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Cummulus
Catenary Cloud
Museum of Contemporary Arts / Lelaboratoire

Denver, United States, 2010 / Paris, France, 2012

Architects: Ciro Najle, Anna Font
Collaborators: Martín Álvarez, Carolina Telo, Analía Hanono

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Cummulus is a cashmilon crochet membrane conceived as a multiplicity of catenary surfaces integrated in a cascade of iterations that escalate the subdivision of a flat sheet into a set of catenary patches according to the progression 0001-0002-0004-0008-0016-0064-0256-1024. The increase of points in the crochet breeds double curvatures and twists, against the grain of the harmonic form. The technique consists of local increments from one to two points at those instances where the curvature of the surface requires material. The increment of points generates the elongation of the lines and the control of curvature. The increment is proliferated, and the over elongation is used to lose control through the means that initially enable it, nurturing a consistent but paradoxical mechanism of expression through nonlinear behaviour. Cummulus integrates a spectrum of divergent sensorial reminiscences (oppression, weight, lightness, buoyancy) and figural resemblances (brains, storms, wombs, intestines, turbulences).

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