These are absolutely incredible. I would love to see them in person!
Kinetic light sculptures by artist/physicist Paul Friedlander
(Source: myampgoesto11, via perpetuallight)
They say one skill of a great photographer is the ability to edit well. Well, count me out of the league of the Greats because I don’t think I could have edited this down further even if I wanted to! It pained me to only show you these seven!
Here are some images I took of an installation by Ross Manning, a part of his exhibit entitled ‘Volumes’, currently showing at PICA in Perth.
Photographing his work was such fun…and I think, produced some pretty splendid results.
(via floresenelatico)
Raindrops Formed by Light, Glass and Machines
Troika founding partner Eva Rucki’s large-scale immersive light installations filmed by Dezeen.
(via aronaltmark)
NY-Space by Simone Decker
Reminiscent of Dr. Who’s TARDIS this walk in booth creates the illusion of infinity within a finite space. I’ve seen work like this on a smaller scale and I even had a mirror that created a similar illusion as a child with LED bulbs, but seeing the effect on a much larger scaled is far more impressive as you feel lost inside such a small area.
Artists: | Website | [via: Today&Tomorrow]
(via floresenelatico)
Under a Different Light created by Beforelight in Greece
“Under a Different Light is a project in which residents of Thessaloniki were invited to donate their unused and broken lighting fixtures to the cause. Beforelight set up shop in an abandoned building and, along with local residents and volunteers, repaired all of the parts and installed the strings of lights along Ernest Hebrard Street.”
More at MyModernMet
Portable Urban River by Luzinterruptus
Shedding light on the importance of Earth’s most abundant resource, Luzinterruptus literally packaged light with some colorful inhabitants of the essential liquid refreshment in Caracas, Venezuela, producing an artificial river in the streets. Local residents took home some of the 2,000 bags so that not a drop would be wasted.
(via floresenelatico)

