As the New Year approaches, captivating light art festivals are taking place around the world, adding a vibrant display of light and shadow to the winter season's end. Below, we have selected works from the Lyon Festival of Lights in France, Durham Lumiere Festival in the UK, and Toranomon Light Art Festival in Japan, allowing you to "visit" all three festivals at once!
Durham Lumiere Festival
Embracing the principles of sustainability and artistic freedom, Lumiere Festival, held biennially since 2009, has attracted over a million visitors and showcased more than 360 exhibits created by over 12,000 artists.
During the exhibition, exceptional light artists from around the world use their extraordinary imagination and creativity to construct luminous and colorful imaginative spaces in familiar corners of Durham.
This magnificent and extraordinary piece was first created in 2018 and will be exhibited in the UK for the first time. Inspired by Marcel Duchamp's "Bottle Rack," the artwork uses a large, inverted bottle rack as its chandelier branches.
This piece is an animated projection resembling textile patterns and draws inspiration from string theory, illustrating the interwoven nature of space and time.
Worth mentioning is that this artwork was created using astronomical data obtained by a project team led by Professor Carlos Frenk from Durham University's Physics Department.
Toranomon Light Art Festival in Tokyo
The Toranomon Light Art Festival is an immersive light art festival closely integrated with the city blocks. It is a new winter touring event where people can stroll through the city and enjoy the art of light and shadow.
Around Toranomon, Minato Ward, Tokyo, seven creative light art installations from global artists have been carefully selected. Visitors can experience a diverse and integrated artistic experience as they stroll through the city during the Christmas and New Year season.
Industrial designer Wouter Widershofen and artist Castres Bourg use tiny LED light devices housed in transparent capsules to create hundreds of light points. By connecting them with metal wires and miniature motors, the unpredictable lights move naturally within the surrounding environment.
Following the principles of exoskeletons, the structure is inverted from the inside out. The artists were inspired by these trends, offering us the opportunity to view architecture with an open mind. For us humans, it may be beneficial to reconsider whether we only need to construct permanent structures.