A Public Art Project: Light Breaks Where No Sun Shines
Public Art,KC Street Car,Early Morning Shadows
Public Art,KC Street Car, Daytime
Public Art,Public Art,KC Street Car,
Public Art,Public Art,KC Street Car,
IPublic Art,KC Street Car,It’s so intense
Public Art,KC Street Car,Work In Progress
Public Art,KC Street Car,KC Street Car, Afternoon Train Reflections
Public Art,KC Street Car,Afternoon shadows reflected on the street
Art Installation, Public Art,KC Street Car,
Public Art,KC Street Car,Patterns on the Wind Catcher
Public Art,KC Street Car, Public Art, Patterns on the Wind catcher.2
Public Art,KC Street Car,Nazanin Amiri Meers is working on her public Art piece
Public Art,KC Street Car,Look the things through us. A view of City elements through patterns installed on the KC streetcar shelter
Public Art,KC Street Car,Kaufman Center, Downtown, Kansas City, Missouri
Public Art,KC Street Car,Evening view of the public art installation
Public Art,KC Street Car,It’s getting close to sunset
Public Art,KC Street Car,evening train, Street Car Downtown , Kansas City
Public Art,KC Street Car,The sun is going down, full view of the public art installation
Public Art,KC Street Car,side view of the public art installation
Public Art,KC Street Car,summer evenings, Another full side view of the public art installation
Public Art,KC Street Car,The night is coming, Side view of the public art installation with a person poking behind
Public Art,KC Street Car,around the night time, the public art installation at night
Public Art,KC Street Car,The night time side views of the public art installation, Downtown, Kansas City
Public Art,KC Street Car,City Reflections, Kaufman Center, Downtown Kansas City,public art installation
In this public art installation, the floral patterns inspired by Islamic tile patterns that cover this KC Streetcar shelter located in the Crossroads, DownTown Kansas City, Missouri is intended to transform sunlight into a therapeutic space for urban travelers. The patterns create soft and sharp shadows and the intensity of the shapes and saturation of the color of shadows will change depending on the intensity of the natural light, the seasons changing, and day and night. This public art hopes to bring an array of light to residents of Kansas City’s lives in a time that reasons to feel light and hopeful are so scarce.
check out the Art in the Loop web page for this project: