Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III makes a desert cabin appear transparent

American artist Phillip K Smith III has added mirrors to the walls of a desert shack in California to create the illusion that you can see right through the building (+ movie).

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Steve King

Entitled Lucid Stead, the installation was created by Phillip K Smith III on a 70-year-old wooden residence within the California High Desert.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Steve King

Mirrored panels alternate with weather-beaten timber siding panels to create horizontal stripes around the outer walls, allowing narrow sections of the building to seemingly disappear into the vast desert landscape.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Steve King

“Lucid Stead is about tapping into the quiet and the pace of change of the desert,” said Smith. “When you slow down and align yourself with the desert, the project begins to unfold before you. It reveals that it is about light and shadow, reflected light, projected light, and change.”

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Steve King

The door and windows of the building are also infilled with mirrors, but after dark they transform into brightly coloured rectangles that subtly change hue, thanks to a system of LED lighting and an Arduino computer system.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Lance Gerber

“The colour of the door and window openings are set at a pace of change where one might question whether they are actually changing colours,” said Smith.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Lance Gerber

“One might see blue, red, and yellow… and continue to see those colours. But looking down and walking ten feet to a new location reveals that the windows are now orange, purple and green,” he added.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Lance Gerber

White light is projected through the walls of the cabin at night, revealing the diagonal cross bracing that forms the building’s interior framework.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Steve King

Read on for a project description from the artist:


Artist Phillip K Smith, III creates Lucid Stead light installation in Joshua Tree, CA

After the long, dusty, bumpy, anxious trip out into the far edges of Joshua Tree, you open your car door and for the first time experience the quiet of the desert. It’s at that point that you realise you are in a place that is highly different than where you just came from.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Steve King

Lucid Stead is about tapping into the quiet and the pace of change of the desert. When you slow down and align yourself with the desert, the project begins to unfold before you. It reveals that it is about light and shadow, reflected light, projected light, and change.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Lance Gerber

In much of my work, I like to interact with the movement of the sun so that the artwork is in a constant state of change from sunrise to 9am to noon to 3am to 6pm and into the evening.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Steve King

With Lucid Stead, the movement of the sun reflects banded reflections of light across the desert landscape, while various cracks and openings reveal themselves within the structure. Even the shifting shadow of the entire structure on the desert floor is as present as the massing of the shack itself, within the raw canvas of the desert.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Lance Gerber

The desert itself is as used as reflected light…as actual material within this project. It is a medium that is being placed onto the skin of the 70-year old homesteader shack.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Steve King

The reflections, contained within their crisp, geometric bands and rectangles contrasts with the splintering bone-dry wood siding.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Lou Mora

This contrast is a commonality in my work, where I often merge highly precise, geometric, zero tolerance forms with material or experience that is highly organic or in a state of change…something that you cannot hold on to… that slips between your fingers.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Lance Gerber

Projected light emerges at dusk and moves into the evening. The four window openings and the doorway of Lucid Stead all become crisp rectangular fields of colour, floating in the desert night.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Lance Gerber

White light, projected from the inside of the shack outward, highlights the cracks between the mirrored siding and the wood siding, wrapping the shack in lines of light. This white light reveals, through silhouette, the structure of the shack itself as the 2×4’s and diagonal bracing become present on the skin of the shack.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Lance Gerber

The colour of the door and window openings are set at a pace of change where one might question whether they are actually changing colours. One might see blue, red, and yellow… and continue to see those colours. But looking down and walking ten feet to a new location reveals that the windows are now orange, purple and green.

Lucid Stead installation by Phillip K Smith III gives the illusion of invisibility to a desert cabin
Photograph by Lance Gerber

This questioning of and awareness of change, ultimately, is about the alignment of this project with the pace of change occurring within the desert. Through the process of slowing down and opening yourself to the quiet, only then can you really see and hear in ways that you normally could not.

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A Tailor’s Ritual by chmara.rosinke for Wäscheflott

Vienna design duo chmara.rosinke created this wooden vanity stand for a local shirt tailor (+ slideshow).

A Tailor’s Ritual by Chmara.rosinke

Anna Rosinke and Maciej Chmara designed A Tailor’s Ritual to be used for fittings at the Wäscheflott tailoring shop.

A Tailor’s Ritual by Chmara.rosinke

The vanity stand comprises mirrors, hangers for clothing and a storage shelf, which all pivot around the wooden frame.

A Tailor’s Ritual by Chmara.rosinke

The floor-length standing mirror is used with a circular mobile mirror to allow the customer to check the fitting in the back.

A Tailor’s Ritual by Chmara.rosinke

One brass hanger is used to hang-up the mock-up shirt and a second is for the final garment. “Wäscheflott always tailors a trial shirt before making the final one,” said the designers.

A Tailor’s Ritual by Chmara.rosinke

Tailoring tools such as needles and pins can be stored on the brass shelf.

A Tailor’s Ritual by Chmara.rosinke

The design was commissioned as part of the Passionswege project for Vienna Design Week 2013.

A Tailor’s Ritual by Chmara.rosinke

The Passionswege project, literally meaning “pilgrimage ways”, initiates collaborations between young designers and traditional Viennese companies. Wäscheflott has produced bespoke tailoring in the centre of old Vienna since 1948.

A Tailor’s Ritual by Chmara.rosinke

Anna Rosinke and Maciej Chmara won the top prize at the inaugural NWW Design Awards at Vienna Design Week 2012 for their mobile kitchen design.

Other vanity items include a storage box and mirror hanging either end of a leather strap and a dressing table with hinged doorsSee more furniture design »

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for Wäscheflott
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London Design Festival 2013: Hunting & Narud: The design duo draws from their native Norway to create functional but wondrously sculptural mirrors

London Design Festival 2013: Hunting & Narud


by LinYee Yuan Rough quarry granite, matte steel and a highly polished copper mirror are the elements that make up one of the most visible design objects at this year’s London Design Festival. The sculptural Copper…

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Glass office for Soho China by AIM Architecture

Mirrored walls and glass ceilings transform this office interior in Shanghai into a labyrinth of reflected light and imagery (+ slideshow).

Glass office by AIM Architecture for SOHO China

Shanghai studio AIM Architecture designed the office for Soho China, the property developers behind Zaha Hadid’s Galaxy Soho and Wangjing Soho projects, and it occupies a space in the company’s Fuxing Plaza complex.

Glass office by AIM Architecture for SOHO China

The space functions as a showroom, so the architects wanted to show customers the raw condition of the office units available to rent.

Glass office by AIM Architecture for SOHO China

“As Soho rents out the offices in this building in bare shell state, the main design idea is to show the customers what they are actually getting, and at the same time add a layer of inspiring luxury to it,” they said.

Glass office by AIM Architecture for SOHO China

Ventilation ducts and other service pipes are visible through a continuous glass ceiling, while glass floors surround individual meeting rooms.

Glass office by AIM Architecture for SOHO China

Mirrored partitions alternate with glass screens and windows, juxtaposing views between rooms with framed apertures of the Shanghai skyline.

Glass office by AIM Architecture for SOHO China

“The glass-only approach allows a complexity that emerges from a simple choice,” added the architects.

Glass office by AIM Architecture for SOHO China

The entrance to the office is via an all-white corridor, where strips of light are reflected to create the illusion of a never-ending grid.

Glass office by AIM Architecture for SOHO China

Other offices filled with mirrors and glass include a Tokyo office with a hidden slide and a production studio in New York with translucent screens and glass partitions. See more office interiors »

Photography is by Jerry Yin, Chief Architect, SOHO China.

Here’s a project description from AIM Architecture:


Glass office by AIM Architecture for SOHO China

An all glass and mirror inner cladding exposes the infrastructure of SOHO’s new office building in Shanghai. The glass creates manifold reflections of the sales models and meeting rooms, while leaving the original height and structure in view. This creates a ‘double reality’ that merges with the stunning views of downtown Shanghai.

Membrane ceilings create extra attention for the models. Light and surfaces reflect throughout the space, even further diffused by half see-through mirrors. Some of the floors are islands of stone or carpet, to create static moments to offset this sea of reflectivity.

Glass office by AIM Architecture for SOHO China

As SOHO rents out the offices in this building in bare shell state, the main design idea is to show the customers what they are actually getting, and at the same time add a layer of inspiring luxury to it.

The glass-only approach allows creating a complexity that emerges from a simple choice. That is what makes this project bold and layered at the same time.

Glass office by AIM Architecture for SOHO China

This project by AIM Architecture is part of Fuxing Plaza, a large mixed-use complex (140.000m2) that hopefully will boost more energy and surprises for the city.

Date of realisation: September 2013
Design team: Wendy Saunders, Vincent de Graaf, German Roig, Carter Chen and Jiao Yan.
Client: SOHO China

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by AIM Architecture
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Rise & Shine by Hunting & Narud

Rise & Shine by Hunting & Narud

London Design Festival 2013: a large brass weight counterbalances this circular mirror by London design studio Hunting & Narud.

Hunting & Narud‘s Rise & Shine features a circular smoked-glass mirror attached to a rope that wraps around a small birch wood disc fixed to the wall.

Rise & Shine by Hunting & Narud

The rope can be adjusted up or down to change the height of the mirror according to how tall the user is, or “to simply play with the composition and reflection of a room,” the designers said.

“By blurring the definition of its use, the mirror does not limit itself to a specific room,” said Amy Hunting.

Rise & Shine by Hunting & Narud

Rise & Shine was originally designed for the klubben group show in Norway. It was exhibited during the London Design Festival last week, at the OKAYstudio & Friends exhibition in Ben Sherman’s Mod_ular Blanc event space, along with opaline glassware by Mathias Hahn.

Hunting & Narud’s range of giant pivoting Copper Mirrors weighted down by large stones are also on show for the festival.

Rise & Shine by Hunting & Narud

Other mirrors featured on Dezeen recently include two-way mirrors that reflect vinyl stripes covering the walls of an art gallery and a huge mirror installation where people appear to be scaling the walls of a London townhouse.

See more mirrors »
See all our stories about London Design Festival 2013 »
See Dezeen’s map and guide to London Design Festival 2013 »

Photographs courtesy of Hunting & Narud.

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Hunting & Narud
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Copper Mirror Series by Hunting & Narud

Norwegian design firm Hunting & Narud is exhibiting a range of large pivoting copper mirrors with stone bases in London during the London Design Festival, which starts on Saturday (+ slideshow).

Copper Mirror Series by Hunting & Narud

The Copper Mirrors Series by London based design duo Amy Hunting and Oscar Narud of Hunting & Narud consists of a range of polished circular copper discs that are attached to mild steel frames.

Copper Mirror Series by Hunting & Narud

The pivoting mirrors can be spun 180 degrees and each mirror has a large grey stone positioned at the base.

Hunting and Narud have said that the mirrors were “inspired by the visual language and movement of the different elements of the solar system.”

Copper Mirror Series by Hunting & Narud

The mirrors were originally conceived for Fashion Scandinavia at Somerset House earlier this year, during London Fashion Week 2013. They are on display at Gallery Libby Sellers in London until 5 October 2013 and feature as a pre-cursor to London Design Festival 2013, which is open from 14 to 22 September.

Copper Mirror Series by Hunting & Narud

Other mirrors featured on Dezeen recently include two-way mirrors that reflect vinyl stripes covering the walls of an art gallery and a huge mirror installation where people appear to be scaling the walls of a London townhouse.

See more mirrors »

Copper Mirror Series by Hunting & Narud

Photographs are by Gideon Hart, courtesy of Gallery Libby Sellers.

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by Hunting & Narud
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Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery

Norwegian designer Kim Thome has installed a series of two-way mirrors that reflect vinyl stripes covering the walls of a London gallery (+ slideshow).

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_8

Kim Thome fixed multicoloured and black and white strips of vinyl to the walls of William Benington Gallery and placed three two-way mirrors on simple black frames in the centre of the room.

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_2

The semi-transparent surfaces produce optical illusions as the reflections are overlaid onto the background when viewed from different angles.

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_9

Thome says the pattern was divided into coloured and monochrome areas following the shape of the interior and “giving a new graphic element to the mirrors as the viewer explores the space.”

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_12

An additional suspended circular artwork features a diagonal pattern on one surface, which is reflected by two-way mirror material applied to the perpendicular plane.

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_16

Works on Reflection II is an extension of Kim Thome’s graduation project, which was presented at the Royal College of Art earlier this year and comprised a range of colourful furniture with built-in two-way mirrors.

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_1

Other illusory mirrors include an installation that looks as if people are climbing the facade of a London townhouse and a mirror that only works when it is placed in front of a dark shape on a wallSee all design with mirrors »

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_4

Here’s some more information from Kim Thome:


William Benington Gallery presents Kim Thome’s first show with the gallery; Works on Reflection II.

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_5

Works On Reflection II is a spatial installation which is a result of a longer investigation exploring the ’reflective’. Using the gallery space as the canvas, the installation will use the ‘reflective’ as medium, or more specifically, a two way mirror. Colour, geometry and patterns are central in staging a fictional space for these to merge, creating an ephemeral ever-changing environment.

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_17

Three mirrors stand central in the gallery space interacting and reflecting the colour vinyl pattern on the walls. Semi-transparent and reflective material such as two-way mirror allows the fore and background to be manipulated by carefully controlling the surrounding elements.

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_13

Colour in the pattern divides the space into three separate areas following the gallery’s interior architecture, giving a new graphic element to the mirrors as the viewer explores the space.

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_10

In this work viewers are challenged by what the reflections reveal, another reality, far from what is visually expected, engaging the viewer to reconsider the objects reflected.

dezeen_Works on Reflection II by Kim Thome at William Benington Gallery_14

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at William Benington Gallery
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Mirror #180 by Halb/Halb

Product news: Berlin studio Halb/Halb has created a creased circular mirror that allows two people to see their reflection at the same time.

Mirror 180 by Nicole Losos

The Mirror #180 by Halb/Halb has a fold down the centre that splits it into two halves and it can be hung in three different rotations.

Mirror 180 by Nicole Losos

One option allows two people to use the mirror at the same time, a second can show people at different heights and a third position reflects the ceiling and another area of the surrounding room.

Mirror 180 by Nicole Losos

The mirror is made from glass and a wooden fixing is attached to the back to hang it to a wall. It measures 50 centimetres in diameter and is available to buy from Berlin Design Store.

Mirror 180 by Halb/Halb

Halb/Halb is a new design studio based in Berlin, founded by Nikolaus Kayser and Nicole Losos. Kayser also works at design studio Böttcher+Henssler, whilst Losos works for Werner Aisslinger.

We’ve also featured Losos’ design for a triangulated wall-mounted structure that you can sit, sleep, read, eat and keep things on.

Mirror 180 by Nicole Losos

We’ve published a number of mirrors recently including one with angled tessellated steel panels and another that only works when it’s placed in front of a dark wall. Leandro Erlich also used a large mirror to create an illusion of people scaling the walls of a London townhouse.

See more mirrors »

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by Halb/Halb
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LUXX mirrors by Samuel Accoceberry

LUXX mirrors by Samuel Accoceberry

Angled steel panels tessellate to form these decorative mirrors by Paris designer Samuel Accoceberry.

Accoceberry built the LUXX mirrors from a series of reflective parallelograms and diamonds, which he tilted so edges fit together and mounted onto three-dimensional frames.

dezeen_LUXX mirrors by Samuel Accoceberry_3

Polished stainless steel panels are tinted gold, bronze and dark grey. Surfaces slanted in three directions reflect different amounts of light, exaggerating their slight angles.

The set of three forms features a large symmetrical design in a vaguely hexagonal shape, an asymmetric medium-sized mirror and a small piece that is also symmetrical.

dezeen_LUXX mirrors by Samuel Accoceberry_4

We’ve published a few mirrors recently, including one that only works when it’s placed in front of a dark shape and another that makes the viewer look as if they’re immersed in water.

See more mirror design »

Here’s some more info from the designer:


LUXX mirrors

During the 13 Days, from 4th to 9th June in Paris, Samuel Accoceberry exhibited the LUXX mirrors.

These objects re-interpret his mirrors Akté, Augé and Nymphé, developed for Marcel By.

These stellar, geometric and sculptural forms are a tribute to the illustrations projects Superstudio group that tried to rewrite the codes of future cites with ideal and utopian concepts.

dezeen_LUXX mirrors by Samuel Accoceberry_2

These mirrors are intended as objects to split the space and help us to have an attitude of contemplation. The look may well get lost in space decomposed by the different colored surfaces.

They are of three forms, such as micro-architectures called LUXX. These parts are made from polished stainless steel elements that are treated in different colors (gold, copper, and night) and assembled on a 3-dimensional structure.

Dimensions: 130x125x15 cm large, medium 78x70x15 cm, 48x48x12 cm small.

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Samuel Accoceberry
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Stylish Cycle Safety

A Second Look is a creative cycling safety accessory that incorporates rear vision mirrors integrated into a wooden handlebar to give riders an easy way to check out what’s around them. Even more useful are seamlessly integrated LED signals that indicate the rider’s intention to turn. Together, these functional elements make for a safer ride without sacrificing style!

Designer: Annabelle Nichols


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(Stylish Cycle Safety was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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