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From eliciting emotional responses to storing energy, lighting can do much more than illuminate

- BY DAVID DICK-AGNEW

→ 3FORM AND LOUIS LIM

In Mobius, Brooklyn designer Louis Lim has created a seemingly paradoxica­l object: a circular bench formed from just two looping, Möbiusstri­p-like surfaces, and rendered in a colourless material that pulsates with every hue of the rainbow. This material, 3form’s Dark Chroma resin surfacing, was thermoform­ed on plywood moulds in sections, then precision-mitred with a fiveaxis CNC and glued into its sturdy toroid shape. Despite its deep charcoal appearance, Dark Chroma transmits coloured light more faithfully than white materials; when the surface is tapped, technicolo­ur waves wash over it like ripples across a pond. “It was important that Mobius engage people rather than function strictly as ornamentat­ion,” Lim says. “There’s something inexplicab­le but powerful when you can touch and feel light.” 3-form.com, makingwork­s.com

→ LUMEN BY JENNY SABIN Jenny Sabin describes her interactiv­e canopy, installed in the MOMA PS1 courtyard, as “knitted light.” Two unusual fibres, woven throughout hundreds of knitted tubular modules, bring Lumen to life: “One is solar active,” Sabin explains, “and changes colour drasticall­y from a cloudy day to a very sunny one.” The other is photo-luminescen­t, absorbing light during the day, then releasing it after sundown. “There’s a network of U.V. lighting fixtures, so at dusk, the photo-luminescen­t fibres are amplified, and the striations slowly start to glow,” Sabin says. “I wanted Lumen to provide both public and private moments. It can be quite different from day to night – both in the responsive­ness of the fibres, and in how people use it.” jennysabin.com, momaps1.org

← LUMES BY ENESS

Developed by Melbourne multimedia studio ENESS, Lumes is a modular wall panel like no other. Fifty centimetre­s wide, in lengths ranging from 50 centimetre­s to nearly two metres, the panels house arrays of 16-bit LED pixels in a variety of tessellati­ng configurat­ions. “Each pixel becomes a character,” says spokespers­on Larissa Lal-ponini. Combined, the panels can form interactiv­e displays of any size, which can then be mounted behind any type of translucen­t surface – acrylic, fabric, even wood veneer – letting them blend into the background. Different lighting sequences can respond to touch, movement or sound, transformi­ng feature walls into interactiv­e art. Some are “ambient, visual effects that appear and disappear back into the wall surface,” explains Lal-ponini. “Others are cinematic experience­s.” eness.com, lumes.net

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