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Heather and Ivan Morison Install "The Black Cloud" in Bristol

By Bustler Editors|

Friday, Jul 31, 2009

From dawn til dusk on Saturday, July 25, artists Heather and Ivan Morison led a crew of volunteers to build a remarkable temporary public artwork in Victoria Park in Bristol, UK. The pavilion-like timber structure, The Black Cloud, was commissioned by Situations at the University of the West of England, and designed in collaboration with architect graduate Sash Reading. It will act as a meeting point, performance stage and shelter for events and performances during its time in the park over the next four months.

image

Click above image to enlarge
The Black Cloud by Heather and Ivan Morison in Bristol’s Victoria Park

The title The Black Cloud is based on a novel by Sir Fred Hoyle in which The Black Cloud describes a large dark body of gas that prevents solar radiation reaching the earth, later found to be a sentient super-organism.

The design is based on the Shabono shelters of Venezuela, which combine an exposed communal zone in the center with sheltered living space around the periphery, and a permeable threshold into the surrounding jungle. The Black Cloud takes these abstract qualities into a new form with a triangulated timber structure that appears to be animated in its light interaction with the park. The form was resolved by taking a geodesic dome, removing the top and deforming the shape into a structure that provides varying degrees of shelter, height and permeability. The result is a structure of 152 unique triangles that take on the lifelike character of a giant insect. The timber facade, sourced from the artists’ arboretum in Wales, was treated using a Japanese scorching technique, to create a dark, protective shield.

image

Click above image to enlarge

The Shape of Things to Come. Barn-raising the Black Cloud was the first of three events initiated by the artists which involved raising the structure on July 25, using local volunteer assistance alongside skilled labor.  The arrival of the shelter was celebrated through communal feasting and music, reflecting the traditional Finnish talkoot and Amish barn-raising, as well as den-building workshops and story-telling.

image

Click above image to enlarge

The Black Cloud will also be open for use by park visitors, local residents, groups and organizations throughout its temporary residency in the park. Combining a radical architectural intervention and a program of events and performances which re-imagine our responses to potential economic, social and environmental futures, The Black Cloud is proposed as a pioneering model for commissioning public art in parks.

The structure will be open to the public until December 6 of this year.

Here some images from the construction event in Victoria Park last Saturday:

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

Images: Situations

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wood ● united kingdom ● the black cloud ● structure ● public ● pavilion ● park ● morison ● europe ● bristol ● art

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Heather and Ivan Morison Install "The Black Cloud" in Bristol

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Heather and Ivan Morison Install "The Black Cloud" in Bristol

By Bustler Editors|

Friday, Jul 31, 2009

Share

Related

wood ● united kingdom ● the black cloud ● structure ● public ● pavilion ● park ● morison ● europe ● bristol ● art

From dawn til dusk on Saturday, July 25, artists Heather and Ivan Morison led a crew of volunteers to build a remarkable temporary public artwork in Victoria Park in Bristol, UK. The pavilion-like timber structure, The Black Cloud, was commissioned by Situations at the University of the West of England, and designed in collaboration with architect graduate Sash Reading. It will act as a meeting point, performance stage and shelter for events and performances during its time in the park over the next four months.

image

Click above image to enlarge
The Black Cloud by Heather and Ivan Morison in Bristol’s Victoria Park

The title The Black Cloud is based on a novel by Sir Fred Hoyle in which The Black Cloud describes a large dark body of gas that prevents solar radiation reaching the earth, later found to be a sentient super-organism.

The design is based on the Shabono shelters of Venezuela, which combine an exposed communal zone in the center with sheltered living space around the periphery, and a permeable threshold into the surrounding jungle. The Black Cloud takes these abstract qualities into a new form with a triangulated timber structure that appears to be animated in its light interaction with the park. The form was resolved by taking a geodesic dome, removing the top and deforming the shape into a structure that provides varying degrees of shelter, height and permeability. The result is a structure of 152 unique triangles that take on the lifelike character of a giant insect. The timber facade, sourced from the artists’ arboretum in Wales, was treated using a Japanese scorching technique, to create a dark, protective shield.

image

Click above image to enlarge

The Shape of Things to Come. Barn-raising the Black Cloud was the first of three events initiated by the artists which involved raising the structure on July 25, using local volunteer assistance alongside skilled labor.  The arrival of the shelter was celebrated through communal feasting and music, reflecting the traditional Finnish talkoot and Amish barn-raising, as well as den-building workshops and story-telling.

image

Click above image to enlarge

The Black Cloud will also be open for use by park visitors, local residents, groups and organizations throughout its temporary residency in the park. Combining a radical architectural intervention and a program of events and performances which re-imagine our responses to potential economic, social and environmental futures, The Black Cloud is proposed as a pioneering model for commissioning public art in parks.

The structure will be open to the public until December 6 of this year.

Here some images from the construction event in Victoria Park last Saturday:

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

image

Images: Situations

Share

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  • Comment as :

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