Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

12 Dec 2022

Jakob Kvist - Dichroic Sphere

 




Dichroic Sphere is a light sculpture by Danish light artist and designer Jakob Kvist.

It consists of an aluminium geodesic dome structure, covered with acrylic sheets and dichroic film. Depending on the angle of the light that hits it, either emitted from within or shining on it from outside, the sphere and the area around it changes colour.

Information from the Southbank website. This runs until 8th January 2023. 


Fred Tschida: Sphere




At the Southbank Centre until early January 2023.  


In this work, two parallel rings of brilliant orange-red neon – the natural colour emitted by the gas when high-voltage electricity passes through it – rotate at a slower speed of 15 rpm to produce the illusion, when photographed with a long exposure, of a giant glowing orb. Unfortunately I was in a rush and using my iPhone so you’ll have to use your imagination!

Tschida began his exploration of glass in 1970 with Eriks Rudans at St. Cloud State University, Minnesota. From 1977 to his retirement in 2015, he was Professor of Glass Design and Director of the Museum of Luminous Phenomena at Alfred University in New York State, where he became an influential educator.

As a leader on Alfred’s renowned glass programme and through numerous national workshops and symposia, Tschida inspired generations of glass and neon artists, including Richard William Wheater, from Neon Workshop, who produced this version of Sphere at their workshop in Wakefield.

Information from the Southbank website. 




 

17 Oct 2022

Square The Block

 “Square the Block” by Richard Wilson RA on the northwest exterior of the LSE New Academic Building on Kingsway, 21 September 2009. LSE Full details here  



If you walk down Kingsway from Holborn Station to the Aldwych  may be slightly taken aback when you glance at the corner of the New Academic Building facing Sardinia Street and Kingsway. While the top of the building looks solid at the base a giant hand or a local earthquake has scrunched the base upwards leaving it to hang in the air.