Entertainmenttheatre & artsArt Exhibitions
Morag Myerscough brings 'Chasing Sunbeams' to Australia.
Morag Myerscough’s 'Chasing Sunbeams' spatial installation, which has recently landed in Australia, is a masterclass in how to paint with architecture, transforming public space into a vibrant, living canvas that feels like stepping inside a joyous, beating heart. Known for her signature graphic patterns and unapologetically bold color palettes, Myerscough doesn't just design spaces; she engineers emotional experiences, a philosophy that resonates deeply with the current movement of AI tools empowering creatives to prototype such immersive environments in minutes rather than months.Her work, reminiscent of the best generative art outputs from platforms like Midjourney where color and form collide in unexpected harmony, challenges the often-sterile conventions of public art by insisting that our surroundings should spark delight and foster community connection. The installation’s very title, 'Chasing Sunbeams,' evokes a childlike wonder, and its execution—a symphony of intersecting lines, geometric shapes, and radiant hues—acts as a physical filter, altering one’s perception of light and shadow throughout the day, much like a masterfully crafted digital filter can redefine an image.This is not art to be passively observed from a distance; it is an environment to be inhabited, a backdrop for human interaction that proves the most powerful designs are those that make you feel something. Myerscough’s practice has long been a beacon in the design world, from transforming hospital wards into healing sanctuaries to turning school courtyards into catalysts for imagination, demonstrating a consistent belief that color is a fundamental nutrient for the human spirit.In bringing this particular work to Australia, a landscape already rich with brilliant natural light and a burgeoning design scene, she engages in a fascinating dialogue with the local environment, her artificial sunbeams playing off the continent’s famous sunshine. The installation serves as a crucial counterpoint in an era increasingly dominated by virtual experiences, asserting the irreplaceable power of tangible, three-dimensional art to create shared moments of pure, unadulterated joy. It asks a compelling question of viewers and designers alike: in a world that can often feel monochrome, what responsibility do we have to inject more color, more pattern, more life into the frameworks of our daily existence? 'Chasing Sunbeams' is more than an installation; it is a manifesto, a proof-of-concept that our built environment can and should be a source of daily inspiration, a lesson every creative, from architects to UX designers working with AI co-pilots, would do well to learn.
#featured
#Morag Myerscough
#Chasing Sunbeams
#spatial installation
#art exhibition
#bold colors
#graphic patterns
#Australia