People, Places, Enterprises & Miscellany pertaining to the Fox family

A cloud index at Paddington Station

From CrossRail website:
American artist Spencer Finch’s man-made sky in the 120-metre long roof canopy at the new Paddington station, directly above Eastbourne Terrace and Departures Road, has been created using original pastel drawings of 32 different types of clouds, which would never naturally appear together, each hand-drawn by the artist. 

 

The canopy progresses from the chunkiest cumulo nimbus through to the lightest of whispy cirrus and, when viewed from below appears to change according to the light, the direction of the sun and the time of day.

“I like that it is very big but that it also has a light touch. The artwork is totally integrated into the station and into the purpose of the glazing of the canopy, as there would have had to have been some sort of diffusing pattern or it would have been too bright. So it ended up serving the dual purpose of creating an artwork and also reducing the glare.”

Inspiration for the artwork came from 19th century English romantic landscape painting from the likes of John Constable, who recorded clouds at different times of the day and year, a process Constable termed ‘Skying’. 

“The artwork exists both as an artificial cloudscape and as a homage to the British obsession with categorizing and systematizing the most fugitive of natural phenomena. Since Luke Howard first created a nomenclature for clouds in 1803, the efforts to comprehend and quantify clouds have been both beautiful and quixotic, and clouds always seem to stay one step ahead of human understanding.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *