Kinetic Light Sculpture. Interactive Facade. Zeilgallery, Frankfurt.

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://users.design.ucla.edu/projects/arc/cm/data/page18/image7.gif&imgrefurl=http://users.design.ucla.edu/projects/arc/cm/cm/staticE/page18.html&h=760&w=500&sz=252&tbnid=RMp-O3pGKrIJ:&tbnh=139&tbnw=92&start=46&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dlight%2Bsculpture%26start%3D40%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26sa%3DN

Kinetic Light Sculpture


Interactive facade

Zeilgallery, Frankfurt

9/92

Christian M?r und R? Kramm


Kinetic Light Sculpture of the Zeilgalerie is a permanent installation on the facade of the Zeilgalerie in Frankfurt and was finished along with the building in September 1992.


<--- Double click on this image! ---


During the day, the perforated surface of the sheet metal, which is in front of the blue facade of the building, remains grey and reserved and only oscillates through the play of daylight. When dusk begins to fall, however, it transforms itself into blue-yellow floating figures, which change colors like a chameleon depending on their surroundings, the prevailing weather conditions.


0? centigrade


8? centigrade


18? centigrade


Three groups of lights - a total number of 120 HQI spots - shine from the inside and outside on to the perforated sheet-metal surface in front of the building's wall. They beam upwards and downwards through the surface with a varying degree of yellow. Temperature, wind, and rain both act as a constant function of time and are the parameters of the light sculpture, which changes in real time.



The overall image is directed by a computer terminal and a weather station on top of the building: the ambient temperature (variables: 0-30 degrees Centigrade) determines the amount of yellow on the blue wall. The yellow patches move in line with the direction of the wind from left to right or vice versa. Wind speed governs how fast they move over the surface. Rain substitutes for wind and causes patches of yellow to fall vertically.


Audio-Visualization


The upper area of the facade is crossed horizontally by the wide, rapidly changing line graphic (LED-Display 4m x 20m) that visualizes the degree of noise made by the passers-by in real-time.



Developer:
Dr. J?Schneider

Light design:
Christian Bartenbach

Programming:
Gideon May

--
The Design-L list for art and architecture, since 1992...
To subscribe, send mailto:design-l-subscribe-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx.
To signoff, send mailto:design-l-unsubscribe-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx.
Visit archives: http://lists.psu.edu/archives/design-l.html

GIF image

GIF image

JPEG image

JPEG image

JPEG image

GIF image

Partial thread listing: