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SECRET SKY
Hume, Michigan

Secret Sky is the structural reworking of the barn to allow the sky to enter and pass through the building. By day, the barn is noticeable for its patterning and intricacy and a massive cut with light pouring through it. At night, the work glows from within acting as a lantern in the landscape and casting long shadows on the ground that surrounds it, giving it back to the sky.



Team:

Charlie O'Geen etC Construction Services
John Gruber, Sheppard Engineering

Project Team:
Terry Boyle
Maksim Drapey
Julia Jeffs
Mike Chin
Esther Yang
Kelly Gregory
Oliver Popalich
James Schalemberg
Tom Schalemberg




ECLIPSE
Toledo, Ohio

Eclipse is a proposal for an architectural wall that highlights the edge view of glass for its many aesthetic and optical effects. Visual shifts and color changes are created based on the occupant’s position or movement in space, and the qualities of available light.

Support:
Pilkington Glass
Momentum Toledo

Consultants:
John Gruber, Sheppard Engineering
etC Construction Services

Team:
Jeffrey Richmond
Maksim Drapey
Hannah Kirkpatrick
Julia Jeffs




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Lune: Borrowed Light
Umbertide, Italy

Lune: Borrowed Light is a series of moons hidden within a castle in Italy. Made from local clay, the works are pulled from the land and suspended out of place, allowing the architecture of the castle to host these ghostly celestial forms. Dark rich glazes cover the pieces, catching and borrowing the light from the greater surroundings as sky shifts across day and night. These moons were placed in intimate enclosures, briefly bringing close a planetary acquaintance often dreamed about from afar. And in the darkness of night, Lune vanishes when all the light is gone.

Lune: Borrowed Light was undertaken at the amazing Civitella Ranieri for the WOJR/Civitella Ranieri Architecture Fellowship created by the generous and insight of William O'Brien Jr. The work was done in partnership with the astonishing Cotto Etrusco with mentoring from the brilliant Dino Finochhi and the cherished help of Greta and Diego Mencaroni.

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CATIE NEWELL: OVERNIGHT
UMMA Museum

Catie Newell: Overnight is a solo-exhibition at the University of Michigan Museum of Art. The exhibition is comprised of a commissioned site-specific installation, Overnight and a series of photographs from Nightly (2013-ongoing). The exhibition registers shifts between day and night in the materiality of the installation, as well as the appearance of the photographs.

The suspended installation and photographic prints measure the difference between darkness and illumination, revealing alternate forms in night and day, from near or far, and from various points of view. Intentionally difficult to see, the works require an attentive, intimate viewing, and a deepened sensitivity to the different spatial worlds that light and dark inscribe.

From the Gallery Statement:
My interest in these double worlds is stirred by the nighttime infrastructure of Detroit. Until recently, Detroit was host to an unusually dark urban landscape with nearly forty percent of its streetlights inoperable due to theft, neglect, and damage. Light is now returning but from streetlights placed according to mathematical measures of distance, rather than occupied need: the imbalances of the new illumination create spatial oddities that hint at distinct but overlapping stories.

Overnight captures an instant in Detroit when darkness is displaced and light mis-registers the urban landscape. The photographs are part of the ongoing series Nightly, which records the presence of another city—a city vanishing into a darkness that removes its walls, alters its spaces, and haunts. The method of printing these photographs creates a layer of metallic sheen, and the subject matter fades in and out of visibility as it shifts through shades of black. It becomes especially difficult to see as the sun sets.

The Nightly photographs inform and infuse the suspended installation, which enacts the material change in the streetlights of Detroit. To deter scrapping, the city has moved from underground copper wiring to aboveground aluminum wires, despite the drop in electrical efficiency and the aesthetic problems of light replacement. In Overnight, a thin gauge of copper holds aluminum wire in suspension, forming subtle figural implications of architectural space. Several lengths of wire are electrified to host LED lights visible only in close proximity to the work. The aluminum has been delicately wound and pulled to unravel and stress the system, increasing its electrical inefficiencies, so the formal masses hover as sporadically-lit architectural moments of night. The work is the work is difficult to see in daylight: it is an architectural space that exists in darkness.

The installation is attuned specifically to the gallery’s exposure to daylight and its transformation into night. During the day, natural illumination catches reflections on the aluminum wire, and provides the best light to view the Nightly series. In the evening hours after sunset and for the duration of the show, the Museum will leave its exterior lights off, allowing the installation spotlights to draw out different lines of light on the aluminum and create the impossible architectural moment captured in the Nightly series.
Overnight intensifies the qualities of night and day, summoning the nuances of their misalignment. It asks what day loses and night keeps.

Project Team:
Kelly Gregory
Matt Culver
Rod Glover
Yasamin Efanydia

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EXHALE
Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Exhale skillfully encases a single blow of glass within a rigid metal structure. The metal form restricts the glass by pinching, hooking and spiking into the volume during the blowing process, capturing a tense play between the constricting and billowing materials. The entire fixture catches one breath.

Exhale, undertaken in partnership with Wes McGee and blower Brian Barber, creates deep physical resonance between strength, fragility, and the fleeting breath that brings them together.

Project assistants: Matt Culver, Kelly Gregory, Emily Kutil

Exhale is available with WDSTCK.