at Ace Gallery, New York, 2002. Production still from the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" Season 2 episode, "Time," 2003. © Art21, Inc. 2003.
ART21: Did it take a lot of planning?
HAWKINSON: In New York, I had already made the model that I had talked about, and I felt confident just in occupying the space, and I didn’t want to think about it too much. I wanted to just really remain blank, to be able to play around with it and be spontaneous with the installation. So, I didn’t do a lot of preliminary thinking about placement. I had a general idea what balloon went into what gallery, and there were a couple of instances where I shifted things around but pretty much stuck with the original plan. Installing the tubes and stuff like that goes pretty fast. In the New York installation, I ended up wrapping all the tubes with tape. Normally the tube, when it’s inflated, is really rigid, and it just goes in a straight line; or if it does bend, it makes a ninety-degree bend, a really sharp bend. And I wanted the tubes in this New York space to curve around and play off of the rectilinear architecture. So, by wrapping the tube with this kind of strapping tape, it gave it a kind of intestinal quality and snaking, so they bent very gracefully.
ART21: It’s a very organic piece, alive even.
HAWKINSON: Yeah, I think it’s organic. There’s an organic aspect in much of my work that maybe has to do with keeping the rules really open. There’s this handheld, handmade aspect in a lot of the work that just by nature creates it’s own signature, creates these kind of organic references. It’s not something that I’m really trying to go after. It’s sort of by-product, I think.
(http://www.art21.org/texts/tim-hawkinson/interview-tim-hawkinson-%C3%BCberorgan)










SWang Te-Yu

Wang Te-Yu creates soft sculptural installations with simple shapes and colours in accordance with the space in which they occupy to create a dialogue between object and space. Her works are also interactive and allow the viewer to physically become a part of the art work. The artist’s work seeks to emphasise physical experience over visual interpretation; everything returns to its simplest form. Through her works, the audience is forced to just be with the distorted space created by the artist, where simple colours represent the clean and unpredictable canvases of nature, and the audience must bodily readjust to comprehend the situation.

(http://theculturetrip.com/asia/taiwan/articles/wang-te-yu-balloon-art-inspired-by-aliens/)




















Penique productions was born in Barcelona in 2007. It is a collective of artists of different disciplines focused on a common project which is based on the idea of making ephemeral installations.
The starting point of each project is the selection of a location, which will be the place where to build a unique and customized piece. An inflatable balloon that expands and invades the space completely by itself.


The balloon grows until it fills the whole space and becomes the part of the existing architecture. The air, acting like the structure, presses against the plastic that faces the outline of the solid limiting and shaping the final form. Conquered by the inflatable, the place is transformed through the new texture, light and monochrome color.
Penique productions appropriates the original site that loses its routine to become part of the work getting a new identity. The balloon acts as a border and frames a new space. The container is also the content blurring the idea of the art object.
Penique productions offers an experience to the viewer. Therefore, through this clear, direct and simple perceptual message, Penique aims to reach all kinds of people without setting a closing speech. 
(http://peniqueproductions.com/)









Hot air balloons loom high on tourist horizon

(http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2013-10/29/content_17066542.htm)




  • <em>german panther</em>, 2007, Luftballon/Luft/Kleber (balloon/air/glou), 960 x370 x 300cm
  • <em>german panther</em> 1b
  • <em>german panther</em> 2
  • <em>german panther</em> 3
  • <em>german panther</em> 4
  • <em>german panther</em> 5
  • <em>german panther</em> 6
  • <em>german panther</em> 7
  • <em>german panther</em> 8
next
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(http://ingesidee.de/resourceviewer.php?pgid=63&lang=en&subpage=1&module=content)




















pixar's up hot air balloon

disney's up hot air balloon
flying cake hot air balloon
flying castle hot air balloon
the polar bear hot air balloon
upside down hot air balloon
(http://amazinginfos.com/12-phenomenal-hot-air-balloons/)







Hot Air Balloon Skywhale 01
Hot Air Balloon Skywhale 02
Hot Air Balloon Skywhale 03
Hot Air Balloon Skywhale 04
Hot Air Balloon Skywhale 05
Hot Air Balloon Skywhale 06
(http://www.strangefeed.com/introducing-the-skywhale/)








Museo Aero Solar: plastic bag art balloon

An ambitious project, but you can try a mini version at home.
The National Gallery of Denmark has teamed up with Roskilde Festival to facilitate a series of collaborative art events at the upcoming festival in June.
The biggest event, quite literally, is Museo Aero Solar – a huge solar-powered air balloon made of reused plastic bags.
The artwork is conceived by the artist Tomas Saraceno and festival goers can participate by collecting plastic bags and taping them together in small sections. The sections of various bags are eventually connected and formed into a big balloon that will float above the ground.
- See more at: http://www.lovelytrash.com/project/museo-aero-solar-plastic-bag-art-balloon/#sthash.0UYND4Bh.dpuf
(http://www.lovelytrash.com/project/museo-aero-solar-plastic-bag-art-balloon/)














Massive Hot-Air Balloon Art Oddity "Skywhale" Takes Flight Over Australia
....
With a turtle-like face and ten udders hanging from its undercarriage, “Skywhale” has a strangely serene presence that belies its somewhat grotesque form. Through the unmistakable maternalism of the giant floating creature, Piccinini asks viewers to question the relationship between people, nature, and technology as well as contemplate issues relating to genetic engineering and biotechnology. 
The strange yet beautiful creature created by Piccinini has raised eyebrows around Australia and received mixed reviews. Comments so far have ranged from “hideous” to “innocent and naive.” But regardless of whether or not the work is to your taste, one thing is for sure, you can’t miss it. And this is one of the reasons that it will go down in history as such a memorable and remarkable gesture.
“I imagine it against the clear blue canvas of a Canberra sky, odd yet somehow comforting,” Piccinini said in her original vision for the commission. “It plays on the idea that the relationship between planning and nature can lead to outcomes that are extraordinary in ways that are unanticipated.”
(http://www.blouinartinfo.com/news/story/901951/massive-hot-air-balloon-art-oddity-skywhale-takes-flight-over)






http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2197640/Helium-weather-balloon-paints-canvas-help-high-flying-youngster-create-unique-artwork--100-000ft.html












국립현대미술관(관장 정형민), 뉴욕현대미술관, (주)현대카드(사장 정태영)가 공동 주최하는『현대카드 컬처프로젝트 15_젊은 건축가 프로그램』을 7월 8일부터 10월 5일까지 서울관에서 개최한다. 『젊은 건축가 프로그램(YAP, Young Architects Program)』은 뉴욕현대 미술관이 젊은 건축가를 발굴하고 그들에게 재능을 펼칠 기회를 주고자 매년 개최하는 공모 프로그램 으로, 1998년 시작되어 2010년부터 칠레, 이탈리아, 터키로 확장하였다. 뉴욕현대 미술관과 오랜 기간 파트너십을 구축해 온 현대카드는 프로그램의 기획 의도와 국내 신진 건축가들에게 갖는 의미에 주목, '젊은 건축가 프로그램'을 '현대카드 컬처프로젝트'로 선정하였으며, 우리 나라의 신예 건축가를 발굴•육성하고자 하는 취지에 깊이 공감한 국립현대미술관과 함께 아시아 최초로 이 프로그램을 공동 주최하게 되었다. ● 서울관 미술관 마당에는 올해 프로그램의 건축가로 최종 선정된 프로젝트 팀 '문지방'의 작품 「신선놀음」이 설치되어 10월 5일까지 일반에 공개된다. 문지방은 구름을 형상화한 공기 풍선과 신비로운 느낌을 주는 물안개, 마치 지상과 천상을 연결하는 듯한 나무 계단 등을 통해 신선이 노니는 장소를 구현했다. 또, 공기 풍선이 만들어내는 그늘 아래 잔디가 깔린 바닥은 관람객들에게 편안히 쉴 수 있는 공간을 제공하고, 구름 사이에 설치된 트램폴린은 색다른 재미를 주어 미술관의 정방형 공간에서는 느낄 수 없는 또 다른 즐거움을 관람객에게 제공할 것으로 기대된다. ● 제7전시실에서는 최종으로 선정된 프로젝트 팀 '문지방(최장원, 박천강, 권경민)'을 비롯하여 최종 후보군에 오른 '김세진, 네임리스 건축(나은중, 유소래), 이용주, AnLstudio(신민재, 안기현, 이민수)'의 작품이 소개된다. 또한 국립현대미술관은 젊은 건축가 프로그램의 국제 네트워크에 참여하는 첫 해를 기념하여 1998년 뉴욕현대미술관 에서 시작된 젊은 건축가 프로그램의 역사와 함께 국내에서 1차로 추천받은 건축가들 역시 이번 전시에 소개한다. ● 『현대카드 컬처프로젝트 15_젊은 건축가 프로그램』은 국내 젊은 건축가에게는 역량을 키울 기회, 관람객에게는 쉽게 접하기 어려운 젊은 세대의 실험성이 강한 건축 전시를 접하는 좋은 기회가 될 것이다.
프로젝트 팀 『문지방』 project team MOON JI BANG_Shinseon Play_01
프로젝트 팀 『문지방』 project team MOON JI BANG_Shinseon Play_02
프로젝트 팀 『문지방』 project team MOON JI BANG_Shinseon Play_03
미술관 마당 ● 서울관 미술관 마당에는 최종 건축가인 프로젝트 팀 '문지방'의 '신선놀음' 작품이 설치된다. 도가사상에 기반을 둔 작품의 기본적인 구성과 내용은 에어벌룬을 이용한 구름과 안개 역할을 하는 미스트를 통하여 신선놀음이라는 주제를 구현하는 것이다. 여기에 목조사다리로 상하부를 연결하여 천상과 지상을 오르내리도록 구성하였고, 트램폴린이라는 기구를 통해 그 재미와 은유적 표현을 더하고 있다. 지면에서는 에어벌룬이 만들어내는 그늘이 아래의 잔디와 더불어 관람객에게 쉴 수 있는 편안한 공간을 만들어 준다. 에어벌룬의 그늘과 잔디, 시원한 미스트는 젊은 건축가 프로그램의 공통주제인 그늘, 쉼터, 물과 효과적으로 반영하고 있으며, 여름철 미술관을 찾는 관람객에게 보다 쾌적하고 즐거운 경험을 제공해줄 것으로 기대된다. 「신선놀음」의 설치 과정의 타임랩스 영상은 제7전시실 내부에서 상영된다.
프로젝트 팀 『문지방』 project team MOON JI BANG_Shinseon Play_04
(neolook.com)