Now that Ben (aka photographer extraordinaire) has recovered from the Educare installation, he's pulled together more pictures from the weekend. Enjoy!
Staging
Hyper-organized
Matt on a lift
Shapes
More shapes
Shadows
Above view
Now that Ben (aka photographer extraordinaire) has recovered from the Educare installation, he's pulled together more pictures from the weekend. Enjoy!
Staging
Hyper-organized
Matt on a lift
Shapes
More shapes
Shadows
Above view
Matt and Ben just returned from Tulsa, where they installed a series of mobiles in a brand-new Educare facility. The design included 91 individual mobiles hung together to span the school's 60-foot long hallway.
Since the school year had already begun, Matt and Ben installed over the weekend to avoid disrupting all the educaring that occurs during the school week. They dove in Friday at 6:37 p.m. and finished Monday at 8:16 a.m.—61 hours and 39 minutes later, with about four hours of power naps (and who knows how much Dr. Pepper) to sustain them.
It could be the sleep deprivation talking, but they were deliriously happy with the end results.
We've shipped off the materials for this mobile, which we're planning to install this weekend. Meanwhile, we're diving into our next project, and 18-foot-wide suspended sculpture for a municipal building in Cincinnati.
Alas, there were a few parts for this mobile that were too big to fit into Matt's stove, so we had to buy a heat lamp to finish the project. On the bright side, we should get plenty of use out of the heat lamp, thanks to its wide range of applications—from curing paint to grilling hot dogs.
In this picture, Ben is grilling the best-ever footlong frankfurters from nearby Olympic Provisions.
And no, the irony is not lost on us: these guys are using the kitchen for work and the workspace for cooking.
Here's Matt on a balmy August evening, spending quality time with a 245-degree oven to form these shapes for this mobile.
Stay tuned!
Materials! For this project!
It's always exciting when materials arrive, because it means a project is really coming together. But this time we're extra giddy, because for this suspended sculpture, we'll be using 3form, an ingenious resin-based plastic made of 40 percent recycled content. (Yes, we're geeks like that.)
Included here are the 350 3form shapes that Matt will individually had form using a sophisticated thermal forming process that may or may not involve his kitchen oven and an Ove Glove.
A mobile maker's work is never done. (But that's a good thing.) Here's a sketch of the next project in our queue:
It's a suspended sculpture that will span the 55-foot-long hallway of an early childhood learning center in Tulsa. The top image is the side view, and the bottom image is the underneath view—the view the kiddos will enjoy.
Now pardon us while we get to work on it!
A few fun facts about the recent installation in Arkansas:
The massive atrium, begging to be filled.
The crate of goods.
Matt, diving in.
White, er, blue-glove treatment.
Hi Ben!
Pride. Relief. Exhaustion.
We've spent the past few weeks prepping to install this mobile (our tallest yet!). It will require a lot of on-site assembly, so the prep work hasn't been terribly glamorous or photo-worthy. But this moment always feels worth documenting:
All the mobile components are all crated up for a cross-country trip, and the freight company should arrive any minutes. Safe travels, mobile! We'll see you in Arkansas!