Layers of Iridescence

Hello everyone! Chloé from Plenty of Colour here again.

I am a major fan of art installations, especially when creators turn an everyday object into something breathtaking. An example of making the mundane magical is this beautiful piece called “Capturing Resonance” by sculptor Soo Sunny Park and composer Spencer Topel.

Featured at deCordova Museum, the colourful and iridescent installation feels like a work of exquisite glass. In fact, Park created the undulating textile by inserting thousands of acrylic squares into chain link fencing. As “Capturing Resonance” was created in a window-filled space, different lighting makes the piece a constantly evolving palette of colour, shadows and reflection. The installation also features an audio element as composer Spencer Topel created an dreamy, elegant composition that is activated by motion sensors so the sound is ever-changing and layered like its iridescent muse. “Capturing Resonance” showcases that any material, no matter how industrial or mundane it may seem, can become a gorgeous piece of art.

 

 

 


(photographs by Michelle Aldredge and Peter Harris via gwarlingot)

Chloé is a Vancouver designer and maker of things. Madly in love with colour since her first toddler glance of the hardware store paint chip wall, Chloé decided to create Plenty of Colour as a daily blog devoted to the topic. When not editing excessive exclamation points out of business emails or swooning over her Pantone guide, you can find Chloé fusing modern technology and handcrafted detail for an array of design clients as well as her own colour-focused projects.