View allAll Photos Tagged PaeWhite

'Wind Thing' by Pae White.

 

lendrumfineart.com/html/por/por_med100.asp

 

Flickr friends, I'm sorry for being so behind in commenting. I'm having the hardest time with Flickr, it is impossibly slow. Mostly I can only see a bunch of white spaces when I go to your streams. Eventually, after several refreshes, sometimes I can see your pictures. Sometimes not. I hope they fix it!

 

Aboutme

...taken at Istanbul Modern... artwork called "Northern Smoke" by Pae White...

  

Istanbul, Turkey...

Best viewed LARGE on Black: bighugelabs.com/onblack.php?id=5966719140&size=large&...

 

After reading about this for several years, I was looking forward to seeing it in person and, even though we were in Chicago in the middle of a record heat wave, the prairie planting was thriving and was even more impressive than I expected. What added immeasurably to the overall effect was the colorful temporary art installation on the roof of a portion of the Art Institute of Chicago in the background. It is called "Restless Rainbow" and is by the 48 year old California artist Pae White.

 

This exhibit is “a commissioned, site-specific work for the Art Institute of Chicago’s Bluhm Family Terrace, uses this dramatic space not as a platform for objects but as the work itself. In this piece, White drew on her interest in and knowledge of graphic design, textiles, and animation to wrap the terrace in a vibrantly colored, energetic abstracted rainbow” according to the Art Institute’s website. The exhibit runs through September.

 

www.artic.edu/aic/exhibitions/exhibition/paewhite

 

Designed to pay homage to the city's motto "Urbs in Horto" (City in a Garden), the Lurie Garden with its graceful wooden footbridge and groves of trees, was the result of an international design competition, and has become a popular resting and meeting place.

 

"Lurie Garden is a 2.5-acre (10,000 m2) garden located at the southern end of Millennium Park in the Loop area of Chicago in Cook County, Illinois, United States. Designed by Kathryn Gustafson, Piet Oudolf, and Robert Israel, it opened on July 16, 2004. The garden is a combination of perennials, bulbs, grasses, shrubs and trees. It is the featured nature component of the world's largest green roof. The garden cost $13.2 million and has a $10 million endowment for maintenance and upkeep. It was named after Ann Lurie, who donated the $10 million endowment. For visitors, the garden features guided walks, lectures, interactive demonstrations, family festivals and picnics.

 

The Lurie garden constantly depicts the dynamics of nature, but it is most colorful from June through the autumn. It is not a botanical garden with a scientific purpose and is instead a public garden. Thus, it does not use a plant labeling system. The plant life of the garden consists entirely of perennials. It does not now nor does it intend to incorporate annuals, which rarely survive Chicago winters. Approximately 60% of the plant life in the light and dark plates are plants that are native to Illinois.

 

The "shoulder" hedge, which serves as the northern edge of the garden, also fills the space next to the void of the great lawn of the Jay Pritzker Pavilion. These hedges use a metal armature, to prefigure the mature hedge.[5] The shoulder hedge is an evolving hedge screen of deciduous Fagus (beech) and Carpinus (hornbeam) and evergreen Thuja (arborvitae, also known as redcedars) that will eventually (over the course of approximately ten years) branch horizontally to fill the permanent armature frame and create a solid hedge.[9]

 

The garden was one of the gardens depticted in the 2006 In Search of Paradise: Great Gardens of the World exhibition that was shown from May 12–October 22, 2006 in the Boeing Galleries and that was later shown in the Chicago Botanic Garden. The Chicago Botanic Garden developed the exhibition that included 65 photomurals of gardens from 21 countries using photographs that were less than five years old"

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lurie_Garden

 

..

Suddenly deep opening notes of a Bach organ fugue filled the room causing the light from "Pae White's" light installation to flow upwards and then wrap all around the space. As the music swelled, the lights flowed more strongly and the colors began to intensify around the perimeter of the space, causing my hair to stand on end as the room gradually faded into a bright white fog of glowing light. Sometime later I felt Jim/JP Hansen @ Random…¡ tapping me on my shoulder and saying it's really warm in here, let's go outside for a bit. Make some music of your own Mon-Fri 630AM-10PM, and Sat 8-5 at the OUS/OHSU Collaborative Life Sciences Building, Portland, OR. NB25099v3 - Happy Sliders Sunday!

and cool lighting at the OUS/OHSU Collaborative Life Sciences Building, Portland, OR One of the fun to photograph locals on this coming Friday's PDXNightowls photo walk. NB26352

A recently new art piece by artist Pae White titled "Restless Rainbow" is such a creative installation which uses the Bluhm Family Sculpture Terrace in a very unique way. The viewer immediately becomes immersed in a world of lines, textures and colors

 

Nikon D7000

At the recently opened OUS/OHSU Collaborative Life Sciences Building the interior of the atrium looks like maze of ramps and mezzanines (e.g. see "empty nest" and "first impressions" by Devin Bryant) connecting the two buildings on each side of it together at a number of levels. On the underside of those are these wonderful neon lights designed by Pae White forming patterns of their own and interacting with the lines of the ceiling tiles, and skylights in innumerable ways creating a treasure trove of abstract comps waiting to be explored. Currently, the building is open 630AM to 10PM Mon-Fri, and 8-5 Sat. i4s9602

Pae White at Greengrassi

Old School Cut & Paste (Scissors & Glue) collage created for the weekly themed blog:

The Kollage Kit

www.kollagekit.blogspot.com

 

This week's theme: GEOMETRIC SHAPES

 

Rainbow image courtesy of a portion of artist Pae White's "Restless Rainbow" 2011. The gals are from a high school year book. Of course the title is taken from that rockin' Stones song!

 

I found this instrumental track on YouTube. 1967 studio outtake.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=7X6u1vYwoCc

at the OUS/OHSU Collaborative Life Sciences Building, Portland, OR is currently open Mon-Fri 630AM to 10PM, Sat 8 to 5, and closed Sundays. Capture some personal time there now before collaboration begins in earnest this Fall. NB25099

Just another photo of people interacting with art. This is a piece entitled "Restless Rainbow" by the artist Pae White. It is a site-specific piece commissioned for display on a terrace on the top floor of the Modern Wing of the Art Institute of Chicago. It provides impressive touches of color to the overall grey surroundings.

(detail) Noisy Blushes, 2020; Ink, cable, electroplated and polished stainless steel. San Jose Museum of Art

What happens when you string hundreds of hexagonal pieces of mirrors with vibrant concentric stripes together? A magical 3D kaleidoscope, it seems.

 

This installation titled “Supertaster” by Los Angeles-based artist Pae White is nothing short of being magical. With each step that viewer takes, the sculpture seems to change. And perhaps even more incredible is that its appearance changes depending on where the work was installed, as its myriads of mirrors reflect the sights from its surrounding.

 

In this stunning work, the insignificant becomes extraordinary. Highly recommended.

 

Pae White

Supertaster, 2013

Two-sided mirror, paper and cable

101 x 211 cm

199 strands, height variable

 

# Pae White (b. 1963 Pasadena, California, USA)

Pae White was born in 1963 in Pasadena, California. She lives and works in Los Angeles. She received her M.F.A. from Art Center College of Design in Pasadena and her B.A. from Scripps College in Claremont, California.

 

# neugerriemschneider

Linienstrasse 155

10115 Berlin

Germany

www.neugerriemschneider.com/

 

# SML Data

+ Date: 2013-05-23T16:25:43+0800

+ Dimensions: 5472 x 3648

+ Exposure: 1/30 sec at f/8.0

+ Focal Length: 28mm

+ ISO: 500

+ Camera: Canon EOS 6D

+ Lens: Canon EF 17-40 f/4L USM

+ GPS: 22°16'59" N 114°10'22" E

+ Location: 香港會議展覽中心 Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre (HKCEC)

+ Workflow: Lightroom 4

+ Serial: SML.20130523.6D.13942

+ Series: 新聞攝影 Photojournalism, SML Fine Art, Art Basel Hong Kong 2013

 

# Media Licensing

Creative Commons (CCBY) See-ming Lee 李思明 / SML Photography / SML Universe Limited

 

“Mixed Media Installation by Pae White: Supertaster, 2013

(Two-sided mirror, paper and cable)” / neugerriemschneider / Art Basel Hong Kong 2013 / SML.20130523.6D.13942

/ #Photojournalism #CreativeCommons #CCBY #SMLPhotography #SMLUniverse #SMLFineArt #Crazyisgood #SMLProjects

/ #中國 #中国 #China #香港 #HongKong #攝影 #摄影 #photography #Art #FineArt #ArtBasel #ABHK #PaeWhite #neugerriemschneider #sculpture #installation #mixedmedia #kaleidoscope #mirror

 

www.flickr.com/photos/seeminglee/8885870157/

Best viewed LARGE on Black: bighugelabs.com/onblack.php?id=5962655088&size=large&...

 

After reading about this for several years, I was looking forward to seeing it in person and, even though we were in Chicago in the middle of a record heat wave, the prairie planting was thriving and was even more impressive than I expected. What added immeasurably to the overall effect was the colorful temporary art installation on the roof of a portion of the Art Institute of Chicago in the background. It is called "Restless Rainbow" and is by the 48 year old California artist Pae White.

 

This exhibit is “a commissioned, site-specific work for the Art Institute of Chicago’s Bluhm Family Terrace, uses this dramatic space not as a platform for objects but as the work itself. In this piece, White drew on her interest in and knowledge of graphic design, textiles, and animation to wrap the terrace in a vibrantly colored, energetic abstracted rainbow” according to the Art Institute’s website. The exhibit runs through September.

 

www.artic.edu/aic/exhibitions/exhibition/paewhite

 

Designed to pay homage to the city's motto "Urbs in Horto" (City in a Garden), the Lurie Garden with its graceful wooden footbridge and groves of trees, was the result of an international design competition, and has become a popular resting and meeting place.

 

"Lurie Garden is a 2.5-acre (10,000 m2) garden located at the southern end of Millennium Park in the Loop area of Chicago in Cook County, Illinois, United States. Designed by Kathryn Gustafson, Piet Oudolf, and Robert Israel, it opened on July 16, 2004. The garden is a combination of perennials, bulbs, grasses, shrubs and trees. It is the featured nature component of the world's largest green roof. The garden cost $13.2 million and has a $10 million endowment for maintenance and upkeep. It was named after Ann Lurie, who donated the $10 million endowment. For visitors, the garden features guided walks, lectures, interactive demonstrations, family festivals and picnics.

 

The Lurie garden constantly depicts the dynamics of nature, but it is most colorful from June through the autumn. It is not a botanical garden with a scientific purpose and is instead a public garden. Thus, it does not use a plant labeling system. The plant life of the garden consists entirely of perennials. It does not now nor does it intend to incorporate annuals, which rarely survive Chicago winters. Approximately 60% of the plant life in the light and dark plates are plants that are native to Illinois.

 

The "shoulder" hedge, which serves as the northern edge of the garden, also fills the space next to the void of the great lawn of the Jay Pritzker Pavilion. These hedges use a metal armature, to prefigure the mature hedge.[5] The shoulder hedge is an evolving hedge screen of deciduous Fagus (beech) and Carpinus (hornbeam) and evergreen Thuja (arborvitae, also known as redcedars) that will eventually (over the course of approximately ten years) branch horizontally to fill the permanent armature frame and create a solid hedge.[9]

 

The garden was one of the gardens depticted in the 2006 In Search of Paradise: Great Gardens of the World exhibition that was shown from May 12–October 22, 2006 in the Boeing Galleries and that was later shown in the Chicago Botanic Garden. The Chicago Botanic Garden developed the exhibition that included 65 photomurals of gardens from 21 countries using photographs that were less than five years old"

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lurie_Garden

 

..

After reading about this for several years, I was looking forward to seeing it in person and, even though we were in Chicago in the middle of a record heat wave, the prairie planting was thriving and was even more impressive than I expected. What added immeasurably to the overall effect was the colorful temporary art installation on the roof of a portion of the Art Institute of Chicago in the background. It is called "Restless Rainbow" and is by the 48 year old California artist Pae White.

 

This exhibit is “a commissioned, site-specific work for the Art Institute of Chicago’s Bluhm Family Terrace, uses this dramatic space not as a platform for objects but as the work itself. In this piece, White drew on her interest in and knowledge of graphic design, textiles, and animation to wrap the terrace in a vibrantly colored, energetic abstracted rainbow” according to the Art Institute’s website. The exhibit runs through September.

 

www.artic.edu/aic/exhibitions/exhibition/paewhite

 

Designed to pay homage to the city's motto "Urbs in Horto" (City in a Garden), the Lurie Garden with its graceful wooden footbridge and groves of trees, was the result of an international design competition, and has become a popular resting and meeting place.

 

"Lurie Garden is a 2.5-acre (10,000 m2) garden located at the southern end of Millennium Park in the Loop area of Chicago in Cook County, Illinois, United States. Designed by Kathryn Gustafson, Piet Oudolf, and Robert Israel, it opened on July 16, 2004. The garden is a combination of perennials, bulbs, grasses, shrubs and trees. It is the featured nature component of the world's largest green roof. The garden cost $13.2 million and has a $10 million endowment for maintenance and upkeep. It was named after Ann Lurie, who donated the $10 million endowment. For visitors, the garden features guided walks, lectures, interactive demonstrations, family festivals and picnics.

 

The Lurie garden constantly depicts the dynamics of nature, but it is most colorful from June through the autumn. It is not a botanical garden with a scientific purpose and is instead a public garden. Thus, it does not use a plant labeling system. The plant life of the garden consists entirely of perennials. It does not now nor does it intend to incorporate annuals, which rarely survive Chicago winters. Approximately 60% of the plant life in the light and dark plates are plants that are native to Illinois.

 

The "shoulder" hedge, which serves as the northern edge of the garden, also fills the space next to the void of the great lawn of the Jay Pritzker Pavilion. These hedges use a metal armature, to prefigure the mature hedge.[5] The shoulder hedge is an evolving hedge screen of deciduous Fagus (beech) and Carpinus (hornbeam) and evergreen Thuja (arborvitae, also known as redcedars) that will eventually (over the course of approximately ten years) branch horizontally to fill the permanent armature frame and create a solid hedge.[9]

 

The garden was one of the gardens depticted in the 2006 In Search of Paradise: Great Gardens of the World exhibition that was shown from May 12–October 22, 2006 in the Boeing Galleries and that was later shown in the Chicago Botanic Garden. The Chicago Botanic Garden developed the exhibition that included 65 photomurals of gardens from 21 countries using photographs that were less than five years old"

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lurie_Garden

 

..

 

After reading about this for several years, I was looking forward to seeing it in person and, even though we were in Chicago in the middle of a record heat wave, the prairie planting was thriving and was even more impressive than I expected. What added immeasurably to the overall effect was the colorful temporary art installation on the roof of a portion of the Art Institute of Chicago in the background. It is called "Restless Rainbow" and is by the 48 year old California artist Pae White.

 

This exhibit is “a commissioned, site-specific work for the Art Institute of Chicago’s Bluhm Family Terrace, uses this dramatic space not as a platform for objects but as the work itself. In this piece, White drew on her interest in and knowledge of graphic design, textiles, and animation to wrap the terrace in a vibrantly colored, energetic abstracted rainbow” according to the Art Institute’s website. The exhibit runs through September.

 

www.artic.edu/aic/exhibitions/exhibition/paewhite

 

Designed to pay homage to the city's motto "Urbs in Horto" (City in a Garden), the Lurie Garden with its graceful wooden footbridge and groves of trees, was the result of an international design competition, and has become a popular resting and meeting place.

 

"Lurie Garden is a 2.5-acre (10,000 m2) garden located at the southern end of Millennium Park in the Loop area of Chicago in Cook County, Illinois, United States. Designed by Kathryn Gustafson, Piet Oudolf, and Robert Israel, it opened on July 16, 2004. The garden is a combination of perennials, bulbs, grasses, shrubs and trees. It is the featured nature component of the world's largest green roof. The garden cost $13.2 million and has a $10 million endowment for maintenance and upkeep. It was named after Ann Lurie, who donated the $10 million endowment. For visitors, the garden features guided walks, lectures, interactive demonstrations, family festivals and picnics.

 

The Lurie garden constantly depicts the dynamics of nature, but it is most colorful from June through the autumn. It is not a botanical garden with a scientific purpose and is instead a public garden. Thus, it does not use a plant labeling system. The plant life of the garden consists entirely of perennials. It does not now nor does it intend to incorporate annuals, which rarely survive Chicago winters. Approximately 60% of the plant life in the light and dark plates are plants that are native to Illinois.

 

The "shoulder" hedge, which serves as the northern edge of the garden, also fills the space next to the void of the great lawn of the Jay Pritzker Pavilion. These hedges use a metal armature, to prefigure the mature hedge.[5] The shoulder hedge is an evolving hedge screen of deciduous Fagus (beech) and Carpinus (hornbeam) and evergreen Thuja (arborvitae, also known as redcedars) that will eventually (over the course of approximately ten years) branch horizontally to fill the permanent armature frame and create a solid hedge.[9]

 

The garden was one of the gardens depticted in the 2006 In Search of Paradise: Great Gardens of the World exhibition that was shown from May 12–October 22, 2006 in the Boeing Galleries and that was later shown in the Chicago Botanic Garden. The Chicago Botanic Garden developed the exhibition that included 65 photomurals of gardens from 21 countries using photographs that were less than five years old"

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lurie_Garden

 

..

 

MUNICH/GERMANY - JULY 16: Pae White on the podium during the Digital Life Design (DLD) Conference taking place at the Porzellan Manufaktur Nymphenburg on July 15-16, 2013 in Munich, Germany. DLDwomen is an international conference and culture which connects new media, business and social leaders, opinion formers and investors for crossover conversation and inspiration.

MUNICH/GERMANY - JULY 16: Pae White talking on the podium during the Digital Life Design (DLD) Conference taking place at the Porzellan Manufaktur Nymphenburg on July 15-16, 2013 in Munich, Germany. DLDwomen is an international conference and culture which connects new media, business and social leaders, opinion formers and investors for crossover conversation and inspiration.

MUNICH/GERMANY - JULY 16: Pae White (Artist) talks with Hans Ulrich Obrist on the podium during the Digital Life Design (DLD) Conference taking place at the Porzellan Manufaktur Nymphenburg on July 16, 2013 in Munich, Germany. DLDwomen is an international conference and culture which connects new media, business and social leaders, opinion formers and investors for crossover conversation and inspiration. (Photo: picture alliance / Jan Haas)

MUNICH/GERMANY - JULY 16: Pae White (Artist) speaks on the podium during the Digital Life Design (DLD) Conference taking place at the Porzellan Manufaktur Nymphenburg on July 16, 2013 in Munich, Germany. DLDwomen is an international conference and culture which connects new media, business and social leaders, opinion formers and investors for crossover conversation and inspiration. (Photo: picture alliance / Jan Haas)

Went to the Pae White ehibition at the SLG

"Restless Rainbow" by Pae White is a new exhibit currently on display at the Modern Wing of the Art Institute of Chicago. I shot this from Millennium Park as I made my way back to my car after the Zombie March over the weekend.

 

(From the AIC's website) Restless Rainbow, a commissioned, site-specific work for the Art Institute of Chicago’s Bluhm Family Terrace, uses this dramatic space not as a platform for objects but as the work itself. In this piece, White drew on her interest in and knowledge of graphic design, textiles, and animation to wrap the terrace in a vibrantly colored, energetic abstracted rainbow. While planning for the installation, the artist wondered: What would happen if a rainbow became disorganized—would it fall from the sky? What if a rainbow misbehaved, causing its color spectrum to take on new order? Would it include black, as rainbows in comic books often do?

The Hostess, 2019. Paper clay and ink on panel. San Jose Museum of Art

(detail) The Hostess, 2019. Paper clay and ink on panel. San Jose Museum of Art

The Storyteller, 2019. Paper clay and ink on panel. San Jose Museum of Art

From the Pae White exhibit at the Taubman, before it was installed.

Relatives/Smoke C, 2016. Tapestry, cotton, polyester and Trevira. FOG SF

Frank Gehry's Jay Pritzker Pavilion, Millennium Park, Chicago, seen through the temporary installation of Pae White's "Restless Rainbow," on the Bluhm Family Terrace, on the "terzo piano," of Renzo Piano's Modern Wing, The Art Institute, Chicago, 2011.

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