Kimsooja: Collaboration on Campus-Nanotechnology & Contemporary Art | ART21

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In this Art21-produced special feature, artist Kimsooja collaborates with scientists and nanotechnologists to create an iridescent steel and polymer sculpture for the Cornell University campus in Ithaca, NY. Developed in collaboration with architect Jaeho Chong and Cornell nano material engineer Ulirich Wiesner, Ph. D., the 46-foot-tall needle-shaped structure "A Needle Woman: Galaxy was a Memory, Earth is a Souvenir" (2014) is the result of the artist's first-ever collaboration with scientists. "This tradition of bringing art and science together precedes modernism," says Stephanie Owens, director of Cornell Council for the Arts. "So [Kimsooja] and [Wiesner] working at a similar interface related to light and objects was a definite continuation of this tradition."
The sculpture's plexi-glass panels are coated with a nano polymer film-molecularly engineered by Cornell materials scientists in Wiesner's lab-to produce experiences inspired by naturally-occurring light phenomenon. "We use iridescence as a principle in order to mimic the effect of the butterfly wing," says Wiesner.
"A Needle Woman: Galaxy was a Memory, Earth is a Souvenir" was created as part of the artist's residency for the Cornell Council for the Arts 2014 Biennial. Learn more about the project at:
cca.cornell.edu/?p=galaxy-was-...
Kimsooja's videos and installations blur the boundaries between aesthetics and transcendent experience through their use of repetitive actions, meditative practices, and serial forms. In many pieces, everyday actions-such as sewing or doing laundry-become two- and three-dimensional or performative activities. In videos that feature her in various personas (Needle Woman, Beggar Woman, Homeless Woman), she leads us to reflect on the human condition, offering open-ended perspectives through which she presents and questions reality.
Learn more about the artist at:
art21.org/artist/kimsooja/
CREDITS:
Featured: Kimsooja; Ulrich Wiesner, Ph. D., Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University; Jaeho Chong, Architecht; Stephanie Owens, Curator & Director, Cornell Council for the Arts; Ferdinand Kohle, Ph. D. student, Cornell University; Hiroaki Sai, Postdoctoral student, Cornell Univerity.
Producers: Ian Forster & Eve Moros Ortega. Camera: Joel Shapiro. Additional Camera: Jaeho Chong; Jason Koski; Well Said Media; & Aaron Wax. Sound: Tom Bergin. Editor: Morgan Riles. Digital Imaging & Animation: Jaeho Chong. Still Photography: Lindsay France & Jason Koski. Artwork Courtesy: Kimsooja and the Cornell Council for the Arts. Special Thanks: Erin Lee Emerson; Wiesner Nanomaterials Group; Kent Kleinman; Darrell Schlom; Tracy Vosburgh; & Jason Dombroskie.
An Art21 Workshop Production. © ART21, Inc. 2015. All rights reserved.
#Kimsooja #Art21

Пікірлер: 6

  • @tracyvosburgh4136
    @tracyvosburgh41368 жыл бұрын

    Worth watching for many reasons-- but if for nothing else watch for the butterflies. Proud to have been a small be part of this project with Stephanie Owens at Cornell.

  • @anthonymorton3074
    @anthonymorton30748 жыл бұрын

    Cornell must be a great place to study! For Sure!

  • @philipcrystal8872
    @philipcrystal88728 жыл бұрын

    amazing art ,bravo.

  • @jlover111209
    @jlover1112098 жыл бұрын

    Pure beauty.

  • @87ericmartinez
    @87ericmartinez8 жыл бұрын

    should have just asked Larry Bell for help.

  • @willmcdono
    @willmcdono8 жыл бұрын

    Um, Sooja, a nanometer is 1/100,000th of a human hair, not 1/10th.

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