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Tempest enables Benjamin Franklin-inspired projection artwork

The centennial celebrations of the Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia have been marked with projection artwork using four Epson L1500 laser projectors – protected by Tempest’s Blizzard enclosures.

The centennial celebrations of the Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia have been marked with an artistic projection masterpiece. 

In Winter Fountains, four large fibreglass architectural domes were installed in the cultural heart of Philadelphia, each using four Epson L1500 laser projectors – protected by Tempest’s Blizzard enclosures. The installation, commissioned by the Association for Public Art (aPA), formed one of the key focal points of Parkway 100, the yearlong centennial celebration of the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.

The dream-like video projections – created by video and new media artist Jennifer Steinkamp – were inspired by Benjamin Franklin’s electrical research and featured a constantly shifting array of icy particles that create static electricity. A total of 16 projectors were used to project the digital animations onto the 13ft-high and 26ft-wide domes that shimmered in the day and glowed in the evening. The four glitter-embedded domes were installed along the Parkway at Aviator Park in front of the Franklin Institute, the Rodin Museum grounds near 21st Street, the Park Towne Place Museum Residences, and the Spring Garden Triangle near Eakins Oval, forming a glowing constellation within a mile-long landscape.

“Ben Franklin is one of the most important scientists in history,” said artist Jennifer Steinkamp. “I read a few biographies about him and decided to let his legacy inspire the piece. He wondered if static electricity and lighting was the same thing. I thought ‘how is lightning formed in clouds?’. It’s small particles of ice bumping into each other forming static electricity, which becomes lightning. The art was inspired by that idea.”

The animations were created using a combination of software programs, including Maya. Dynamics was used to simulate natural phenomena of gravity and wind. Steinkamp created a script to generate random rock-like shapes, and used Maya to sculpt the shapes, adding small drawings and textures to further bring the content to life.

Steinkamp explained: “During the installation, numerous people in the streets approached me to ask if I was the artist, and then they would proceed to thank me. This happened over and over – this piece makes me very happy. The projectors are my medium. I have been working with the limitations and possibilities of video projectors for 29 years.”

Tempest enclosures were provided by Doug O’Connor of LightWerks Communication Systems.

Parkway 100, which includes more than a year of public events and activities planned by the Parkway Council – a coalition of cultural and educational institutions, businesses and residences in the Parkway Museums District. Winter Fountains was on view along the Parkway from November 30, 2017 – March 18, 2018, nightly from sunset to midnight, and was made possible with major support from the William Penn Foundation.

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