highlike

Nils Volker

Nils Volker  Seventeen

source: highlike

Work: SEVENTEEN A site specific installation commissioned by the Kunstmuseum Celle (Germany) for the exhibition “Scheinwerfer” 2013/2014. Tyvek, cooling fans, led, custom made electronics size variable.
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source: core77

Just when you thought artist Nils Völker couldn’t expand on his expansive respiratory installations, we’re bringing you a new title to the bunch. Like with his last breathing light installation, “Thirty Six,” his newest addition “Seventeen” adds just enough new appeal to catch our attention.

This one features the somewhat creepy breathing motion that the artist is known for along with some smart light play. More understated and zen-like than the others, “Seventeen” culminates in an undulating hanging light system made of Tyvek. The lights are brought to life with cooling fans, LED lights and custom-made electronics. Check out the video below to get the full scope of the installment. Make sure to full-screen this one—it’s the only way to watch Völker’s work in action.
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source: nilsvoelker

Nils Völker is a media artist living and working in Berlin.

In 2004 he received a diploma from the Bauhaus University in Weimar. Afterwards he moved to Berlin where he started working self employed as communication designer. Since 2010 Nils Völker creates artworks with the means of physical computing somewhere at the intersection of technology and art. During the past years he realized mostly large scale installations which have been exhibited in museums and art spaces all over the world.

In 2010 he realized an installation made from ordinary garbage bags, inflated and deflated in controlled rhythms. This work, called “One Hundred and Eight”, has been exhibited several times and has been widely published online, in books and magazines.

It was the starting point for a whole series of installations based on inflating/deflating cushions made from different materials. The largest one was made from 252 large silver cushions for the exhibition “Captured – a Homage to Light and Air” followed by further site specific commissions like “Thirty Six” for Art Lab Gnesta, “Forty Eight” for the Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery, “Seventy Five” for Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts in Taipei and “Eighty Eight” commissioned by the Gewerbemuseum Winterthur, Switzerland. This installation has been adapted in 2013 as “Eighty Eight #2″ for an exhibition at the Musée de Design et d’Arts Appliqués Contemporains in Lausanne.

Besides from working on further variations of this series Nils Völker lately realized “64 CCFL”, a light installation that is mainly made from so called cold cathode fluorescent lights and “Fountains” his first public artwork that is now in permanent collection in Xixi Wetland Park in Hangzhou, China.