Fort Mason – SEATS

 Posted by on April 29, 2012
Apr 292012
 
Fort Mason
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The Eel: Eliciting Ethereal Light by VeeV Design

The eel explores relationships between physical environment and human sensation. Traversing the spectrum from corporeal to ethereal, the eel responds to external stimuli by emitting both heat and light with ranges of color intensity. The eel is clearly solid matter. Yet – at times – it appears intangible and diffuse.

According to their vast, and fascinating website: Raveevarn began her design education in Bangkok, Thailand, at Chulalongkorn University. She continued her graduate studies in both Architecture and Landscape Architecture at Harvard University Graduate School of Design. Raveevarn received The Arthur Wheelwright Traveling Fellowship Award from Harvard University in 1996 and the LEF Foundation Grant in 1999.

Raveevarn is now an Associate Professor in Architecture Design at University of California at Berkeley. She is also a visiting professor and serves as a design critic at numerous academic institutions both in the States and abroad. Most recently, she holds a visiting professorship at University of Southern California in Los Angeles. Both of her design and academic work have been exhibited and published widely in the US and abroad.
The sculpture lights up, and in that context the title makes considerably more sense. To see pictures of the sculpture in the night go here.

  5 Responses to “Fort Mason – SEATS”

  1. You’re right – the night shots are great. What fun to play around on it in the darkness!

  2. I’m sorry, but this doesn’t do it for me. Looks like a block of ice. However, I reserve final judgment until I see it in person, and if RedPat likes it, as you do, then it must have some worthy characteristics! 🙂

  3. I really like this one! I love the cool icy look…and those night pics are great:) I can’t remember who it was but I remember seeing a video of ice sculptures melting which this reminds me of.

  4. Now I remember…Chihuly’s Wall of Ice

  5. It looks different from different directions. Appears more interesting to look at than to sit on.

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