Installations

Large-scale immersive environments, geodesic domes, and geometric sculptures built for festivals, events, and public spaces.

The Space Dome

The Space Dome

A fully immersive projection dome experience.

The Space Dome is a covered geodesic sphere with a 360-degree projection-mapped interior. Fractals, geometric animations, and slow color fields cover every surface from floor to ceiling. Inside, there's a joystick connected to a custom video game where you fly through a solar system of glowing geometry and fractals. The game feeds into the main visuals, so what you're doing at the controls is part of what everyone else is seeing. You can play, or you can just find a spot on the ground and look up. It's one of the few places at a festival where people actually stop for a while.

Jungle Gym Dome

Jungle Gym Dome

Climbable geometry meets large-scale light art.

The Jungle Gym Dome is a climbable geodesic structure with hammocks strung through the interior and a ShadowCaster Lamp hanging at the center. Inside, people sit on the ground, settle into the hammocks, or find their way to the top where the view of the grounds is worth the climb. A good spot for a set, a sunrise, or a storm rolling in. It ends up being one of the natural gathering points wherever it's set up.

Hammock Domes

Hammock Domes

Relax inside a living, breathing light canopy.

The Hammock Domes are a covered geodesic structure set up as a place to rest and hang out. The interior usually has hammocks, rugs, and depending on the event, chairs. A ShadowCaster Lamp hangs at the center, low enough that people can reach it from a hammock or off the ground and set it moving. The cover is either a white canopy, which picks up the lamp's geometric shadow patterns clearly across the whole space, or colorful shade triangles that the light works nicely against. The setup shifts a little from event to event based on what's needed, but the idea is the same: somewhere comfortable to stop, with something interesting to look at overhead. People come in to nap or get out of the sun, stay because it's comfortable, and often end up in a conversation with whoever else settled in nearby.

The Obelisk

The Obelisk

A towering beacon of geometric light.

The Obelisk is a 17-foot internally lit geometric tower with a triangular base and a twist built into the structure about halfway up. It came out of thinking about what a giant ShadowCaster Lamp might look like, then taking that idea somewhere more architectural. A traditional obelisk is four-sided and straight. This one has three sides, rotates through the middle, and plays with how it reads depending on your angle. From some spots it looks completely symmetrical. From others it looks like it's leaning. It isn't. The structure is level; the geometry is just doing what geometry does when you start introducing twists and triangular faces. The panels carry two themes that run through a lot of Geovisual's work: time and secrets. Clocks, hourglasses, and infinity symbols sit alongside keys, locks, and coded imagery. There's enough going on in the surface detail to spend real time with it up close, and from a distance at night it glows as a single tall presence that's easy to spot from across a field. It's one of those pieces that shows you something different every time you come back to it from a new direction.

ShadowCaster Lamps

ShadowCaster Lamps

Hand-crafted geometric luminaires for any scale.

ShadowCaster Lamps are steel geometric light sculptures with patterns cut into the panels and color-changing LEDs inside. They're portable enough to go anywhere. Hung from a dome, a tree branch, or a building, or set up on a tripod out in the open, they work in almost any configuration. The light comes through the cut geometry and lands differently on every surface it hits, and the shadows shift whenever the lamp moves. People interact with them without being told to. They reach up and set them spinning, lay down with their heads underneath, or just sit near one on a tripod and watch the colors change. At festivals they have a way of expanding the usable space of an event, drawing people into corners or edges of the grounds that wouldn't otherwise have much going on. A well-placed lamp makes an area feel inhabited. A few of them together make a whole section of a site feel like its own destination.

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