Jigsaw Tower Installations

The Marble Curtain by Jeanne Gang is Made Out of 620 Slabs of Stone

The Marble Curtain is an art installation that looks like one gigantic jigsaw puzzle. That is because it is made up of giant puzzle-like pieces. Each piece in the Marble Curtain installation is carved out of a slab of stone using water-jet cutters. A total of 620 slabs were linked together just like a traditional puzzle.

Created by Studio Gang Architects, a design firm based in Chicago, and led by architect Jeanne Gang, the Marble Curtain installation measures an impressive 18 feet tall and weighs approximately 1,500 pounds. Initially installed in the Smithsonian Institution’s National Building Museum, Marble Curtain is self-supporting, requiring no frames. The makers state, "We chose to explore stone’s structural capacity and challenge conventional thinking about this age-old material by hanging it in tension from the museum’s vaulted ceiling."
Trend Themes
1. Jigsaw Tower Installations - The trend of creating large-scale installations made up of puzzle-like pieces, allowing for unique artistic expressions.
2. Water-jet Cutters - The trend of using water-jet cutters to carve slabs of stone for artistic installations, enabling precise and intricate designs.
3. Challenging Conventional Thinking - The trend of using unconventional materials or methods, such as hanging stone in tension from a vaulted ceiling, to create innovative and thought-provoking installations.
Industry Implications
1. Art and Design - The art and design industry can explore jigsaw tower installations as a way to push boundaries and create visually stunning artworks.
2. Stone and Marble - The stone and marble industry can capitalize on the trend of using water-jet cutters to offer unique carved stone products for various applications, including art installations.
3. Architectural Engineering - The architectural engineering industry can embrace the concept of challenging conventional thinking to create structurally innovative designs, such as hanging stone in tension for architectural installations.

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