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Expo 2000 in Hanover Germany

Article published in Lighting and International September 2000
Pavilions at Expos try at out doing each other in terms of uniqueness. Most however, although having original interiors, are still buildings from the outside. That is, they have four walls and a roof. The Dutch Pavilion is different. The architect MVRDV of Rotterdam gave it no walls at all. The theme of it was that Holland Makes Space. Much of its land is reclaimed, a significant quantity of its food is grown under glass, it is an example of man working to control nature. It is not surprising then, that the cinema at the top, showing a surreal portrait of Holland, is itself sitting on an upper floor held up only by large trees (with no reinforcement) forming a woodland landscape. The level below comprised of giant pots, gives the impression that the roots of the trees are concealed inside.


The pots are in various sizes; twelve stretch from floor to ceiling whilst the other twenty five penetrate the ceiling at different heights, so that visitors can walk underneath them. A few pots have letter box shaped port holes cut in to them from which projected images emerge to form a surreal show.


Some of the interior spaces were designed by MET Studio of London. They chose Peter Phillipson of Future Group Lighting Design for the gobo and colour light effects on the "flower pots"and Graham English of McClean English (who also worked on the Health Pavilion) to interpret the concept brief in relation to the photographic projections. The photospheres of dutch landscapes and lifestyles included Hans van der Meer; Cary Markerink, Karel Tomei Gerald van der Kaap and Theo Baart.


The curved walls are illuminated by specially constructed diachronic filtered washlights creating hundreds of shades of colour. They are recessed into curved slots in the ceiling.


Text and lines are projected onto the pot surfaces by the use of Clay Paki Zoom 1200’s. These lights are intense, and show up in broad daylight, even in the late afternoon when the sun was low in the horizon. In addition, each light has a powerful zoom facility allowing the normal change in image size that occurs when panning across surfaces of increasing distance, to be modified. Peter explains, “The pots formed unusual projection surfaces being curved in one plane and tapered top to bottom. Grahams transparencies could be key stoned and cropped as they were fixed in position, but the gobos had to be programmed so that, during lulls in their movement,they were perfectly registered, ie aimed straight on, so that the letters looked undistorted. We tried a number of desks in order to accurately pin point the fixed part of each movement. We found that the Avolites Pearl was useful. It has 12 sub masters allowing the assignment of subparts of each sequence easier to edit. Unfortunately, it still uses a floppy disk drive for backing up.”


The result is unusual , it resembles the BBC tv web page advert with text moving left and right and up and down in an ordered fashion. “As the text gobos move around they need to be rotated to keep them horizontal”, Peter explains. “It would helpful if there was a definite zero position in the gobo holder with a location point on the gobo itself. If replacement was necessary the whole sequence would not need to be re-edited. In a club for example, if rotating text is used, its position at any given instant is not important, but now as subtle and repeatable use of moving text is becoming more common, it would good if future generations of moving lights were to include this feature.”
The sound was a mixture of conversations of dutch people mixed into a delicious cacophony by Tony Frossard of The Sound Experience using standard weatherproof speakers and amplifiers but crucially the mixing was done, live on site, via a 64 mult-track mixer running Ntrack software.


A review of the pavilion by BBC’s Radio 4 programme “You and Yours” described the Dutch Pavilion as “An absolute work of art” and “The best thing there”.


       


       


 

Earth Galleries Atrium
Natural History Museum London

       

1940s House
Imperial War Museum London

         


Whilst working with DHA, Peter Phillipson designed several aspects of the lighting for Neal Potter's Earth Galleries Atrium at the Natural History Museum (formally the Geology Museum). Six striking Icon figures welcome the visitors. They sit on internally lit glass semi-spheres, the Icon light from specially .

The barrel vaulted glass ceiling was of such architectural merit that it could not just be blacked out. Instead the light level was cut down greatly using techniques to attenuate the daylight but reflect its heat away into the sky.

The walls were made of Petrach and decorated with constellations and planets. Cut into these are 44 cases displaying rare examples of fossils and rocks. Some of these have been in the possession of the NHM for over 150 years but not shown until this project was completed. One factor in this was that the cases need only be cleaned by the curators of the exhibits. The lighting is provided by a bespoke fibre optic system which allows the lamps to be maintained by electricians outside of the cases. There is no security issue for lighting maintenance.

In the 1940's House, Alison Proctor has used theatre techniques to light the facades as if they were really outside. There is a contract to maintain the lighting so that this short to medium term exhibition keeps its original appearance.

 

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