Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Sam R - "Other" Installation

 Filled Space - Installation ideation / materialistic 

Following the theme inspired by Nam Jun Paik's work "TV Garden," I wanted to continue making things that speak about technology vs humanity/technology vs environment. 


There are only two movable walls. 
I think the idea is string- how you are going about it feels more sculptural than installation based. Think about pushing the wires more and possibly other materials for the heads. Maybe less African mask, like so, appropriation is lessened. It could be face printouts or larger face in chicken wire and paper?  Let's talk amore when we are in person. 


This time I want to explore more with the technology aspect and play with a matrix panel. it could debatably take up more time than I have to experiment with something like that which in that case it can be replaced with some other entrancing piece of technology to set in the middle of the piece. I think the main mood I want to convey is whatever the faces are attached to is something that is inherently "entrancing". to inhibit this more entrancing affect I want to incorporate the use of line to radiate emphasis. 


Materials:

Sculpey
Maroon-colored tissue paper
Maroon/ blue yarn
22 gauge electrical wire
RGB LED Matrix Panel


Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Amelia - Materialistic Ideas

02/24/2026

These past few Sundays, I just spent sewing together more of the webbing which is why I didn't have any new updates or photos to show. I did start using the sewing machine rather than hand sewing which did significantly speed up the process. Once finishing the webbing I began nailing it to the walls. Once that was finished I have spent these last few days pinning more clothing onto the other clothes.

Originally I planned to have the clothes only go up to 6'5" with the drop ceiling to give a claustrophobic feel. However after realizing the height of the door was taller and talking with Ashley and other students, I decided it would be better to continue adding the clothes to grow taller.

At this point I am finishing filling in the whole on the walls as well as giving the 'top line' more of an organic shape rather than having the clothes end in a straight line. I am also going to be adjusting the lights to see how I would like them. 

I also received comments that I should try to continue the clothing all the way up. I think I would like to see what it would look like with the drop ceiling, but if I choose not to go that route I will try and slowly add more clothing going up throughout the time the installation is up.

sewing with machine




webbing nailed on the wall
moving clothes up higher




^ example of a finished section

02/01/2026

    Currently there is not much to update on, except that I have chosen to do the clothing room as a continuation of my BFA work. I have begun sewing some clothes together to create the 'webs' we discussed. I think at this point I am just trying to decide if I am going to want to try and fill the entire room, or somehow make two false walls, or at least framing for two walls, to make the gallery space appear smaller. I am unsure of how to successfully do that. I wondered if I made framing and then took muslin or large sheets to cover the wall and attach the clothing to that (either before or after attaching it to the wall. I also have to take in consideration the price of wood or if there would be enough available in the wood shop and I don't necessarily have the funds to buy all the wood myself. So it could be cheaper to just buy more clothes (from second hand stores) and try posting again for more donations. I think I just worry about running out of clothes.

I would also like to make a drop ceiling of some sort and am trying to decide if it should just be a dark large sheet which I attach some clothing to or if it should be completely covered.


At this point I am going to continue making the 'webbing'. Since a large part of this installation won't be able to be worked on until I am in the space I will also start sketching out my ideas for my small world and getting those up.

laid out webbing ft. my cat

sewing together with embroidery floss (repurposed friendship bracelet string)

This is developing in a strong direction, and the webbing is already doing the conceptual work it needs to do. Rather than filling the entire room, I’d encourage you to think about filling the walls and ceiling instead. Let the installation wrap the viewer without completely occupying the floor.

Treat the walls and ceiling as continuous surfaces where the clothing webs accumulate, overlap, and connect. This will create immersion while still allowing the viewer space to move and breathe within the room.

You don’t need to build false walls for this. Using the existing architecture and letting the clothing become the structure will keep the focus on material and labor rather than construction.

For the ceiling, a lowered or darkened fabric plane with clothing integrated into it could help compress the space without overwhelming it.

Keep focusing on producing webbing now. Repetition and density across vertical surfaces will matter more than adding new elements.

You’re on a good path — commit to coverage on the walls and ceiling, and let restraint on the floor give the piece clarity and control.

P.s. I would not waste floss on sewing. Use cheap string and lets get you the pins in the am so you know where they are. Remind me!

01/24/2026

Artist Inspiration


    Guerra de la Paz is a collaboration between two artists, Alain Gueraa and Neraldo de la Paz. I am drawn to the themes and messages they explore within this work. I also appreciate how they allow the materials they use (in this case clothes) to speak for itself.
 




    I am constantly drawn to the visuals of Chiharu Shiota's work. I appreciate the organized visual chaos she creates. I am also drawn to the materials she uses and the ways in which she uses them.






I discovered the second image first and was immediately drawn to it. After trying to figure out the artists I found that it must be the recreation of a performance piece done by Carolee Schneemann (as seen in the first image). 




Ideas/Sketches

    For this project I have two main ideas I am circling between, both of which fit in with my portfolio.

    Idea #1:

    My first idea is an expansion of my BFA work. This work focus on the environmental impact of fast fashion and the textile industry. Within my BFA work I created a large tower of clothes, I hoped that could represent the overwhelming waste that we create but are lucky to not have to address. When thinking about this idea originally, I thought it would be visually interesting as well as push the feeling of overwhelm further if I created an entire room covered in this clothing. This idea was not possible during an exhibition where I was sharing space with other artists, but having the THIS gallery space would now give me this opportunity.

I would like to cover the entire room in clothing. This means wall to wall and the floor and a drop ceiling. I think taking large sheets of fabric and attaching the clothes to these would be the best method. I would also like light to be apart of this work in some way, possibly just having small slivers of light shining through the ceiling.

The aspect of this idea I am most concerned about is having enough clothes. I currently still have a large amount of clothes, however a lot of it is cut up and I worry about running into the problem of repeating the same patterns and fabric too many times. A solution I thought would be to make the room feel much smaller than it actually is by using the large sheets of fabric to create false walls (possibly needing a wood structure for some stability).


    Idea #2
    
    My second idea is an expansion of my work from my Honors capstone work in Fall of 2024. I wanted to create a piece that visually expanded on the work I have already created while exploring a new aspect of the theme this body of work surrounds. When making this body of work I was interested in created an piece I felt represented the way anxiety can lead me to spiral, but I didn't end up getting around to this. I would like to create this now. I want to create a large scale installation that feels like the inside of my head, specifically with decision making. I want to make this work chaotic and messy, using simple materials such as paper, markers, crayons, and string. I would cover the floors, walls, and make a drop ceiling from a large paper (possibly butcher paper). Then fill the walls with my own version of mind maps and thoughts, etc. Similar to one of the other pieces in my exhibition, I was considering making this piece interactive and allowing people to come and write on the walls as well.

However, I have noted and after talking with Ashley that this piece could also be very successful as my 'site specific' installation in my bedroom. I do agree with this and think that could give me the opportunity to experiment more with having string run across the room as the work would be viewed through my own documentation of it rather than the viewer actually needing to walk through the work itself.


Amelia, this is a strong and thoughtful set of ideas, and your artist references are well chosen. You’re clearly thinking about material, scale, and immersion in ways that align well with contemporary installation practices.

Both directions you’re considering make sense conceptually, but they operate very differently in terms of space and feasibility. The clothing installation feels especially strong for the THIS gallery. It builds directly from your BFA work, uses material as meaning rather than illustration, and takes advantage of the opportunity to fully surround the viewer. Your instincts about compression, false walls, and limiting the scale of the room are good, and those strategies could help manage repetition while intensifying the feeling of overwhelm.

The anxiety / mind-map installation is also compelling, but I agree with your observation that it may function more successfully as a site-specific, documentation-based work rather than a public gallery installation. That idea relies heavily on personal interiority and process, and placing it in a private space could allow you to push it further without needing to manage viewer flow or durability.

At this point, I’d encourage you to choose one direction for THIS gallery and commit to refining it. Think about which idea:

  • depends most on the physical room,

  • allows the material to do the conceptual work,

  • and can be fully realized within the time and resources available.

Whichever direction you choose, focus on restraint and clarity. Let fewer decisions do more work, and keep asking how the viewer encounters the space physically and emotionally. You’re asking the right questions—now it’s about narrowing and committing so the installation can fully resolve.





Monday, February 23, 2026

Keeley H – "That" Installation

02/22/26

Install and Completion 

Process:

    I am so incredibly grateful that we got into our spaces a week earlier than we originally thought. It truly allowed me to fully envision my installation and have it all come together in my head. I do think I could have gotten it done in one day, but having the time to completely set up the objects and materials, and knowing exactly how to go about it, opened up so much more time for the more intuitive process in the fabric form. I worked my way from the biggest elements down to the more detailed ones. First, we hung the grid above the lights, and thanks to David, that went super quick. Next, get all the plastic drop clothes hanging from the walls. I knew that I didn't want to lay down the floor drop cloths until the very end. I then got some help installing the chain and meat hooks. Then went up the light gels and the final form. And lastly, I laid down the plastic on the floor, cut the doorway strips, and configured the fiber pool. 

Images:

Reflection:

    In hindsight, I should have done all the light work and hung the drop cloths before installing the chain and meathooks. Maneuvering the latter around both the light rails and those elements was tricky and not a fun time. So any high installation required should be done with the least number of elements in the room. Learned that very quickly. There are many elements I want to incorporate if I get the opportunity to show this installation again, that I just didn't have the time or experience to incorporate this go-around. But for my first-ever installation, I am proud of how it came out. Some of those other elements include: a way to cool down the room, incorporating a scent, and possibly adding slight movement to the empty chains. I fell in love with the way they slightly swung when I first installed them. 

    I am not entirely happy with the components on the floor. It just feels like something is missing, and maybe that is just "more".  I'm hoping to add more fibrous materials to see if that helps. I also think that the plastic could have been a bit less see-through. It works for the room it's in now, but in the future, I'd want to use either a heavier-duty plastic or something with less transparency. In hindsight, I should have made a level mark at the height I wanted to hang the plastic sheets from to make the install easier and ensure everything stayed at the same level. It looks quite messy with the way I went about it this time. I should also notch the steel bar that runs through the feet so the butcher's hook can rest in it for better stability and balance. 

Statement:

My artistic practice centers on creating space for difficult conversations about violence against women; conversations that are often dismissed, minimized, or silenced. Girlhood: begging to be believed. I create work not only for myself but for those who are quiet and well-versed in being gentle despite the violence they’ve walked through, for individuals who value mindfulness and observation over hasty action. As a woman, I have frequently experienced my perspectives being overlooked or interrupted. Visual art has become the place where I can assert what I have not always been allowed to say aloud. By transforming these experiences into tangible, visual forms, I aim to create work that demands attention, invites reflection, and fosters understanding. My current work takes the form of large-scale cast forms and sculptural installations, using materials such as cast iron, bronze, knit thread, cast paper, and fabric to embody the tension between vulnerability and resilience. 


02/17/26:

In Progress Update:







    I made some progress over the weekend, but I could really use the next week to hunker down and focus on this installation alone. I started adding fabric to my chicken-wire forms, and I'm going to use actual cuts of meat to help determine the color of the fabric I place and stitch on. I intend to cover these forms completely, then add details before adding additional layers of fabric and other details directly to them.  I'm using these forms as the building blocks for the overall form. 
    The next steps for this week to focus on and complete for install are:
  • Paint feet and add detail to wounds where bar punctures
  • Continue to add fabric and details to forms
  • Build fabric loops for things to hang from inside feet. 
  • Hang plastic drop clothes
  • Measure and cut chain - 5 feet


02/08/26

Updates:

I began building smaller elements within my overall installation this past week, and really got down the measurements for the room and the height. After getting some measurements and fully dialing in to what the form will look like overall, I'm feeling much better moving forward. The bottom measurement between the figure and the floor may vary depending on how much overlap there is between the meat hook and the feet.  Dave also gave me a rough estimate of where it's easiest to hang the grid, so the measurement at the lowest point is subject to change. 



I spent a few days putting together various sizes of chicken wire that mimicked meat cuts or even figural elements, and I'm hoping to finish those up tomorrow and begin the plaster gauze process. I want these forms to create the illusion of mass without its weight. Since I am hanging from the grid, I'm trying to keep everything as lightweight as possible. I was also able to forge two meat hooks from a steel rod. I attempted this at first with a quarter-inch pencil rod, and after some advice, I decided to redo them with a much thicker one. I think they look much better and much more realistic this way! I just need to fabricate one more and shine up the metal before sealing it.  




One thing not pictured above (I feel a little weird about it right now lol) is the mannequin feet I ordered. I drilled holes through the ankles and cut off the tops of the feet to allow a steel rod to pass through and support the rest of the figure. I also decided to brush wax on the feet to give them a more realistic texture before priming them and getting them ready to paint. Once those get to a better point of resolution, I will include photos. (Once they don't gross me out)


I was also planning to spend this past weekend finishing the miniature version of this installation, but I was hit with a pretty nasty cold, so I intend to finish it by the end of this week, with more focus on the elements of the large-scale installation. - I will work harder in the future to prevent this setback!

02/01/26

Refinement:





I realized after posting yesterday that my update doesn't make much sense if my idea hasn't been refined and shown here. Things are a little out of order, but it'll make sense soon! I redid my original sketch after pondering the questions given to me, and I answered them below.

  • How many hanging forms are necessary to create the intended atmosphere?
  • What is the minimum number to still communicate weight, repetition, and presence?
  • Which elements must be physically built, and which can be implied through space, light, or restraint?
  • Would fewer forms intensify the experience?
  • Could one area carry the most visual weight while others recede?
  • Where does restraint create more tension than accumulation?
    After allowing for this idea to exist in my head for longer than just a moment, like it did last semester, and listening to those around me, I realized that I don't need to fill up the room with figures for my idea to still strike hard. The question "What is the minimum number that still communicates weight, repetition, and presence?" is the most inspiring one to think through. I began to break down the idea to the bare bones. What are the bare necessities for creating the atmosphere and visually communicating the idea? I really enjoy the point that restraint can create more tension. 
    So I've decided to move to just one figure within the room, not centered, but maybe off to the side. I'm not totally sure about this decision yet, but I think it will be addressed in both the mock-up I'm creating and during the install. The repetition could come from other hooks hanging alongside the one being used. Insinuating that there is intention and space for more to join. Maybe allowing audience members to place themselves there. The suggestion of red lights, the buzzing sound of fluorescent lights, and cooling the room down are incredible, and I would love to include them. 
Materials I am building:
  • The abstract form that follows the feet. I want to construct some of this out of stiffened fabric and fiber thread. I want this part to be intuitive. I was also thinking that creating a chicken-wire and plaster gauze form might help clarify the overall shape before I start going all haywire with other materials. 
  • After thinking about it, I think I will blacksmith the three meat hooks. One, because I love blacksmithing. Two, I can control the look of each hook fully throughout the process. And three, because they are three of the same form that can be easily fabricated. 
Materials I am gathering or ordering:
  • It's crazy that I'm building a piece that involves feet even though I hate them so much. I decided to order a pair of mannequin feet (not super expensive), both as a reference or even as a base to add more naturalistic details on top of. Feet are weird, and I'm not interested in making a mold of mine (I don't want to use a model either, the less real feet involvement the better), so I figured this was the next best option. 
  • Plastic sheets: I plan on just utilizing plastic drop cloths.
  • Chain?
  • Sound?
Some questions from me:
  • What is the best way to hang the drop cloths? I want them to go fairly high, as I don't think I need to hide anything within the ceiling for this piece. So maybe that doesn't matter as much now that I think about it. 
  • I want to use a chain to hang this piece from. Is there a light-weight chain that would keep the overall weight of my form light enough for the grid to handle? Or should I consider a different material to use? Rope? Cording?
  • What are the dimensions of the "That" gallery space? 
  • Is it possible to implement a way to make the room colder? I really love Megan's suggestion!
  • Is it possible to have sound coming from up above? Like in the ceiling, mimicking the fluorescent light sound?

Core idea
The work places the viewer inside a meat-locker environment: cold, sterile, fluorescent, and quietly violent. Rather than filling the room with bodies, the piece relies on restraint. One suspended figure is enough to carry the emotional weight, while empty hooks and open space imply repetition, absence, and the potential for more.

The figure is suggested through the feet only. The rest of the body dissolves into an abstract, weighted mass. The viewer crosses a plastic threshold to enter the space, immediately encountering a controlled, clinical atmosphere.

––––––––––––––

What must be present for the piece to work

  • One clear hanging event that reads as industrial and intentional
  • A plastic threshold the viewer physically passes through
  • A cold, sterile environment created through light, sound, and material restraint
  • Evidence of repetition through unused hooks or empty hanging points

Everything else is optional and should only be added if time allows.

––––––––––––––

What you are building
Three forged meat hooks (only one needs to be used; the others can remain empty)
One suspended form: mannequin feet attached to a hook and hanging line
An abstract mass beneath the feet, built intuitively using fabric and fiber
A simple armature (chicken wire and plaster gauze) may be used first to define the overall shape

––––––––––––––

What you are sourcing

  • Mannequin feet to use as a base or reference
  • Clear plastic drop cloths for walls and threshold strips
  • Lightweight chain or cable for hanging
  • A subtle fluorescent hum or industrial buzz for sound

––––––––––––––

Key decisions to lock in now

  • Limit the work to one hanging figure
  • Let restraint do the work rather than accumulation
  • Choose one symbolic detail for the feet, not multiple
  • Keep the violence suggestive rather than graphic

––––––––––––––

Installation notes
Plastic should be hung high, cleanly, and with intention. Fewer large sheets will read better than many small ones. We have some. May need to order more.
Use a lightweight chain, cable, or cord rated for the ceiling grid, with a discreet safety backup.
If actual cooling is not possible, rely on cool lighting, sound, and plastic to imply temperature.
Sound should be subtle and plausible, as if coming from the lights above rather than from a speaker.

––––––––––––––

Three-week build focus
Week one: confirm dimensions, finalize hanging plan, test one hook and feet connection
Week two: fabricate hooks, finish feet, build the abstract mass
Week three: install plastic, hang the form, add sound and lighting, refine and clean

––––––––––––––

Primary goal
Clarity over quantity. Control over excess. The viewer should feel unsettled immediately, before they fully understand why.



01/31/26:

Updates:

    After the first week, I have a few updates on this installation. All of which I am very excited about and really itching to work on. I decided that in order to do this right, especially for my first time doing an installation at this scale, I wanted to map out the room and build my own at a smaller scale. I did this with cardboard and hot glue, and even got the wall color and a cute little sign down. Once I finished this, I began working on what would go into the space. I didn't get too far, but I'm excited to continue to work on it while materials for the large-scale installation are still being shipped. Here are some images I took of the in-progress work, and hopefully by next week, I will be working on the real deal! (Many of my materials should be here by Wednesday)




Here are some different angles of the "That" gallery I built. I had so much fun with it and now realize all the different ways to improve it so it can be so much better next time. I don't necessarily like how the edges turned out, but now I know what I'll do differently!

I realize that this totally doesn't look like anything recognizable yet, but I started on modeling the feet and attaching them to the meat hook and chain. I want to paint them to make them look a bit better and to also figure out a color story that will go with the fabric, fiber, and other materials that will be hanging from it. 


 01/25/26:

Initial Idea and Sketches:

I went back and forth about whether to make this installation human-scale or mini, and I finally decided on human-scale. I think the impact is there, at least for me. I haven't personally been in the meat locker of a butcher shop, and I'm not sure how many others have, but I fully intend to do research and visit one to get the details right. I want to place my audience in that space. The cold and sterile environment with the trace amounts of blood and violence that don't ever go away, no matter how many times that room is scrubbed and rinsed down. Instead of using fully recognizable female bodies for the figure, I only want the feet to convey what is actually happening.  I want the entire room covered in clear plastic sheets, and for the viewer to walk through a visual and physical boundary of "sterile" plastic strips before they can take in all the details. 

There are so many different kinds of meat hooks online, and I could either buy them or have them made. I think my decision will depend on my timing, but they really shouldn't take too long to fabricate. Each form will have recognizable feet, and I was trying to find ways to make them symbolize female bodies, but maybe they don't. We have so much violence against people in general in this country that it could be anyone hanging there. Maybe some have heels, or some have painted toenails. I don't know exactly, but I'll find out as soon as I start making. After the feet, I just want the feeling of carnage. Of dripping. Of weight and destruction. 


Artist Inspiration:

Tamara Kovianovsky:

"Tropical Abattoir"




Teresa Kovianovsky's work is so beautiful. When I first stumbled across her work I was in awe for at least an hour. I really suggest visiting her website (which I do have linked) and viewing the rest of her work because this is just the beginning. Her use of fabric and patterns to create such grotesque and also beautiful renditions of meat and animal bodies is fascinating. I want to cry and throw up while looking at them, but also cuddle up to them because they look so huggable? How can those two visceral reactions coexist? I don't know, but this work encapsulates it. 

Tara Kennedy:

"Hope Emerging"


Tara Kennedy has been a massive inspiration for my work the last couple years which is why she keeps appearing in my artist inspiration list. I find her use of color and fabric/fiber to be so inspiring, and I hope to one day achieve a semblance of this in my work. I also enjoy the knots and texture added to some of her work as a way to give visual interest and keep the eye moving. 



Feasibility & Scope Questions to Consider

  • This is a strong and serious direction. As you move forward, I want you to think carefully about what is realistically buildable within the time and resources available.

  • Ask yourself:

    • How many hanging forms are truly necessary to create the intended atmosphere?

    • What is the minimum number that still communicates weight, repetition, and presence?

    • Which elements must be physically built, and which can be implied through space, light, or restraint?

  • Consider the labor involved in:

    • fabricating the hooks

    • constructing the hanging forms

    • installing plastic sheeting safely and cleanly

    • managing weight, balance, and attachment

    • de-installation and clean-up
      How much of this can be completed confidently within the timeline?

  • Think about where simplification might strengthen the work:

    • Would fewer forms intensify the experience?

    • Could one area carry the most visual weight while others recede?

    • Where does restraint create more tension than accumulation?

  • I encourage you to identify one or two elements that are essential to the concept, and treat everything else as negotiable.

  • This project doesn’t need to be maximal to be powerful. Focus on clarity, control, and what the viewer encounters in the space rather than the total amount produced.




Kane Garrison Small World Installation

February 23rd, 2026

Much better revised mini installation artist statement:

In this installation, I would like to give every viewer a chance to enter a world of soft, fuzzy, and whimsical relaxation. This world is meant to both be explored and be a safe place for those looking to escape the outside world. The color choices and encapsulation of the room are inspired by the artist Yayoi Kusama, from whom I learned that the lighting can be and often is just as important as the installation itself. 

The found object chosen for my gallery space is a toy castle, chosen for its inherent relationship to childhood and play. The miniature scale of the installation also plays into the concept of reclaiming the inner child, as it resembles the size of dollhouses and toys. By using soft fabrics and making the floors plush, I am creating an environment for all viewers to get in touch with the inner child and reclaim the whimsy of childhood. This experience is both psychological and sensory, as the texture of the fabric is also part of the experience. 



February 9th, 2026

Mini installation artist statement: 

In this installation, I would like to give every viewer a chance to enter a world of soft, fuzzy, and whimsical relaxation. This world is meant to both be explored and be a safe place for those looking to escape the outside world. By using soft fabrics and making the floors plush, I am creating an environment for all viewers to get in touch with the inner child and reclaim the whimsy of childhood.


January 26th, 2026

For my Small World Installation, I would like to create a fun house designed for adults to get back in touch with their inner child. This is a topic that I am very passionate about, as I fear many adults lack the same sort of whimsy and pure viewpoints and forget that life can be fun too. I am inspired by the work of Yayoi Kusama, and how she brings bright colors and fun patterns into her installations. I want my mini installation to be full of bright colors and places to explore.

Yayoi Kusama - 아트선재센터 

I am currently planning on using a wooden castle that I have had for a while for my mini installation, but am open to other forms of dollhouses. My installation will be in the form of a fun house, made with materials such as plush toys, fabric, and foam to create a soft land where one can relax. The floors are intended to be a bit squishy so that its soft but not impossible to walk on. The walls will be patterned in some rooms and fuzzy in others, and I would like the walls to be squishy as well. 

The installation will have other sculpture and objects to explore, but I have not decided what all should be included. So far I have the idea of including giant stuffed animals, a foam pit, bean bag chairs, and a bubble room where viewers can roll around in a giant bubble. I believe adding sculptures similarly shaped to the ones in this installation by Yayoi Kusama may help the installation, but I am open to more ideas on that as well.


Kane, this is an enthusiastic and imaginative starting point, and your interest in play, whimsy, and re-engaging an inner child comes through clearly. Yayoi Kusama is an appropriate reference for thinking about immersive environments, repetition, pattern, and sensory experience, and it makes sense that her work is guiding your use of color and tactility.

For this project, I want to encourage you to keep focusing on scale and translation. The “fun house” idea is strong conceptually, but at a miniature level the challenge is not recreating everything that would exist at full scale, but deciding what suggests that experience most effectively. Plush floors, fuzzy walls, and patterned surfaces can all work, but you’ll need to think carefully about how a viewer encounters and reads the space visually rather than physically.

The wooden castle or dollhouse is a good found object starting point, especially because it already implies childhood, play, and interior rooms. As you move forward, ask yourself:

  • Where does the viewer “enter” the space visually?

  • What makes this feel like an environment rather than a collection of mini objects?

  • Which elements are essential to the feeling of play, and which could be implied rather than fully built?

Right now you have many possible components (stuffed animals, foam pit, bubble room, furniture), and it’s okay not to decide everything yet. I’d encourage you to choose one or two dominant material ideas and push those further, rather than trying to include every feature of a full-scale fun house.

This is a promising direction. The next step is refinement—simplifying, committing to a clear spatial logic, and letting scale do the work. Focus on how color, repetition, and softness can create a sense of play within a small interior, and you’ll be in a good place to move forward.


Sam R - "Other" Installation

 Filled Space - Installation ideation / materialistic  Following the theme inspired by Nam Jun Paik's work "TV Garden," I want...