Waugh Thistleton installs modular three-storey maze in V&A's Sackler Courtyard

A nine-metre-high maze built from cross-laminated timber is on show at the V&A during London Design Festival, to demonstrate the potential of carbon-neutral buildings.

London-based architecture studio Waugh Thistleton is behind MultiPly, a modular three-storey structure that showcases the first British-made CLT – a type of engineered wood that is much stronger than standard timber.

MultiPly for LDF by Waugh Thistleton Architects

The installation comprises a series of cube-shaped rooms, connected by many staircases and bridges. Throughout London Design Festival, which runs from 15 to 23 September, the public will be invited to explore these.

Openings in each cube frame unique views of the V&A and its Sackler Courtyard, which was added in the recent extension by AL_A. At night, soft lights inset in the doorways illuminate the timber tower with a soft glow.

MultiPly for LDF by Waugh Thistleton Architects

The project was a collaboration between the architects, engineering firm Arup and the American Hardwood Export Council (AHEC).

The CLT was manufactured in Scotland, using American tulipwood. The process involves layering sections of wood at right angles, then glueing them together.

MultiPly comprises 111 panels of CLT, locking in 30 tonnes of carbon dioxide. This means that all the emissions from making and transporting the raw materials are offset, making MultiPly a carbon-neutral structure.

MultiPly for LDF by Waugh Thistleton Architects

The building arrived to the site as a flat-pack kit of parts. The panels were slotted together using digitally fabricated joints, allowing the pavilion to be assembled in just five days.

“If it wasn’t for the rules and regulations and timing we had to work around we probably could have done it in three,” said David Venables, European director for AHEC.

MultiPly for LDF by Waugh Thistleton Architects

For Andrew Waugh, director of Waugh Thistleton, constructing a three-storey structure on the roof of the V&A’s newest galleries offered the chance to prove how versatile CLT is.

“When we first started talking to LDF, it was quite a challenge. Of all the places we could have put it in London this year, this was the most precious because it’s brand new and it’s beautiful and it’s the V&A,” he told Dezeen.

“We’re over three storeys here but light as a feather, so it can stand on this roof without damaging these beautiful tiles,” he added.

“It’s a great opportunity to demonstrate the lightness of the material, the beauty of the courtyard, and that we can pack it all down nice and neatly after its finished and walk away.”

MultiPly for LDF by Waugh Thistleton Architects

CLT has been used to construct several past LDF installations, including The Smile by Alison Brooks and Endless Stair by dRMM, but in all previous cases the panels were screwed together.

This time around, a system of metal bolts and brackets was developed.

“This is the very first time that CLT panels have been connected in a way you can just unbolt them and take them apart and use them again,” said Venables.

MultiPly for LDF by Waugh Thistleton Architects

Thanks to the new joint system, the floors and walls are much stronger, allowing Arup’s engineers to integrate cantilevered modules that teeter out over the tiles with no need for additional support.

All the stairways were built from offcuts in the production process, while the tulipwood panels on the topmost module were vacuum baked to make them impervious to the weather.

“This is really exciting for us, to conceive of durable external fabrics for buildings, that are made of timber too,” said Waugh.

MultiPly for LDF by Waugh Thistleton Architects

The panels and modules are designed so they can be reused and repurposed in any number of configurations when LDF draws to a close.

Waugh and Venables hope the chance to engage the public with such a playful installation will encourage property developers to consider CLT for residential projects.

MultiPly for LDF by Waugh Thistleton Architects

“This is about building high density urban housing. This is a little demonstration model for what we do, for what we’re interested in,” said Waugh.

“It’s about not using concrete and steel, but carbon friendly replenish-able materials.”

American tulipwood is a hardwood tree species native to America’s east coast. It’s so fast growing that AHEC claims the wood required for the LDF structure is replaced by the natural growth of American forests in five minutes.

The Scottish-made CLT for the project only required lower grade timber. AHEC wants to show that creating a market for it as a low cost and sustainable construction material would put a value on timber, making forest management more of a priority and encouraging reforestation.

In turn, Waugh wants to show that this hardwood CLT could offer a solution to the UK’s housing crisis.

“We’re having fun, but it’s serious fun,” said Venables. Waugh added: “Serious message, but lots of fun.”

MultiPly is open at the V&A Sackler Courtyard from 15 September to 1 October 2018.

Photography is by Ed Reeve.

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Eight designers exploring the versatility of glass for London Design Festival

This year’s London Design Festival features an array of projects that showcase new and inventive techniques in glass. Design reporter Natashah Hitti picks out eight of the most interesting examples, including vessels shaped by spectacles and glass blocks infused with bubbles.

Taking place this year from 15 to 23 September, the city’s annual design festival features more than 400 events – and glass features in many of them.

According to Studio Sahil founder Rezzan Hasoglu, who is showcasing glass infused with sand, the material offers “endless possibilities”.

“Glass is a versatile material – it could be used for craft or industrial production,” she told Dezeen. “When I first learned glassblowing and other glassmaking processes, I became fascinated.”

Also at LDF, Helsinki-based designer Ekin Kayis is presenting glassware combined with ceramics during the making process. He said the appeal for the material is that it never goes out of fashion.

“The market for industrially produced glassware is ever present,” he explained. “It is near impossible to replicate the material experience of glass with another material.”

Kayis said that changes in manufacturing technology are also making many new types of glassware possible.

“While the traditional tools used in glassblowing remain mostly the same, the developments in digital design, manufacturing and prototyping are becoming more influential and are opening up new possibilities for form exploration, mould-making or for implementing more experimental methods,” he said.

See eight of the best examples of contemporary glass design from LDF below:


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Ron Arad

Having dedicated much of his time to designing both glasses for the face and decorative glassware, London-based designer Ron Arad has combined the two to create a series of playful vessels.

On display at the Vessel Gallery in Notting Hill, Arad’s collection of hand-blown objects are called Where Are My Glasses – in a pun on the double meaning of the word. “So, where are my glasses? Well, it’s transparent!” joked the designer.


Hideki Yoshimoto

Rise, a project by London-based designer Hideki Yoshimoto, aims to recreate the appearance of bubbles and the refraction of light in water.

Yoshimoto wanted to experiment with the complex way that light transmits and reflects inside different materials, to create a mesmerising visual effect. He first showed the project in Milan in 2017, but is now bringing it to London – it will feature at Matter of Stuff’s exhibition Blown Away, at Sketch.


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Ekin Kayis

By combining ceramic with glass during the glassblowing process, Helsinki-based designer Ekin Kayis aims to create a relationship between two materials that are disparate in texture, form, colour and finish.

Made up of a range of differently shaped vessels, the Nordic Mood collection is intended to recreate the colours of the sky in Finland. The pieces will be on display at the Old Truman Brewery as part of London Design Fair.


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Raw-Edges

London studio Raw Edges transformed a traditional Israeli dance into 30 spinning glass lamps in this installation for WonderGlass, which debuted in Milan in April and will now go on show at the Venetian brand’s Fitzrovia showroom for LDF.

Called Horah, the installation consists of sculptural glass lights in a variety of sizes and colours. Each one features curving glass “leaves”, which are attached to a pivoting motor, causing them to gently rotate.


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Eliška Monsportová

Eliška Monsportová took inspiration from nature and the “poetics of surrealists” for her Pedestal objects. Monsportová blew a hand-made glass directly into moulds made from stones, before adding coloured panes of glass on top.

The installation will be displayed at the Colours of Transparency exhibition taking place in the Old Truman Brewery as part of London Design Fair.


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Jana Němcová

Czech designer Jana Němcová has created a series of kiln-cast glass objects that have been combined with plexiglass and neoprene (a synthetic rubber).

Described by the designer as “sculptural still life”, the Chimera collection takes inspiration from contemporary pop culture, but is also intended to reference the natural world and its forms. The pieces will also be shown at the Colours of Transparency exhibition.


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Studio Sahil

Rezzan Hasoglu of London-based Studio Sahil has created tabletop objects made using different methods of combining blown glass with sand, which she is showing at the Form & Seek exhibition at the London Design Fair.

Drawing inspiration from natural phenomena, patterns and formations, the materials and processes used in the making of the Sand to Glass collection result in different visual and textural qualities.


Cameron Design House x Geronimo

British lighting brand Cameron Design House (CDH) has teamed up with Los Angeles-based balloon artist Jihan Zencirli, aka Geronimo, to create an immersive light installation that will be on show at the Old Truman Brewery for the festival.

The installation sees Geronimo transform CDH’s Helmi chandelier into a balloon sculpture. Inspired by a fisherman’s net, the Helmi light comprises a series of hand-blown glass pearls, each illuminated by a single LED filament bulb and suspended in the air by a gold chain net.

The post Eight designers exploring the versatility of glass for London Design Festival appeared first on Dezeen.

Steel ribbing flanks courtyard at Palace for Mexican Music

This concert hall in Mérida, Mexico, comprises a building faced in metal ribs that encloses a central plaza for public performances.

The Palace for Mexican Music, or Palacio de la Música Mexicana, was designed by four local studios: Alejandro Medina ArquitecturaMuñoz Arquitectos, Reyes Rios Larrain Arquitectos and Quesnel.

Palace for Mexican Music

The project comprises a three-storey, U-shaped building with a local limestone exterior and central courtyard. On top is a roof terrace and garden overlooking the city.

Palace for Mexican Music

The flat stone walls presented to the street are peppered with coloured-glass windows that glow blue, pink and green in the evening light.

Meanwhile, vertical steel strips painted matte black cover the sides of the upper two levels of portions facing the courtyard, forming external partitions with wave-like shapes.

Palace for Mexican Music

Aptly titled Patio of Strings after the ribbed cladding, the central outdoor space is planned as a public performance area with capacity for 400 people.

Palace for Mexican Music

This plaza also faces the city’s Cathedral and the dome atop a Third Order Temple from the 17th century, which are framed by the two wings of the building when viewed from a central vantage point.

While creating the cultural building, much attention was paid to foot traffic across the site, regardless of whether pedestrians would enter the venue itself.

Palace for Mexican Music

The intention is for the project, commissioned by the Mexican state of Yucatán’s ministry of culture and the arts, to help revitalise Mérida’s historic downtown.

Throughout the day, the building’s colours appear to change – from crisp white stonework in the midday sun, to softer hues as the sun sets.

Palace for Mexican Music

Upon entering is a spacious entrance, with access to a subterranean museum and elevators to the main concert hall upstairs.

Palace for Mexican Music

The basement museum, dedicated to Mexican music, includes 12,916 square feet (1,200 square metres) of exhibition space, as well as a museum shop, and storage and utility facilities.

The double-height concert hall is located in the upper portion of the building’s larger north side. The space is decorated with warm wood floors and panelling, and 450 seats upholstered in brown to match.

Palace for Mexican Music

Directly across from the concert hall – also upstairs but in the south wing – is a library and an archive of recordings from the National Music Library of Mexico, the largest collection outside of Mexico City.

Palace for Mexican Music

Dezeen has covered a handful of other projects in Mérida, with examples like a pavilion for a historic house by Materia Arquitectonica and a pink-coloured architecture office for TACO.

Elsewhere in the countury, recently built music venues include a concrete concert hall overlooking the Gulf of Mexico by Rojkind Arquitectos and a triangular building beside Aztec ruins by Productora and Isaac Broid.

Photography is by Onnis Luque.

Project credits:

Architecture team: Mariana Rios, Natalia Avila, Carlos Fleischer, Manola Rejon, Honathan Alvarez
General contractors: Constructora Proser, Carlos Ancona, Francisco Basso, Luis Burgos
Structual engineers: Mario Gomez Mejia and Eric Raygoza of Esssa Ingeneria Estructural; Rafael Barona and Sergio Alvarez of Danstek
Museum design: Exhibiscopio
Lighting design: 333 Luxes, Elias Cisneros

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Infiniti's Prototype 10 concept is a modern take on the classic speedster

Infiniti has unveiled its latest Prototype 10 concept car, which aims to bring the classic speedster into the electric era.

The Japanese automaker “looked back to go forward” with its vision for the single-seat Prototype 10, which reimagines the early Californian speedster model with a “cool, clean and forward-looking design”.

Infiniti's Prototype 10 is a modern twist on the classic speedster

“The Infiniti Prototype 10 echoes the layout and design of some of the most evocative car designs of all time, where power was celebrated through high-powered single-seat competition cars,” said the brand.

“Our new concept speaks of an electrified future, something which is reflected in its form and details,” it continued. “It is appropriate that we found inspiration in an optimistic bygone era in which cars were characterised by the simple love of driving.”

Infiniti's Prototype 10 is a modern twist on the classic speedster

Featuring a fully electric powertrain and a single-seat cockpit, the new model exhibits Infiniti’s driver-focused design approach, which focuses on “the simple love of driving” to deliver a luxury experience.

“This idea of ‘looking back to go forward’, and combining the inspiration of an earlier aesthetic with future technology, lets us show how excited we are about the era of electrification,” said executive design director Karim Habib.

“Prototype 10 draws on some of the most iconic and evocative car designs of all time to illustrate this excitement.”

Infiniti's Prototype 10 is a modern twist on the classic speedster

The concept car was revealed on 23 August at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in California.

Inspired by the ancient art of Japanese paper folding, the exterior 3D body structure boasts an origami-like aesthetic, achieved by “coaxing the aluminium as if it was Japanese paper.”

“Paper folding was developed in China 2,000 years ago. By the seventh century it had travelled from China making it to Korea and then Japan,” explained the brand. “It was first practiced in the Japanese Imperial Court where it was considered an amusing and elegant way of passing the time.”

Infiniti's Prototype 10 is a modern twist on the classic speedster

“With our new Infiniti electrification design language taking shape on a few projects in the studio, we wanted to reflect and seek an inspired and elegant way of passing the time at Pebble Beach,” it continued.

With plans to electrify all of its new production cars from 2021 onwards, Infiniti’s Protoype 10 is a taster of things to come for the brand’s future design language.

Infiniti's Prototype 10 is a modern twist on the classic speedster

“We all feel a certain degree of passion when talking about roadsters and speedsters,” said Infiniti president Roland Krueger.

“We are equally passionate about the potential that electrification holds for the future of our cars – a daring speedster is the perfect study for our designers to explore an electrified future and ignite such excitement,” he added.

Founded in 1989, Infiniti is the luxury vehicle division of Japanese automaker Nissan, which recently developed a new technology that allows vehicles to read the brain activity of drivers, and initiate movement in response.

The post Infiniti’s Prototype 10 concept is a modern take on the classic speedster appeared first on Dezeen.

How can you use a freezer to help with meal planning?

This is the second in a two-part series on how you can use a deep freezer to help with meal planning.

As I mentioned yesterday, we see meal planning as the best process for planning healthy meals, creating a simple shopping list, and avoiding the stressful “what’s for dinner” moment in front of the open refrigerator. A meal plan helps to keep clutter out of your body, and streamlines your at-home eating.

One of the ways you can use a freezer to help with meal planning is by vacuum sealing foods you buy in bulk. If you don’t own a product like a FoodSaver Vacuum Sealer, using freezer-safe zip-top bags and squeezing out as much air as possible can work as well. To get the air out of a zip-top bag, close the bag except for an inch at one of the corners. Submerge the exterior of the bag in water almost to the top of the bag. Let the pressure of the water release air from around your food, and then quickly close the last inch at the top of the bag. Be careful not to let any of the water into the bag and onto your food.

The way we use our FoodSaver is pretty straightforward. We start by buying fish filets, beef filets, chicken breasts, roasts, ground turkey, some pork cuts, and usually one or two other meat items based on what is freshest at our butcher’s shop. (If you buy half a cow from a CSA or another animal in larger portion, ask to have the meat butchered for you. My butcher does the vacuum sealing for his customers for a small fee.) Then, we head to our farmer’s market or grocery store and pick up some lettuces and other vegetables that are in season. We buy what we know we like and will use in the next three months.

After shopping, we go home and divide everything up into meal-size portions (we’ll put two fish filets in one vacuum bag, for example). We seal up the storage bags, adhere a piece of masking tape with the date written on it, and throw them all in the freezer. Well, except for the vegetables we want to eat fresh and the lettuces. Lettuces should never be frozen — you don’t want to freeze vegetables with high water content. When you put meat into their bags, you also can add marinades in with the food and they can absorb flavors during the time in the freezer.

When I create my meal plan, I “go shopping” in my freezer and see what I have and what meals I can create from the food in the freezer. I write down what meat I need to pull out of the freezer and transfer it into the refrigerator to thaw two days in advance. (Never thaw meat or fish on the counter.) Vegetables I usually don’t thaw ahead of time.

How do you use your freezer to keep meal planning simple? I’m looking forward to getting our deep freezer and having the convenience of being able to buy more in bulk than we already do.

 

This post has been updated since its original publication in 2008.

Post written by Erin Doland

A Cable That Can Take All You Can Give It

I have this habit of charging my phone in the car and placing it my cupholder (the only convenient place to put it) while I’m driving. It doesn’t matter if I use a stock cable or aftermarket edition, it inevitably ends up wearing down because of the stress placed on the connector. The internal wiring becomes exposed and voila! I eventually have to replace it a few times a year.

If you’re like me and have a similar problem with wearing down your charging cables, you too could use a USB93 in your life! It’s the world’s first unbreakable USB cable. It also features a uniquely designed rotating-ball connector that swings 90° in 3 directions so you never have to worry about stress being placed on the delicate ends. This in combination with its nylon braiding ensure that it’s long-lasting and that you never have to waste time and money replacing worn out cables!

Designer: Alisa Miroshnyk

Click here to Buy Now: $17.00 $35.00 (52% off)

usb93_unbreakable_cable_layout

World’s first Unbreakable USB cable. 90° rotation in 3 directions, fast charging & tangle-free.

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usb93_unbreakable_cable_04

USB93 uses a unique rotating ball design inspired by robots used by NASA, Boston Dynamics and world over. The simple yet extremely functional design allows full range of movement which takes the stress off the cable connection hence prolonging cable life and providing options to use your device in the most comfortable way possible.

USB93 uses nylon braiding so you get a tangle-free experience, giving you more time on untangling things that really matter.

usb93_unbreakable_cable_01

Click here to Buy Now: $17.00 $35.00 (52% off)

Design Job: Lynk Is Looking for an ID Intern Who Enjoys Creating Organized & Efficient Living Spaces

Do you enjoy creating organized and efficient living spaces? Can you visualize inventive ideas before putting pen to paper? Do you enjoy using 3D visualization tools while perfecting your ideas into great new products? If these are intriguing questions, we would like to hear from you. We are looking for

View the full design job here

Eight designers exploring the versatility of glass for London Design Festival

This year’s London Design Festival features an array of projects that showcase new and inventive techniques in glass. Natashah Hitti picks out eight of the most interesting examples, including vessels shaped by spectacles and glass blocks infused with bubbles.

Taking place this year from 15 to 23 September, the city’s annual design festival features more than 400 events – and glass features in many of them.

According to Studio Sahil founder Rezzan Hasoglu, who is showcasing glass infused with sand, the material offers “endless possibilities”.

“Glass is a versatile material – it could be used for craft or industrial production,” she told Dezeen. “When I first learned glassblowing and other glassmaking processes, I became fascinated.”

Also at LDF, Helsinki-based designer Ekin Kayis is presenting glassware combined with ceramics during the making process. He said the appeal for the material is that it never goes out of fashion.

“The market for industrially produced glassware is ever present,” he explained. “It is near impossible to replicate the material experience of glass with another material.”

Kayis said that changes in manufacturing technology are also making many new types of glassware possible.

“While the traditional tools used in glassblowing remain mostly the same, the developments in digital design, manufacturing and prototyping are becoming more influential and are opening up new possibilities for form exploration, mould-making or for implementing more experimental methods,” he said.

See eight of the best examples of contemporary glass design from LDF below:


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Ron Arad

Having dedicated much of his time to designing both glasses for the face and decorative glassware, London-based designer Ron Arad has combined the two to create a series of playful vessels.

On display at the Vessel Gallery in Notting Hill, Arad’s collection of hand-blown objects are called Where Are My Glasses – in a pun on the double meaning of the word. “So, where are my glasses? Well, it’s transparent!” joked the designer.


Hideki Yoshimoto

Rise, a project by London-based designer Hideki Yoshimoto, aims to recreate the appearance of bubbles and the refraction of light in water.

Yoshimoto wanted to experiment with the complex way that light transmits and reflects inside different materials, to create a mesmerising visual effect. He first showed the project in Milan in 2017, but is now bringing it to London – it will feature at Matter of Stuff’s exhibition Blown Away, at Sketch.


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Ekin Kayis

By combining ceramic with glass during the glassblowing process, Helsinki-based designer Ekin Kayis aims to create a relationship between two materials that are disparate in texture, form, colour and finish.

Made up of a range of differently shaped vessels, the Nordic Mood collection is intended to recreate the colours of the sky in Finland. The pieces will be on display at the Old Truman Brewery as part of London Design Fair.


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Raw-Edges

London studio Raw Edges transformed a traditional Israeli dance into 30 spinning glass lamps in this installation for WonderGlass, which debuted in Milan in April and will now go on show at the Venetian brand’s Fitzrovia showroom for LDF.

Called Horah, the installation consists of sculptural glass lights in a variety of sizes and colours. Each one features curving glass “leaves”, which are attached to a pivoting motor, causing them to gently rotate.


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Eliška Monsportová

Eliška Monsportová took inspiration from nature and the “poetics of surrealists” for her Pedestal objects. Monsportová blew a hand-made glass directly into moulds made from stones, before adding coloured panes of glass on top.

The installation will be displayed at the Colours of Transparency exhibition taking place in the Old Truman Brewery as part of London Design Fair.


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Jana Němcová

Czech designer Jana Němcová has created a series of kiln-cast glass objects that have been combined with plexiglass and neoprene (a synthetic rubber).

Described by the designer as “sculptural still life”, the Chimera collection takes inspiration from contemporary pop culture, but is also intended to reference the natural world and its forms. The pieces will also be shown at the Colours of Transparency exhibition.


Eight of the best glassware designs at London Design Festival 2018

Studio Sahil

Rezzan Hasoglu of London-based Studio Sahil has created tabletop objects made using different methods of combining blown glass with sand, which she is showing at the Form & Seek exhibition at the London Design Fair.

Drawing inspiration from natural phenomena, patterns and formations, the materials and processes used in the making of the Sand to Glass collection result in different visual and textural qualities.


Cameron Design House x Geronimo

British lighting brand Cameron Design House (CDH) has teamed up with Los Angeles-based balloon artist Jihan Zencirli, aka Geronimo, to create an immersive light installation that will be on show at the Old Truman Brewery for the festival.

The installation sees Geronimo transform CDH’s Helmi chandelier into a balloon sculpture. Inspired by a fisherman’s net, the Helmi light comprises a series of hand-blown glass pearls, each illuminated by a single LED filament bulb and suspended in the air by a gold chain net.

The post Eight designers exploring the versatility of glass for London Design Festival appeared first on Dezeen.

Transform A Dull Workspace with Sleek, Organic Design

poly_chair_layout

Office workspaces have the unfortunate potential of being very dull and uninspiring environments, but it doesn’t have to be this way. With a little bit of careful selection combined with visually interesting design, the space can be a wonderful place to work… or at least look at!

POLY is an item of multipurpose furniture that’s destined for the workplace! It carries an organic design that can be almost effortlessly folded into a more compact, storage-friendly form. The seat back features a beautifully characterful pattern for added visual interest, while simultaneously providing ventilation.

Every aspect of the seating has been considered, from the slim forms of the legs that provide a simplistic aesthetic and durable construction, to the seating options of both cloth and mesh to ensure that the chair is suited to the environment it is to be placed within!

Designer: Changgon Lee

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A Replica of the Moon is Touring the World

Luke Jerram a créé plusieurs répliques fidèles de la Lune qu’il a ensuite décidé de faire tourner dans toute la planète, sous le nom de Museum of the Moon. Le projet a visité la Chine, la Finlande, les Emirats Arabes Unis, l’Australie…en montrant son visage bienveillant partout autour du globe, cette Lune maternelle unit ceux qui l’admirent peu importe où ils se trouvent. L’installation est accompagnée d’une musique du compositeur Dan Jones. L’image a été fournie par le NASA’s Astrogeology Science Center.