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Surfaces in Flux

September 19, 2025 through February 28, 2026

This installation reimagines the architecture of gathering through a suspended inflatable dome and a modular communal surface that respond to movement, weight, and touch. Hovering overhead, the soft, inverted dome creates an ethereal canopy, while below, a low-lying platform formed from individual cylindrical inflatables straps together into a shared ground.

 

The space invites people to sit, recline, and lean into one another, allowing the structure to subtly shift and redistribute itself in response to its occupants. This mutability becomes both a physical experience and a metaphor for the ways communities form, dissolve, and reassemble.

 

Surfaces in Flux

By embracing air, impermanence, and softness as primary materials, the work challenges the fixity of traditional architecture. It proposes an open, non-hierarchical environment that supports connection, care, and shared presence, a gentle counterpoint to the static and monumental, and an invitation to imagine new ways of being together.

Surfaces in Flux

First photo by Bob by Robert Heishman + Robert Salazar

Surfaces in Flux Tube Light Installation Voids Rollers Adaptive Ground Lucid Dreamscape Soft Horizons Ellipse and Ellipsis Charlotte Chesnais Reflections of Now Fluid Gardens Garden House Purble Nebula On Slowness Dry Garden NOGUCHI AND GREECE, GREECE AND NOGUCHI ECHOES POIKILOS LIGHTS ON Chronos Conversations on Domesticity Ask Me If I Believe in the Future DOMESTICITY-AT-LARGE DOMESTICITY-AT-LARGE Why Now? Hard, Soft, and All Lit Up with Nowhere to Go Future Archeology Future Archaeology Volax Come Back Tomorrow Archipelago Far Doric Columns Standing Stones Pilotis Landscapes Homage Formations Bloc Studios / Alcova Forms of Volume Untitled Memory Acts New Reflections Champs Creatifs Athlos Rest Stop Table of Contents
Surfaces in Flux
Surfaces in Flux
September 19, 2025 through February 28, 2026

This installation reimagines the architecture of gathering through a suspended inflatable dome and a modular communal surface that respond to movement, weight, and touch. Hovering overhead, the soft, inverted dome creates an ethereal canopy, while below, a low-lying platform formed from individual cylindrical inflatables straps together into a shared ground.

 

The space invites people to sit, recline, and lean into one another, allowing the structure to subtly shift and redistribute itself in response to its occupants. This mutability becomes both a physical experience and a metaphor for the ways communities form, dissolve, and reassemble.

 

Surfaces in Flux

By embracing air, impermanence, and softness as primary materials, the work challenges the fixity of traditional architecture. It proposes an open, non-hierarchical environment that supports connection, care, and shared presence, a gentle counterpoint to the static and monumental, and an invitation to imagine new ways of being together.

Surfaces in Flux

First photo by Bob by Robert Heishman + Robert Salazar