DMY Berlin 2010: designers
For Use/Numen of Vienna and Zagreb wove
a web of adhesive tape around scaffolding at the
DMY Berlin venue in the Tempelhof
former airport last week.
The project involved wrapping 45 km of tape about the posts over four
days.
It was one of three projects awarded in the DMY Awards (see
Tafelstukken
by Daphna Isaacs and Laurens Manders, also awarded, in
our
earlier story).
For Use/Numen represented
Vienna
Design Week at the event, which takes place in October this year.
See all our stories about DMY Berlin in
our
special category.
Here’s some more information from the designers:
Vienna Design Week Embassy presents
Tape Installation #5 at DMY, 09.-12.06.2010 / Tempelhof, Berlin
Although the Tape Installation is conceived as a kind of parasite,
site specific object located at places like old attic, columns of a
historical building, group of tries or an industrial concrete structure,
due to location change of DMY a custom scaffolding construction had to
be made. Therefore the installation appeared more like a captured UFO on
the old Tempelhof Airport and less like a cocoon.
The installation was executed within four days (approximately 160
working hours) utilizing almost 700 conventional transparent tapes (45
km of tape).
The tendons of multiple layers of transparent adhesive tape are
firstly stretched in between a construction. The following continuous
wrapping of tendons results in a complex, amorphous surface through the
process reminiscent of growing of organic forms.
The idea for the installation originates in a set design concept for a
dance performance in which the form evolves from the movement of the
dancers between the pillars. The dancers are stretching the tape while
they move, so the resulting shape is a (tape) recording of the
choreography.
from dezeen