As summer begins here in the U.S. the mind naturally turns to the glories of warm weather days spent outdoors. So here are four outdoor-oriented projects to inspire creative design thoughts:
1) Monstrum
Why play in a playhouse, if you can play in moon rockets, submarines, giant snail shells, clown heads or Trojan horses? That's the question that motivates Monstrum, a group of designers and craftspeople creating unique playgrounds from their workshop in Copenhagen. Click on over to the Monstrum website to see images of their playful and beautiful work.
2) Your Rainbow Panorama
Here's a bit of museum/exhibit/design inspiration that evokes light, and the sun, and endless horizons: artist Olafur Eliasson's architectural installation entitled "Your rainbow panorama."
Situated on top of the ARoS Aarhus Kunstmuseum art museum in Aarhus, Denmark, Your rainbow panorama invites you to experience the familiar (a city skyline) in unfamiliar ways. Olafur Eliasson's creation consists of a 150-meter-long and three meter-wide circular walkway in glass in all the colors of the spectrum.
3) One Day Poem Pavilion
Artist Jiyeon Song has created a sculptural structure that utilizes perforations carefully arranged throughout the top surfaces. As light shines through the Pavilion's holes at different angles, legible text is created on the sidewalk underneath. Different lines from a poem appear at different times of the day, due to the position of the sun. What is super cool is that (again, due to the sun's position) one poem appears during the summer, and a different poem appears in the winter.
4) Miguel Marquez Outside
Michael Pederson is a street artist and photographer in Sydney, Australia. His blog Miguel Marquez Outside shows, among other projects, signs that Pederson has placed in public. They look official and offer rules, suggestions, and information about the area.
Many of Pederson's signs twist the traditional notion of informational signs (like those found in museums!) I wonder how we could play with visitors' expectations in outdoor exhibits by using ideas like this?
Many of Pederson's signs twist the traditional notion of informational signs (like those found in museums!) I wonder how we could play with visitors' expectations in outdoor exhibits by using ideas like this?
If you find other inspiring and creative projects during your summer travels, send me an email with links, descriptions, and images so I can feature them in future ExhibiTricks posts!
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