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Helen Betts | profile | all galleries >> Rediscovering Home >> Washington Rediscovered: Year 2 >> 'Hive' at the National Building Museum tree view | thumbnails | slideshow

'Hive' at the National Building Museum

I had some free time at work today so took the opportunity to visit (with Tim, who had the day off from work) the National Building Museum, which was hosting an installation titled “Hive,” by Studio Gang. From the museum website:

“Soaring to the uppermost reaches of the Museum, Hive is built entirely of more than 2,700 wound paper tubes, a construction material that is recyclable, lightweight, and renewable. The tubes vary in size from several inches to 10 feet high and will be interlocked to create three dynamic interconnected, domed chambers. Reaching 60 feet tall, the installation’s tallest dome features an oculus over 10 feet in diameter. The tubes feature a reflective silver exterior and vivid magenta interior, creating a spectacular visual contrast with the Museum’s historic nineteenth-century interior and colossal Corinthian columns.”

I find it useful to do small sub-galleries for things like this because I always want to post more pictures than the main Washington gallery can accommodate.
'Hive' in the Great Hall
'Hive' in the Great Hall
Inside one of the hives
Inside one of the hives
One view of a hive
One view of a hive
Into the light
Into the light
Hive shadows
Hive shadows
Colorful paper tubes
Colorful paper tubes
Framing the busts
Framing the busts
Tubes and more tubes
Tubes and more tubes
Two hives and a column
Two hives and a column
Contrasting styles
Contrasting styles
Reaching for the ceiling
Reaching for the ceiling
Three hives in a row
Three hives in a row
Acoustics
Acoustics
Framed
Framed
Surrounded
Surrounded
Ground level
Ground level
Magenta on view
Magenta on view
Receding tubes
Receding tubes
Caught between a pillar and a column
Caught between a pillar and a column
The orifice
The orifice