Few weeks ago we presented the work by Luftwerk through Mas Context / Iker Gil at Marina City (see link below). Now it's up to another monument of architecture of the twentieth century. INsite by Luftwerk -Chicago-based artists Petra Bachmaier and Sean Gallero- is an art exhibition that will transform the Mies van der Rohe’s Farnsworth House into a canvas of light and sound. Visitors are invited during the exhibit to see the site in a unique setting after sunset and experience INsite from both the exterior and interior of the house.

INsite celebrates the structural minimalism and transparency of the Farnsworth House. Once illuminated the planes of the architecture will appear to float in darkness with projected light travelling through the glass walls, creating a myriad of reflections. INsite brings a heightened awareness of the house's innate characteristics; it dissolves the structure and distills it into an experience of light and space. Featuring original music by percussionist Owen Clayton Condon and curated by Steve Dietz, President and Artistic Director of Northern Lights.mn.

When.- Opening Night. Friday, October 17.4pm-10pm. October 17 to 20, 2014

Where.- Experience INsite installation with live performance, guest speaker, hors d’oeuvres, wine and refreshments, and luxury coach transportation from and to downtown Chicago.


To learn more and purchase tickets please visit.-  farnsworthhouse.org
 

Description of the project by Luftwerk

INsite is a looping composition divided into three sections roughly corresponding to the structure of the house, the fluidity of its transparent glass walls, and the organic, where nature meets geometry. Luftwerk uses precision projection mapping, especially in the first movement, to highlight the horizontal structural steel beams that enable the glass walls to enclose the volume of the space with such an ethereal mass. Subsequent projection of abstracted patterns are like an artist’s MRI of the interior volume of Farnsworth, flooding it with images of fluidity created in their studio in a playful but systematic topographic investigation. In the last movement, color enters in and nature is projected within the volume of the house. dappled sense memories from the daytime meld with the structural outline of the house, transforming it.

In a sense there are two Farnsworth Houses. There is the one that most people get to experience during the day, and there is Farnsworth at night. During the day, Farnsworth hovers above the grassy landscape and the glass walls provide a transparent view that is also subtly hermetic. Even though there is no visual barrier, interior and exterior are sealed off from one another. You are in nature but not necessarily “amongst” it. At night, Luftwerk’s projections literalize the hover quality of the structure, highlighting the horizontal steel beams supporting the house but virtually eliminating through absence of illumination any connection to the ground. The house becomes unmoored. From the inside there is an epidermal transformation. The glass skin becomes reflective and the space expands fractally toward the indefinite. But beyond the glow of refracted light there is no landscape, no nature, only a primeval dark.

There is a story here, and it is one that Luftwerk wants you to experience not be told. If you could bottle the daytime Farnsworth, the magical feeling we all have as we walk around it, viewing from different angles, inside and out, and project it back on itself at night, without the “distraction” of the landscaping or the furniture – or the history – what would the house look like? How would it feel? The dots and squares and pixels are abstracted patterns of sunlight through the leaves of the overhanging trees and sunlight on water, referencing the nearby Fox River, the viscosity of glass, and the flow of time. What is Farnsworth now?

There is one other critical element to Luftwerk’s illuminating exploration of the philosophy of Mies, and it is the musical score of Owen Clay Condon. Condon uses a number of different instruments in his own sonic exploration of Farnsworth, but the key is his use of B as the resonant frequency of the physical distance between floor and ceiling – the height of the volume of Farnsworth. It is a sonification of the structure, which melds minimalist percussion with the otherworldly tones of a vibraphone to encourage a reverie of Farnsworth where past and present and future meet in a kaleidoscope of light and sound and remembrance and imagination.

What do you do with a revered 20th century masterpiece? You learn it. You map it. You illuminate it. You reflect it. You project onto it and into it. You play it. That’s INsite.

More information

Luftwerk is the collaborative vision and artistic practice of Petra Bachmaier and Sean Gallero. The duo have been working together for over 10 years, creating art installations that merge the elements of light and video with the sculptural aspects of architecture and design. In 2010 Luftwerk was commissioned to create a new media exhibit for Frank Lloyd Wright’s centennial celebration of The Robie House. Since then Bachmaier and Gallero have discovered a resonance with architecture and the experience of space and site, developing several projects that transform architecture into a canvas of light and motion. Their projects open a new dialogue of rediscovery that bridges history and contemporary media of public spaces and landmark structures. Currently they are engaged with The National Trust of Historic Preservation to create an immersive site-specific exhibit for the Farnsworth House in Plano, IL.

Read more
Published on: October 16, 2014
Cite: "INsite at The Mies’ Farnsworth House this Weekend. By Luftwerk" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/insite-mies-farnsworth-house-weekend-luftwerk> ISSN 1139-6415
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