Previously I've posted about Big Bambú, the Doug + Mike Starn installation inhabiting a portion of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's roof. It is "a growing and changing sculpture―a vast network of 5,000 interlocking 30- and 40-foot-long fresh-cut bamboo poles, lashed together with 50 miles of nylon rope." Visitors can traverse the installation via walkways integrated into the construction. To date I haven't been able to do so; the above photo, taken from a walkway just west of the museum, is as close as I've gotten to Big Bambú. Yet this image illustrates an extra part of the piece's obvious appeal: it grows to take on a presence beyond its rooftop footprint. As much as I'd love to see it extend all the way down to the ground, providing a link from Central Park to the roof, the nest-like appearance above the glass skylights is just alien enough to strike my fancy.
Previously:
#1 - Phyto Universe
#2 - One Bryant Park
#3 - Pier 62 Carousel
#4 - Bronx River Art Center
#5 - The Pencil Factory
#6 - Westbeth Artists' Housing
#7 - 23 Beekman Place
#8 - Metal Shutter Houses
#9 - Bronx Box
#10 - American Academy of Arts and Letters
#11 - FDR Four Freedoms Park
#12 - One Madison Park
#13 - Pio Pio Restaurant
#14 - Queens West (Stage II)
#15 - 785 Eighth Avenue
No comments:
Post a Comment