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Plastique Fantastique's 'Polymeter' Inflatable Confronts Material Legacy on Korean Coast
On the coast of Busan, South Korea, the art collective Plastique Fantastique has installed 'Polymeter,' a dynamic, fossil-based inflatable that breathes with the sea. The sculpture, made from polymers derived from fossil fuels, serves as a striking paradox—a temporary monument to the permanent impact of industrial materials.It billows and transforms in the wind, its translucent form engaging in a constant dialogue with the elements. This public art piece functions as a large-scale environmental experiment, where natural forces like wind and salt spray are the primary users, interacting with and reshaping the structure.The choice of material is a deliberate, critical statement, linking the artwork's existence to the same industrial processes that endanger coastal ecosystems. Its design process echoes algorithmic iteration, where artists adjust form and pressure to achieve a balance between structural integrity and poetic transience.The eventual degradation of the sculpture is not a flaw but an integral part of its narrative, completing a lifecycle that mirrors our own complex relationship with synthetic materials. In a digital age, 'Polymeter' re-embodies conceptual art, offering a tangible, sensory experience rooted in the physical interplay of human design, synthetic substance, and natural forces.
#featured
#Plastique Fantastique
#inflatable sculpture
#Busan
#fossil-based
#art installation
#shoreline
#contemporary art
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