Kasey N Stertz
  • home
  • about
    • biography
    • resume
    • Portfolio
    • exhibitions+press
  • sculpture
    • blaze
    • Bangkok, Thailand
    • Seattle, WA
    • 42.4'48", -75.58'12"
    • Skin Series
    • Digital Reconstruction
    • Artificial Reconstruction
    • Tree Replication
    • Gravity Pause
    • Bracket Insanity
    • Spike Wall
    • Un: Environment
  • columns
    • blaze
    • Amasa Back
    • SF North
    • Prototypes
  • architecture
    • Early Architecture
    • Unity Park, Haiti
    • Sears Tower Retrofit
    • Compass
    • Troost @ 46
  • design
    • Kenneth Spencer Research Library
    • Raptor Exhibit
    • Character Design
    • Digital Jewelry
  • skills
    • Sketching
    • Rhino 3D
    • Laser Systems
    • 3D Printing
    • Presentation
  • contact
  • home
  • about
    • biography
    • resume
    • Portfolio
    • exhibitions+press
  • sculpture
    • blaze
    • Bangkok, Thailand
    • Seattle, WA
    • 42.4'48", -75.58'12"
    • Skin Series
    • Digital Reconstruction
    • Artificial Reconstruction
    • Tree Replication
    • Gravity Pause
    • Bracket Insanity
    • Spike Wall
    • Un: Environment
  • columns
    • blaze
    • Amasa Back
    • SF North
    • Prototypes
  • architecture
    • Early Architecture
    • Unity Park, Haiti
    • Sears Tower Retrofit
    • Compass
    • Troost @ 46
  • design
    • Kenneth Spencer Research Library
    • Raptor Exhibit
    • Character Design
    • Digital Jewelry
  • skills
    • Sketching
    • Rhino 3D
    • Laser Systems
    • 3D Printing
    • Presentation
  • contact
Kasey N Stertz

unconventional environment

Saran Wrap, Tinfoil
Created Spring 2012

Primarily a light experiment, the requirement for this project were that we could only use everyday/non-precious materials to create an installation. I was immediately drawn to saran wrap and tinfoil based on their reactions to light. My goal was to create an immersive environment that one wandered through in search of the light (at the end of the tunnel).

Approximately 1600 feet of saran wrap was used, in strips ranging from 12’ to 3’. Each strip was individually tied to the ceiling and then too many attempts to smooth the saran wrap was made. Only a single box of tinfoil (200’) was used for the creation of the “tunnel”.
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