Theo Jansen Exhibition: The Beach Animal That Eats Wind / Theo Jansen with Earthscape

© Earthscape/Yusuke Komatsu

Designers: Theo Jansen with Earthscape Location: Oita Art Museum / 865 Ueno Oita city Oita, Japan Photographs: Earthscape/Yusuke Komatsu, Shin Suzuki

Theo Jansen Exhibition: The Beach Animal That Eats Wind / Theo Jansen with Earthscape - More Images+ 38

Japanese landscaper Eiki Danzuka collaborated with Dutch artist Theo Jansen. Earthscape (Director, Eiki Danzuka) was responsible for total direction and arrangement of a “Theo Jansen Exhibition.” The installation of Jansen’s works in the space captures both the natural setting of Oita and the Dutch landscape, and actively draws visitors in. By installing various devices we created an exciting space — children entering immediately want to rush in and examine the installation.

© Earthscape/Yusuke Komatsu

Theo Jansen’s Strandbeesten (“Beach Animals”) are giant structures assembled exclusively from everyday materials available in DIY shops in the Netherlands, such as plastic tubes. When wind blows into them, their many legs move dextrously, enabling them to walk. These lifeforms possess a mysterious appeal and continue to evolve at the hands of Mr. Jansen. The Beach Animals have traversed the oceans of the Netherlands to arrive in the forests of Oita. Earthscape has added various features to the space using the earth itself: sand, driftwood, and flora from Scheveningen in the Netherlands, as well as pine cones collected in Oita.

The exhibition has been structured into three zones: “sea,” “life,” and “forest,” allowing visitors to vicariously experience the evolution of the Strandbeesten. Just as the natural scenery of faraway Holland and Oita are connected by horizons, so are all living things connected. To express these “lines” of connection, we have inscribed various information such as words, photographs, and images between the show’s entrance and exit, at a height of 145 cm (the eye-level of a Japanese person).

sketch

INSTALLATION CONCEPT - From the Sea to the Forest - A pack of Strandbeest come from the sea into the forest. They live by eating wind on the beach, and over the years undergo various evolutions. The forest and the sea share a connection as a single life form. The forest acts as a natural dam to protect against river flooding and droughts, and brings nutrients to the sea to help its phytoplankton and marine algae grow, and its fish prosper. Without the beautiful forest, the beautiful sea cannot exist. Just as humans evolved from the ocean, the Strandbeest, too, may leave their beach and begin an evolution into the forest. How will they choose to express themselves in Oita, home to both luscious oceans and forests?

- Sea / Life / Forest – This exhibition is composed of three zones: Sea, Life, and Forest. Sea is a place where you can sense the beach and the wind. It is a zone where those Strandbeest who became extinct during the course of evolution stay. A bed of white sand has been installed on one side of the exhibition space, displayed alongside seashells, driftwood, and flora from the beaches of Scheveningen. Life is a zone where visitors learn about the process of making Strandbeest, and where children blow life into Strandbeest through straws(plastic tubes). And finally, Forest is a zone where you can watch the Strandbeest move, with the forest of the Ueno Hills in the background.

© Shin Suzuki

Pinecones, tree branches, and bamboo have been carried in from the forests of Oita, and the Strandbeesten begin their journey to the forests of Ueno. Horizon – Landscape Connecting the Sea to the Forest – We drew a line, about eye-level, on the wall. The line appears in the space in various forms; at times as text, at times as the outline of a landscape, and at times as the level of water. The line presents many kinds of information, including information on the Strandbeest, the wind and forest, and the nature of Oita and the Netherlands. It indicates the horizon of Beppu Bay that would otherwise be visible from this location, and hints at the horizon of the Netherlands, connecting even further beyond… Through the Strandbeest, we invite the viewer to feel the connection between life and nature.

© Earthscape/Yusuke Komatsu

Text provided by Earthscape.

© Earthscape/Yusuke Komatsu
© Earthscape/Yusuke Komatsu
© Earthscape/Yusuke Komatsu
© Earthscape/Yusuke Komatsu
© Earthscape/Yusuke Komatsu

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Cite: Christopher Henry. "Theo Jansen Exhibition: The Beach Animal That Eats Wind / Theo Jansen with Earthscape" 12 Sep 2011. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/167928/theo-jansen-exhibition-the-beach-animal-that-eats-wind-theo-jansen-with-earthscape> ISSN 0719-8884

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