in

14,000 Prescription Lenses Dangle like Dewdrops in a Lush Japanese Forest

All images courtesy of Caitlind r.c. Brown and Wayne Garrett, shared with permission

14,000 Prescription Lenses Dangle like Dewdrops in a Lush Japanese Forest

Suspended like a vortex of rain, a new installation from Caitlind r.c. Brown and Wayne Garrett ushers viewers into a shimmering enclosure.

“A Whisper in the Eye of the Storm” dangles 14,000 prescription lenses from a pair of concentric circles. Created for the Northern Alps Art Festival in Omachi City, the site-specific work evokes the region’s historic relationship to water.

Blanketed with heavy snow in the winter and drenched during rainy summers, the city experiences several wet seasons. Situated at the base of the Japanese mountain range, it boasts natural features like lakes, hot springs, and hydroelectric dams. Omachi has also seen its population rapidly dwindle in recent years.

Brown and Garrett have previously worked with found, recycled objects like lightbulbs and telephones. Nested behind Nishina Shrine along the shore of Lake Kizaki, this new piece repurposes eyeglasses that catch and refract sunlight and magnify the surrounding cedar forest, focusing viewers’ gazes on the enlarged natural world around them.

“The work invites visitors to look at the landscape (and each other) with fresh eyes, seeing differently and peering deeply into the ancient and evolving landscape,” the artists say.

“A Whisper in the Eye of the Storm” is on view through November 4. Find more from Brown and Garrett on their website.

Related articles

  • Cloud Ceiling: An Interactive Cloud Made with 15,000 Light Bulbs at Progress Bar in Chicago
  • A New Book Plunges into the Vast Diversity of the World’s Oceans Across 3,000 Years
  • Thirteen Prodigious Sculptures Nestle Among the Trees in ‘La Forêt Monumentale’
  • Laura Ellen Bacon’s Monumental Willow Works Ebb and Flow in Amorphous Masses
  • Two Curtains of 30,000 Prescription Lenses Cast a Distorted Water-Like Glimmer Across a Beijing Gallery
  • Our House is Flooding: a Semi-Submerged Life-Size Home Floats Down the River Thames


Source: Art - thisiscolossal.com


Tagcloud:

Genesis Belanger Coaxes the Uncanny from Vignettes of Consumption and Gluttony