Boolean Operator by MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY

Sandolo
Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO

For the event of the Jinji Lake Biennial, MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY installed a large-scale outdoor pavilion on the elevated plaza of the Suzhou Center. Its undulating enclosure interrupts the usual traffic, as an unexpected, emergent environment. It appears to have bubbled up from the ground, or dropped from the sky. The structure, both massive in scale and delicate in white aluminum, lands lightly on an ultra-thin edge.

Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO

Boolean Operator —so named for the function that determines relationships between statements, geometries or forms—makes an impression from a distance. Unlike the surrounding texture of the city, this curious structure radiates an otherworldly quality. It casts a strange shadow. It seems to conceal something behind its porous shell. Like seeing the full moon on a clear night, you can start to identify its surface, its irregular craters, and its possible depths. You are drawn closer into its gravitational pull.

Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO

THE EXTRAORDINARY VOYAGE
Entering the structure is a revelatory experience. Something between a vessel that’s carefully engineered to “move” you and a destination in itself, Boolean Operator transcends the surrounding environment, even as it remains embedded in it. Typically, we argue for the contextual; here were interested in a point of departure.

Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO

Looking to the extraordinary paths around the moon, to the bottom of the sea, and into the center of the earth, we take inspiration from the celebrated author Jules Verne. Across the 54 volumes that make up his Voyages Extraordinaires, Verne opens portals to other universes, but he also delights in the means of travelling there. The ship that takes Captain Nemo to the bottom of the sea is described as both a tactical vehicle and a lush interior, outfitted with an organ, salon, and a formal dining room.

Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO

VECTORS OF TRANSLATION
Like Verne’s Nautilus, a ship modeled on an early French submarine, our ultra-thin shell structure is a transporting vessel. The vector of translation from one world to another is highly engineered, and for Verne, ahead of its time. Disguised as a kind of sea creature in steel sheet metal, the Nautilus becomes a conspicuous part of the habitat it navigates. The technology described in the Voyages Extraordinaire s prefigures the innovations with which we are familiar today: u-boats, satellites, spacecrafts, and television.

Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO

THE INSTANCE OF THE SKIN – CROSSING A THRESHOLD
In one respect, our journey happens in an instance: you cross the threshold and you are, all of a sudden, somewhere else entirely. The drama of the interior atmosphere makes you feel as if you have suddenly descended into some other world, despite the thinness of the enclosure that separates you from the familiar terrain beyond.

Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO

Suffuse in light, the details come into and out of focus. A continuous surface grows from a network of columns that peel open into the enclosing shell. Topologically , there is no simple dichotomy between envelope and supports, but the two are made from a continuous skin that self-supports throughout. The relationship is like an unwrapping: what is inside of the columns eventually becomes the outside of the shell. In aluminum parts as thin as 1mm in places where the curvature is tightest and up to 2mm thick on the largest spans, the structure maintains a light impact on the ground.

Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO

The intricacy of the skin asserts a density : of limbs, of openings, of parts and their connections. You have to let your eyes adjust to the resolution of the experience. Unfocusing your gaze again, the whole scene overwhelms, strikes awe, compels you to move closer, deeper, and through an edgeless space. The doubly-curved surfaces cast no regular shadows, giving little information to the eye to perceive its scale or depth. The only way to understand the space is to move through it. Your winding path isn’t designed, but implied by a swirl of light, plotted on a map of your own desires.

Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO

TRAVELING AGENTS
Crawling agents of a computational search protocol find their way across the aggregated mesh, leaving a trail of non-linear stripes in one pass and apertures between them in another. The two directions of flow curves result from a structural analysis on the digital 3D geometry. Agents determine the directional fitness as well as the maximum length of stripes along these paths so that they can be accommodated on a conventional sheet of aluminum.

Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO

A PUBLIC INTERIOR TO DISCOVER AND REDISCOVER
Boolean Operator is a public room that is unlike anything that lives in the city. It’s an art experience catches you off guard, a surprising interior to be found among the usual business of the Suzhou Center. It must be entered to be discovered, but as it becomes known and mapped by Suzhou locals, it becomes a site to pursue, to seek out, and to transport you over and over again.

Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO
  • Location: Suzhou, China
  • Design + Fabrication: MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY
  • Client: Qu Art for the 2018 Jinji Lake Biennial
  • Year: 2018
  • Photographs: NAARO, Courtesy of MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY
Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO
Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO
Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO
Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO
Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO
Boolean Operator
Photo © NAARO

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