To date, the Earthtime 1.26 sculpture has been installed in 15 cities on 4 continents: Denver, Colorado (2010), Sydney, Australia (2011), Amsterdam, Netherlands (2013), Singapore (2014), Montreal, Canada (2015, 2016, 2017), Prague, Czech Republic (2015), Durham, UK (2015), Santiago, Chile (2016), Shanghai, China (2017), Chiayi, Taiwan (2018), Hong Kong, China (2018), Geneva, Switzerland (2020), Munich, Germany (2021), Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (2021), and Milan, Italy (2022).ģ,395 sf area of net in plan MATERIALS AND SIZEįiber, Buildings and Sky combined with Colored Lighting. The number in the title refers to a measurement of time, as the earth’s day was shortened by 1.26 microseconds. Inside Echelman’s studio, the physical form of Earthtime 1.26 was digitally modeled with inspiration from a scientific data set describing a single geological occurrence in one part of the world (a 2010 earthquake in Chile) that caused ripple effects around the globe, which sped up the earth's daily rotation. These include architects, designers, and model-makers in the studio, as well as an external team of aeronautical and structural engineers, computer scientists, lighting designers, landscape architects, and a fabrication team. To create the sculptural form, Echelman works with teams both inside and outside her studio. Each time a single knot moves in the wind, the location of every other knot in the sculpture’s surface is changed in an ever unfolding dance of human-made creation with the forces of nature beyond our control. Many options allow flexible customization. Alarms can be set on the local time of any city in the world. It has a built-in database of more than 140.000 cities worldwide but users can add any number of custom locations. These sculptures serve as symbols of interconnectedness - composed of countless intertwined fibers. EarthTime displays the local time and date of any place in the world. The Earthtime sculpture series seeks to heighten our awareness about the way we are all interconnected with one another and our planet. I invite viewers to pause beneath my sculpture for a moment to contemplate our interconnectedness with each other and our planet, and to become aware of our own sensory experience." - Janet Echelman Descriptionīetween August 11th and October 3rd, 2021, Janet Echeman’s Earthtime 1.26 sculpture was exhibited at Munich’s Odeonsplatz, presented by Mercedes-Benz. My artwork reflects an interconnectedness of opposites - flexibility with strength, earth with sky, things we can control with the forces beyond us. Playing almost exclusively at planetariums, Spacecraft uses. " I'm excited to install Earthtime 1.26 Munich in the historic Odeonsplatz, where past and present intertwine to create a dynamic urban now. Artist: Spacecraft Album: Earthtime Tapestry.
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