Photo Credit: Dominic Russo
ARIZONA!
November 2018 - April 2019
Scottsdale, Arizona
PUBLISHED IN
Photo Credit: Scottsdale Public Art
Design
Jin Choi and Thomas Shine
Volunteers
Crocheters
Structural Design
Thomas Shine
James Axley, (Emeritus) Professor Yale School of Architecture
Rigging
Engineering
McLaren Engineering Group
Metal Fabrication
Magnum Companies
Installation
Thomas Shine
Jin Choi
Scottsdale Public Art
Special Thanks to
Kim Curry Evans, Scottsdale Public Art
Jennifer Gill, Scottsdale Public Art
Kayla Newnam, Scottsdale Public Art
John Shimkus, Scottsdale Public Art
Matthew Hannon, Hannon Rigging
Dominic Russo, Hannon Rigging
Photo Credit: Scottsdale Public Arts and Choi+Shine
ARIZONA! is designed to interact with natural light during the day and glow when illuminated at night.
During the day, the crocheted surface of ARIZONA! reflects, absorb and retransmit sunlight. In the morning or late afternoon sun, the ribbons appear as glowing, translucent objects. During the full day sun, the lightweight and yet huge lace ribbons cast intricate, patterned shadows, creating both a pleasant visual experience and a second reading from the overlapping lace patterns.
The mysteriously glowing large lace ribbons create a sense of magic with their dynamic movements frozen, emphasizing the stillness of the sculpture with an ethereal and quieting nature. The mirrored reflections on the canal complete and enclose the form of the entwined ribbons, a mirage that further defies the notion of time and gravity.
Photo Credit: © 2018 Choi+Shine Architects
Photo Credit: © 2018 Choi+Shine Architects
Photo Credit: © 2018 Choi+Shine Architects
The swirls of ARIZONA! creates walls and canopies of laces bending and overlapping to engage spaces within that can be occupied. Some of these spaces are narrow passages that are compressed in increasing anticipation of the release, which leads to an enclosure that affords a view through the other layered spaces and their veiled occupants.
This arrangement creates interesting theatrical relationships between the seeing and the seen. Visitors inside the meandering folds of ribbons are staged as part of the artwork while viewers outside will become spectators of the artwork’s occupants. This relationship is reversed when the occupants see the city and the people outside the sculpture framed as artwork, captured in each openings of the lace.
Seeing these out of scale, unexpected lace ribbons intertwined with the canal and the bridge causes the viewer to stop and gaze. This momentary pause of our routine provides an opportunity to find the poetry around us, in Arizona.
Photo Credit: © 2018 Choi+Shine Architects
Photo Credit: © 2018 Choi+Shine Architects
Photo Credit: Matthew Hannon
Photo Credit: © 2018 Choi+Shine Architects
Photo Credit: © 2018 Choi+Shine Architects
Photo Credit: © 2018 Choi+Shine Architects
Photo Credit: © 2018 Choi+Shine Architects
If you would like to participate
in our future crochet projects,
please send us an email to:
skim [at] choishine.com
The images and design copyright 2016 - 2024 Choi+Shine Architects, LLC. All rights reserved.
The designs, artworks and images on this page are subject to copyright, patent and/or trademark protection.
Contact: Choi+Shine Architects for written permission for image use.