Kolonihavehus | Tom Fruin

Posted in Benchmark Projects, Materials, Temporary Art by Sinead on 7th February 2011 Kolonihavehus | Tom Fruin

New York artist Tom Fruin recently presented his latest sculptural work Kolonihavehus, in the plaza of the Royal Danish Library in Copenhagen.

The sculpture was constructed from one thousand pieces of recycled plexi glass, sourced from places such as a local closed down plexi glass distributor, a framing shop and the dumpster outside the Danish Architecture Centre.

The artwork was accompanied by daily performances by ensemble CoreAct, and sound and lighting designs that respond to the movements of passers-by. Kolonihaveuses were originally small garden sheds located in plots on the outskirts of cities, used as an escape and refuge for apartment dwellers.

Fruin's sculpture presents a lively take on the original use of Kolonihaveuses. Its brightly coloured panels are reminiscent of a church's stained glass window panels, and propose a contemporary refuge for Copenhagen's residents and visitors. By night the Kolonihavehus was internally lit and becomes a beacon of colour on the banks of the canal.

ARTIST Tom Fruin
ARTWORK
Kolonihavehus
LIGHTING DESIGN Nuno Neto (Portugal)
SOUND DESIGN
Astrid Lomholt (Denmark)
LOCATION Copenhagen, Denmark
DURATION
October 15th - November 13th 2010


Image via | The Cool Hunter


Image via | Tom Fruin

VIA | The Cool Hunter and Tom Fruin

Post your comment

Comments

No one has commented on this page yet.

RSS feed for comments on this page | RSS feed for all comments