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Above below beneath above, 2015
Part of Toyo Ito building, Singapore

Above below beneath above refers to aerating roots, the part of certain plants that grows above ground as an extension of the subterranean system of roots. Sixty root-like steel columns – conceived as a as a spatial introduction to CapitaGreen, a new building by Toyo Ito by Toyo Ito in Singapore – rise from the ground, reaching up to a canopy created by an overhang of the building’s façade. Since they are situated on a slope, the roots differ in height from 15 m to 15.6 m. There are seven different types of roots with varying elliptical cross-sections from approximately 0.25 m to 0.75 m. Their amplitude shifts between -1 m and +1 m. In between the columns, twenty polyhedral structures are suspended. Constructed from stainless-steel frames and coloured glass tiles, these are lit from within to create different light conditions. The work creates a skin that negotiates between inside and outside; a soft border between the building, the city, and nature.

Image used on Blog post '478' (from S3)
Image used on Blog post '478' (from S3)
Image used on Blog post '478' (from S3)
Image used on Blog post '478' (from S3)
Image used on Blog post '478' (from S3)
Above below beneath above, 2014 - CapitaGreen, Singapore, 2015 - Photo: Juliane Eirich
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[Blog post '474'] @studioolafureliasson Instagram video

Ventilator studio test for Moderna Museet, Stockholm
Virklighetsmaskiner opens 3 October

Your space embracer, 2005, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, Unlimited Art Basel, 2015

How long does it take (an astronaut) to get out of a black hole, 2010 - Photo: Studio Olafur Eliasson, 2010

How long does it take (an astronaut) to get out of a black hole, 2010

Image used on Blog post '470' (from S3)
Image used on Blog post '475' (from S3)

Circular waterfall model.

The New York City Waterfalls, 2008

The New York City Waterfalls, 2008

Waterfall, 2004 - Hall Art Foundation, Reading, Vermont, 2013 – 2004 - Photo: Jeff Nintzel

Feature: Making time and space explicit by way of falling water

Waterfall, 1998 - Neue Galerie am Landesmuseum Joanneum, Graz, 2000 – 1998 - Photo: Koinegg
Der reflektierende Korridor, Entwurf zum Stoppen des freien Falls, 2002 - Zentrum für Internationale Lichtkunst, Unna, Germany, 2002 - Photo: Werner J. Hannappel
Reversed waterfall, 1998 - neugerriemschneider, Berlin, 1998 - Photo: Jeppe Hein
Reversed waterfall, 1998 - Stiftelsen Wanås Utställningar, Knislinge, Sweden, 2000 – 1998 - Photo: Anders Norrsel
Waterfall, 2004 - ARoS Aarhus Kunstmuseum, Denmark, 2004 - Photo: Poul Pedersen
Waterfall, 1998 - SESC Pompeia, São Paulo, 2011 - Photo: Olafur Eliasson
Waterfall, 1998 - SESC Pompeia, São Paulo, 2011 - Photo: Olafur Eliasson
Sketch for The New York City Waterfalls, 2008
The body as brain: Projekt Sammlung (3), 2005 - Kunsthaus Zug, 2005 - Photo: Felix Hallwachs / Studio Olafur Eliasson
The body as brain: Projekt Sammlung (3), 2005 - Kunsthaus Zug, 2005 - Photo: Felix Hallwachs / Studio Olafur Eliasson
Sketch for the exhibition The Body as Brain. Projekt Sammlung (3)
The body as brain: Projekt Sammlung (3), 2005 - Kunsthaus Zug, 2005 - Photo: Felix Hallwachs / Studio Olafur Eliasson
Contact is content at Seljalandsfoss, 2014
Image used on Blog post '465' (from S3)
[Blog post '462'] @studioolafureliasson Instagram video
A view becomes a window, 2013

Feature: A view becomes a window, 2013

Window projection, 1990 - Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, Copenhagen, 1990 - Photo: Olafur Eliasson

Feature: A view of one's own - framing reality

Mercury window, 2010 - Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin, Germany, 2010 - Photo: Maria del Pilar Garcia Ayensa / Studio Olafur Eliasson
Red window semicircle, 2008 - Studio Olafur Eliasson, Berlin, 2008 - Photo: Jens Ziehe
The blue window that never thinks, 2000 - neugerriemschneider, Berlin, 2000 - Photo: Jens Ziehe
Sun window, 1997 - Kunsthalle Wien, 1997
Twilight window, 2015 - Mirrored Gardens, Hualong Agriculture Grand View Garden, Panyu, Guangzhou, China, 2015 - Photo: Luo Xianglin, Chen Shengming
Your repetitive view, 2000 - Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie Karlsruhe, Germany, 2001 – 2000 - Photo: Franz Wamhof
Your repetitive view, 2000 - Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie Karlsruhe, Germany, 2001 – 2000 - Photo: Franz Wamhof
Installation view of Olafur Eliasson: Your sun machine, 1997 - Marc Foxx Gallery, Los Angeles, 1997 - Photo: Olafur Eliasson
The curious garden, 1997 - Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, 2000
The curious museum, 2010 - Studio Olafur Eliasson, 2012 - Photo: Thilo Frank / Studio Olafur Eliasson
The curious museum, 2010 - Studio Olafur Eliasson, 2012 - Photo: Thilo Frank / Studio Olafur Eliasson
Your circumspection disclosed, 1999 - Castello di Rivoli, Turin, Italy, 1999 - Photo: Paolo Pellion
Sketch for Eisfenster, 1998
Eisfenster, 1998 - Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Zurich, 1998 - Photo: Hans-Christian Schink
Your circular now, 2015 - Mirrored Gardens, Hualong Agriculture Grand View Garden, Panyu, Guangzhou, China, 2015 - Photo: Luo Xianglin, Chen Shengming
Your circular now, 2015 - Mirrored Gardens, Hualong Agriculture Grand View Garden, Panyu, Guangzhou, China, 2015 - Photo: Luo Xianglin, Chen Shengming
Seeing yourself seeing, 2001 - Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie Karlsruhe, Germany, 2001 - Photo: Franz Wamhof
Double double hung window, 1999 - Marc Foxx Gallery, Los Angeles, 1999 - Photo: Unknown photographer
Your uncertain archive, 2014
Yellow double hung windows, 1999 - Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York, 2004 – 1999 - Photo: Oren Slor
Regenfenster, 1999 - Frankfurter Kunstverein, Germany, 1999 - Photo: Olafur Eliasson
Regenfenster, 1999 - Frankfurter Kunstverein, Germany, 1999 - Photo: Katrin Schilling
Image used on Blog post '460' (from S3)
Merce Cunningham Dance Company – Dancing in ‘The weather project’, 2003

Merce Cunningham Dance Company performs within The weather project at Tate Modern, 2003

[Blog post '452'] @studioolafureliasson Instagram video

Tree of Codes premieres tonight at Manchester International Festival

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Tree of Codes rehearsals with Paris Opera Ballet and Company Wayne McGregor, June 2015. Manchester International Festival.

Tree of Codes rehearsals and interview with Wayne McGregor

Image used on Blog post '453' (from S3)

Jonathan Safran Foer - Tree of Codes, 2010

[Blog post '451'] @studioolafureliasson Instagram video
Image used on Blog post '457' (from S3)
[Blog post '444'] @studioolafureliasson Instagram video

Tree of Codes, Manchester International Festival, premieres Friday, 2 July

Connecting cross country with a line – A film for ‘Station to Station’

This weekend: Connecting cross country with a line, 2013
Part of Doug Aitken's Station to Station at The Barbican, London

Image used on Blog post '447' (from S3)

Cirkelbroen in Copenhagen opens 22 August

Contact – A film by Claire Denis

Contact - a film by Claire Denis

Image used on Blog post '438' (from S3)

Double exposure - with Doug Aitken in Iceland, 2003

Image used on Blog post '438' (from S3)
Image used on Blog post '438' (from S3)
Image used on Blog post '438' (from S3)
Image used on Blog post '438' (from S3)
Image used on Blog post '438' (from S3)
Image used on Blog post '438' (from S3)
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