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What Inspires Lightscape Artists?

Chicago artists have been busy in their studios creating installations with uplifting messages to welcome visitors to the 91短视频鈥檚 Lightscape.

Matthew Hoffman鈥檚 12-foot-tall sculpture celebrates the word JOY: 鈥渢he expression of love, comfort, and happiness when we're with the ones we love.鈥

Tanner Woodford鈥檚 Pride & Promise鈥2020 Heritage Christmas Tree boasts hundreds of six-point stars, like those on the Chicago flag, that 鈥渞epresent the pride and promise we feel in our community and home.鈥

And Michael Young鈥檚 Night Birds, with their neon-lit feathers and abstract style, 鈥渁ims for a sense of emotional connection鈥攈armony, growth, energy鈥攁nd simultaneously promotes unity while remaining personally meaningful to each viewer.鈥

How they found their inspiration is as varied as the artists.

Michael Young's Night Birds

Matthew Hoffman鈥檚 Joy sculpture

Tanner Woodford's Pride & Promise initial design concepts

 

鈥淗ope and joy are my favorite holiday words,鈥 said Hoffman, an artist-designer and custodian of the You Are Beautiful project. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about spending time together, looking at all the ways we have to celebrate, and creating a piece into a scale where it would have that moment of awe.鈥

His challenge? Choosing joy over hope. 鈥淚 love both words. But hope only has one 鈥減鈥 stem and joy is really nice because it had two big feet at the ends of it and joy won out.鈥

Based on Hoffman鈥檚 cursive handwriting, the installation of aluminum and outdoor plywood will have a running LED light on the outside edges. While it looks like a single strip, it鈥檚 made of 6,250 LED modules within the strips. 鈥淲e try to make things look really simple and elegant even though they鈥檙e pretty complex.鈥

Envisioning a 35-foot tree with hundreds of stars prompted Woodford to study buildings outside his apartment and to cut out paper stars of various sizes to determine the project鈥檚 scale. 鈥淚t felt whimsical in the moment,鈥 said the Design Museum of Chicago鈥檚 founder and executive director. 鈥淚t felt like the best place to start.鈥

Pride & Promise tree design 

Tree topper design

The tree, topped with a 5-foot-tall Chicago star, is made of stacked rows of mirrored and matte-finished stars. Each row is affixed to a circle of varying diameters to create a cone, with stars loosely attached so they move with the wind. 鈥淢irrored stars will reflect everything surrounding the tree, including the people you came with...I love that you鈥檒l be able to see yourself in it.鈥

Woodford, known for murals and exhibitions, said the Pride & Promise tree is a first and 鈥渇ull of hope for the future that we really need right now. It鈥檚 also something that鈥檚 for Chicago. What鈥檚 more Chicago than the star?鈥 Young hoped to catch the spirit of flying and flight when he created glowing birds with metal wings that could swoop down from the sky, rustling tree leaves.

鈥淓ach piece takes about a month to make. I go through positioning each feather and repositioning until I feel it鈥檚 right,鈥 said the artist, who works in aluminum, bronze, stainless steel, and light. 鈥淚 make the neon that lights the birds鈥 feathers as well. I have a neon shop in my studio,鈥 he added. 鈥淭o my knowledge, there are no forms of lighting I haven鈥檛 used.鈥

Young, who specializes in public sculpture and light-based works that can be found in the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum and at major corporations, said his challenge involved 鈥渃reating a stand for each wing that enabled the piece to float. I鈥檓 really happy with the way they worked out.鈥

Don鈥檛 miss these and other inspiring installations at Lightscape. Get your tickets today. chicagobotanic.org/lightscape