UNTITLED
2003
Kaija Kiuru & Anders Wilhelmson
Kaija Kiuru:
The lace-like frailty and beauty of thin ice, the power of flowing water packed into a dense mass, the silent yet ever alive immensity of eternal ice.
Ice in its wealth of form and meaning; combining images of the material’s inherent sensitivity with images of its power provides a fascinating basis for designing the work.
Anders Wilhelmson:
Process:
Compressed snow (8 x 8 x 8 meters) with spherical cavities intersecting each other and the sides of the cube forming into a room with views to the sky.
Bringing life into the “heart of ice”
UNTITLED
2003
Kaija Kiuru & Anders Wilhelmson
Kaija Kiuru:
The lace-like frailty and beauty of thin ice, the power of flowing water packed into a dense mass, the silent yet ever alive immensity of eternal ice.
Ice in its wealth of form and meaning; combining images of the material’s inherent sensitivity with images of its power provides a fascinating basis for designing the work.
Anders Wilhelmson:
Process:
Compressed snow (8 x 8 x 8 meters) with spherical cavities intersecting each other and the sides of the cube forming into a room with views to the sky.
Bringing life into the “heart of ice”
UNTITLED
2003
Kaija Kiuru & Anders Wilhelmson
Kaija Kiuru:
The lace-like frailty and beauty of thin ice, the power of flowing water packed into a dense mass, the silent yet ever alive immensity of eternal ice.
Ice in its wealth of form and meaning; combining images of the material’s inherent sensitivity with images of its power provides a fascinating basis for designing the work.
Anders Wilhelmson:
Process:
Compressed snow (8 x 8 x 8 meters) with spherical cavities intersecting each other and the sides of the cube forming into a room with views to the sky.
Bringing life into the “heart of ice”
UNTITLED
2003
Kaija Kiuru & Anders Wilhelmson
Kaija Kiuru:
The lace-like frailty and beauty of thin ice, the power of flowing water packed into a dense mass, the silent yet ever alive immensity of eternal ice.
Ice in its wealth of form and meaning; combining images of the material’s inherent sensitivity with images of its power provides a fascinating basis for designing the work.
Anders Wilhelmson:
Process:
Compressed snow (8 x 8 x 8 meters) with spherical cavities intersecting each other and the sides of the cube forming into a room with views to the sky.
Bringing life into the “heart of ice”
ARTWORK
ARTWORK
ARTWORK



