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Thursday, 27 June 2013

IN ORBIT: A SPACE-INSPIRED FLOATING PLAYGROUND THAT PUTS VISITORS INTO ORBIT


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A Space-Inspired Floating Playground That Puts Visitors Into Orbit
By Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan,
Gizmodo, 21 June 2013.

Tomás Saraceno's M.O. as an artist is to make you float - either on top of millions of yards of plastic, or inside of hexagonal sky pods, or on top of an inflatable balloons. His latest Jules Verne-tinged installation, which opened today, is no different.

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In Orbit, as the piece is called, took three years to design and build. The installation invites visitors to climb a rope ladder to reach a three-layered network of netting that hangs 60 feet above the courtyard of a museum in Germany. Up above the building, they're welcome to lounge, explore, or play withe a dozen gigantic PVC balls that litter the 75,000-square-foot canopy.

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What's the point of this massive, floating installation (besides having fun)? Saraceno talks about his work in terms of particle physics and astronomy. He describes his inflatable landscapes like they're building-sized models of physical phenomena, including String theory, Planck scales, and space-time continuums. So given the name of this piece - In Orbit - it's easy to imagine it in terms of celestial bodies: dozens of tiny humans floating through deep space, interacting with inflatable planets as they go.

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More information and images at Tomás Saraceno and Design Boom.

Video: Tomás Saraceno - In Orbit


[Source: Gizmodo. Edited. Video added.]


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