DON’T MOVE THE FOUNTAIN
Collective Installation Design
2024
Group Exhibition at
Dutch Design Week, Vienna Design Week
With works by:
Natali Aguirre Montaña, Ise Weier, Georges Baida, Phoebe Ho, Jonghoo Jeong, Alicia Borssén, Derrick Crichlow, Thibaud Boto, Pia Gräwe, Lilly Noordhof, Christophe Boulmer, Léane Gorgette, Lucie Briand and Leto Keunen, Dalila Fermezza, Sarath Muralidharan, Chiara Zarotti, Jun Fujisaku, Serim Kwack, Christoph Wimmer-Ruelland, Sugyeong Lee, Yichun Liu, Mijali Posada, Kai Hsiang Wen.
DON’T MOVE THE FOUNTAIN is an installation by second year Contextual Design students. We collaborated on the challenge of creating a group installation consisting of ten teams. Each team came up with a concept and design for a fountain head and backdrop, resulting in water flowing through waterwalls and individual streams. The water becomes the connecting element that holds the pieces together.
FaceTime
Collective Installation Design
2024
Group Exhibition at
Dutch Design Week, Vienna Design Week
With works by:
Natali Aguirre Montaña, Ise Weier, Georges Baida, Phoebe Ho, Jonghoo Jeong, Alicia Borssén, Derrick Crichlow, Thibaud Boto, Pia Gräwe, Lilly Noordhof, Christophe Boulmer, Léane Gorgette, Lucie Briand and Leto Keunen, Dalila Fermezza, Sarath Muralidharan, Chiara Zarotti, Jun Fujisaku, Serim Kwack, Christoph Wimmer-Ruelland, Sugyeong Lee, Yichun Liu, Mijali Posada, Kai Hsiang Wen.
DON’T MOVE THE FOUNTAIN is an installation by second year Contextual Design students. We collaborated on the challenge of creating a group installation consisting of ten teams. Each team came up with a concept and design for a fountain head and backdrop, resulting in water flowing through waterwalls and individual streams. The water becomes the connecting element that holds the pieces together.
FaceTime
Our face is our greatest identifier, it defines who we are and how we are perceived and treated by others. Iconic faces have ruled this society, becoming hegemonic characters that bring with them stereotypes and misconceptions. The interplay of western and eastern faces processed by a digital entity creates an attempt to blur the lines of what we consider as perceptible and what cannot be perceived, allowing for a rerouting of our identity.
Facetime creates a performative water head that uses water as a collaborator, provoking uncontrollable results while slowly washing out our thoughts that create our faces, continually revealing untold stories beneath the skin. Creating a dynamic, evolving piece that uses time as a medium - something we as humans cannot resist.
Facetime creates a performative water head that uses water as a collaborator, provoking uncontrollable results while slowly washing out our thoughts that create our faces, continually revealing untold stories beneath the skin. Creating a dynamic, evolving piece that uses time as a medium - something we as humans cannot resist.