Sculptural Glass Objects

View More

Violet Frosted by Marius Boekhorst Refracts Flowers Through Tinted Glass

The Violet Frosted by Marius Boekhorst is a sculptural glass object designed to alter how floral arrangements are perceived through color, light, and distortion. The piece uses frosted violet glass combined with curved surfaces to shift how stems and petals appear from different viewing angles. When flowers are placed within the object, the material produces softened gradients and diffused outlines that change as light passes through. The composition appears fluid rather than fixed, depending on placement and perspective.

The dynamic art design relies on tinted glass and uneven contours to refract light and modify the visibility of forms inside the structure. Frosted sections obscure detail while clearer areas allow partial transparency, creating contrast across the arrangement. The rounded geometry also affects scale, making elements appear enlarged or compressed depending on positioning.

Trend Themes

  1. Chromatic Refractive Design — Integration of tinted, refractive materials into object design creates mutable color experiences that alter perceived form and mood across viewing angles.
  2. Perceptual Product Morphology — Objects that manipulate geometry and surface finish induce scale and shape illusions, prompting novel ways to present and reinterpret conventional items.
  3. Gradient Diffuse Materials — The use of frosted-to-clear gradients produces controlled visibility and softens detail, enabling products to balance mystery and partial disclosure.

Industry Implications

  1. High-end Floral Retail — Premium florists could offer vessel designs that transform arrangements into dynamic, changing compositions that extend display value and customer engagement.
  2. Luxury Tableware and Decor — Tabletop and decorative brands stand to reframe setting aesthetics by embedding refractive elements that shift perception of color, depth, and composition at the table.
  3. Architectural Glass and Facades — Building envelopes employing tinted, contoured glazing can modulate interior views, daylight quality, and perceived spatial dimensions in novel ways.

Related Ideas

Similar Ideas
VIEW FULL ARTICLE