Obscure cave
The art installation Obskurní jeskyně / obscure cave by the architect Karolína Burešová (PhD student from FA BUT) and the photographer Franziska Nagelová captures the image of nature in a concrete shell. Through the principles of optics and photoreaction, he creates a cave painting of nature.
In the past, turnips were an important part of landscape protection, or their borders. The installation turns landscape protection into the present, and draws attention to its beauty and uniqueness.
A cave painting created by a vivid reflection of reality draws us into a unique light experience with a hint of distant history (cave paintings), the recent past (rosewood - border protection) and the current present (contemporary landscape). Similar to the historical cave paintings that depicted the life of primitive man, we can read the life of the landscape/nature captured in time.
The optical phenomenon of the camera obscura becomes the technique of image rendering. This is created from the very object of the ropík, whose embrasures in this concept serve to transmit the image inwards, as a contrast to the use of the building in the past for shooting outwards.
The results of the experiment will be presented at a planned exhibition early next year, along with workshops. The project was created as part of the Faculty Development Projects program as part of Karolína Burešová's dissertation under the supervision of Michal Palaščak and Markéta Žáčková. The design itself was created as a studio project already in 2016 under the guidance of Barbora Ponešová and Jan Foretník.
Inserted by | Šoborová Adéla |
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