Duncan Rawlinson

  • Galleries
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • About
  • Contact
  • Blog
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x
search results
Image 77 of 88
Prev Next
Less

Duncan-Rawlinson-Photo-105950-Burning-Man-2014-Black-Rock-City-Nevada-USA-20140825-IMG_1733.jpg

Add to Cart Add to Lightbox Download
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Parasolvent by: Dan Benedict from: Anaheim, CA year: 2014

Parasolvent is a mechanical expression of loss, release, healing and decay. Participants turn a crank to rotate a 20’ tall ring of red parasols. The collapsed parasols rise up through the chest cavity of a human figure and gradually open as they climb upwards, reaching full extension at the apex, and slowly closing as they descend.
This piece is a meditation on the idea that engineering and architecture can create a space or object that acts a vessel for spiritual healing; imagining something we have held inside of us, be it sickness or pain, leaving us, rising, blossoming and decaying.

Contact: [email protected]

Copyright
Duncan Rawlinson
Image Size
3827x3827 / 10.1MB
http://Duncan.co
Keywords
1PMtATQbGW8nHk7NE5C6gzfvWizhKohvDi, 2014, 5D MK III, 5DMKIII, Black Rock City, Burning Man, Burning Man 2014, Burning Man 2014 Black Rock City Nevada USA, Burning-Man-2014-Black-Rock-City-Nevada-USA, Canon, Canon EOS 5D Mark 3, Canon EOS 5D Mark III, Duncan Rawlinson Photography, Duncan.co, Duncan.co/Burning-Man-2014, Nevada USA, Photo by Duncan Rawlinson, Taken with Canon EOS 5D Mark III, https://Duncan.co, https://Duncan.co/Burning-Man-2014
Contained in galleries
Burning Man 2020, Burning Man All
Parasolvent by: Dan Benedict from: Anaheim, CA year: 2014<br />
<br />
Parasolvent is a mechanical expression of loss, release, healing and decay. Participants turn a crank to rotate a 20’ tall ring of red parasols. The collapsed parasols rise up through the chest cavity of a human figure and gradually open as they climb upwards, reaching full extension at the apex, and slowly closing as they descend.<br />
This piece is a meditation on the idea that engineering and architecture can create a space or object that acts a vessel for spiritual healing; imagining something we have held inside of us, be it sickness or pain, leaving us, rising, blossoming and decaying.<br />
<br />
Contact: dan@benedictaugust.com