View allAll Photos Tagged Infinity.

Infinity symbol in the tree

An interesting project, a different take on the infinity mirror

Infinity SC U15 Boys

You can see how the pool and ocean look as one.

To see a world in a grain of sand

And a heaven in a wild flower,

Hold infinity in the palm of your hand

And eternity in an hour.

William Blake

Looking towards Tees Barrage and the Infinity Bridge at Stockton from the top of one of the hills in Maze Park nature reserve

Proud to have this photo featured on North East Tonight Weather show... www.jamesdonn.co.uk/?p=262

Infinity Mirrored Room - Filled with the Brilliance of Life, 2011/2017

 

Entering this installation, you move along a reflective walkway over a shallow pool. Around you, tiny dots of light are repeated endlessly in the mirrors and water. The lights pulse, like a heartbeat or a ticking clock. Even while we experience infinite space, we are made aware of time passing.

The effects Kusama creates relate to her own visual hallucinations. Kusama has experienced these from early in her life. In them she becomes ‘obliterated’ by repeated dots. Here she invites us to share this ‘self-obliteration’. The dots surround and engulf you, making it hard to tell where you end and where the rest of the room begins. Usually, when we experience art, there’s a clear distinction between us and the artwork. But Kusama confuses this on purpose. To experience her mirror rooms, she asks us to become part of them.

[Tate Modern]

 

Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirror Rooms

(May 2021 – June 2023)

 

Tate presents a rare chance to experience two of Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Mirror Rooms. These immersive installations will transport you into Kusama’s unique vision of endless reflections.

Infinity Mirrored Room – Filled with the Brilliance of Life is one of Kusama’s largest installations to date and was made for her 2012 retrospective at Tate Modern. It is shown alongside Chandelier of Grief, a room which creates the illusion of a boundless universe of rotating crystal chandeliers.

A small presentation of photographs and moving image – some on display for the first time – provides historical context for the global phenomenon that Kusama’s mirrored rooms have become today.

[Tate Modern]

  

Taken in Tate Modern

Infinity Mirrored Room - Filled with the Brilliance of Life, 2011/2017

 

Entering this installation, you move along a reflective walkway over a shallow pool. Around you, tiny dots of light are repeated endlessly in the mirrors and water. The lights pulse, like a heartbeat or a ticking clock. Even while we experience infinite space, we are made aware of time passing.

The effects Kusama creates relate to her own visual hallucinations. Kusama has experienced these from early in her life. In them she becomes ‘obliterated’ by repeated dots. Here she invites us to share this ‘self-obliteration’. The dots surround and engulf you, making it hard to tell where you end and where the rest of the room begins. Usually, when we experience art, there’s a clear distinction between us and the artwork. But Kusama confuses this on purpose. To experience her mirror rooms, she asks us to become part of them.

[Tate Modern]

 

Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirror Rooms

(May 2021 – June 2023)

 

Tate presents a rare chance to experience two of Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Mirror Rooms. These immersive installations will transport you into Kusama’s unique vision of endless reflections.

Infinity Mirrored Room – Filled with the Brilliance of Life is one of Kusama’s largest installations to date and was made for her 2012 retrospective at Tate Modern. It is shown alongside Chandelier of Grief, a room which creates the illusion of a boundless universe of rotating crystal chandeliers.

A small presentation of photographs and moving image – some on display for the first time – provides historical context for the global phenomenon that Kusama’s mirrored rooms have become today.

[Tate Modern]

  

Taken in Tate Modern

Puntarenas, Costa Rica

Puntarenas, Costa Rica

Taken From the "Infinity Pool" of the Marina Bay Sands Hotel

The Jungle Bar of the hillside Resort located in the hills of the little village of Pili in Siquijor Island.

 

Yayoi Kusama Infinity Mirror room, Tate Modern London

Visiting the Infinity Pool at the Marina Bay Sands to swim around and get a great view of Singapore.

Infinity SC U15 Boys Spring

Infinity pool near sunset.

Pimolai Resort

Koh Lanta, Thailand

Name: Infinity

Length: 117m

World's largest yacht number: 40

Shipyard: Oceanco

Estimated Price: 335 000 000€

Infinity and Ezekiel in 2003

Infinity - Atelier Alain Ellouz

The Infinity Room juts out 218 feet from the House on the Rock, without supports underneath. The room has over 3,000 windows

   

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_on_the_Rock

Yayoi Kusama Infinity Mirror room, Tate Modern London

Minolta X-700 || Vivitar 28-70 f/3.5-4.8 || Ilford HP5 Plus ISO 400

Infinity SC U15 Boys

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