Architects of Air: Daedalum to open in Cultural Trust

From the UK-based company Architects of Air and its founder, Alan Parkinson, the Backyard at 8th & Penn welcomes the innovative and otherworldly Daedalum this summer in the Cultural District.

Daedalum takes its name from Daedalus; a figure of Greek mythology, father to Icarus, and architect of the labyrinth of King Minos of Crete. An awe-inspiring, immersive inflatable sculpture known as a “luminarium”, Daedalum’s core element is a maze of 17 egg-shaped domes & the arrangement of their translucent dome tops and pods, designed to produce vistas and hues of considerable variety and subtlety.

With a fresh spatial conception, mysterious sight-lines alter color inside from event to event and hour to hour, both experiential and artistic at once. While exploring the labyrinth, visitors are welcome to discover 2 new major elements brought to fruition by Meko, son of Architects of Air founder Alan Parkinson.

The first, Daedalum’s Tree, is an adventurous assembly of intersecting volumes rising above the visitor with inspiring complexity. The other, a massive Main Dome, utilizes indirect illumination to skew interior colors according to the sun’s direction. Constructed of 600 pieces in an arranged pattern, the Main Dome’s ceiling calls upon influence by Rome’s Pantheon and a drawing from Gustave Doré, which sees angels circling heavenward in Dante’s paradise.
Spiritual, radiant, stimulating and soothing, Daedalum’s organic purity provides a vessel of light and hues that draw all visitors to become part of the living, inhabited sculpture that is the luminarium experience.

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