The best light installations and LED installations. Light sculptures in the form of prisms in Montreal

25.02.2019

Without the installations of the Sila Sveta studio, it is difficult to imagine not only the nightlife, but the general cultural life of Moscow: large-scale parties of the Arma17 promo group, the Outline festival, mapping on the building Bolshoi Theater, the main building of Moscow State University, the arch of Gorky Park and everywhere else. These same people are the authors of the permanent installation in Central Museum WWII and light show for Polina Gagarina at Eurovision. Not so long ago, the company opened an office in Los Angeles, and with it there was participation in the America's show. Got Talent and the Coachella festival. One of the founders of the studio, Alexander Us, spoke about the history of the "Power of Light", the role of the "Russian rave" in its fate, classics, rock and his best installations.

How did you get into business

I never thought I'd be fascinated by light. I was a journalist: I wrote about cars and drove them. In parallel with this, he dreamed of making a movie and came up with various scenarios for himself. At one of the parties in 2005, I met businessman Dima Antonov. He brought the first lighting device to Moscow - a giant slide projector. On that fateful evening, when I saw a huge projection on the house, I was stunned by its capabilities and capacities. We sold them for 700 thousand rubles.

I came up with the name Sila Sveta, which seemed very artsy to me at the time, but we were sure that we needed a catchy phrase.

Director Lev Levinson found us and taught us how to make a show. When we had 14 devices, I came up with the name "Sila Svetaa", which seemed very pretentious to me then, but we were sure that we needed a catchy phrase. At first it seemed to me that soon all this would collapse at some point. Doubts were fueled by people from the industry with the words "yes, your mapping is a story for a maximum of a year." Very important event for Sila Sveta was the appearance of a partner in the person of Alexei Rozov. He is responsible for production and finance. Nine years have passed, and we continue to grow and develop, and it seems that this is for a long time. The main thing is to ask yourself more often why you are doing all this. If the answer is “money”, then you are in trouble. Here about something else.

About the first projects

Our first project - in 2008 we lit up the Ostankino television tower. The crisis began, there were no orders. I dropped everything and went to India, where my child was born. Then came City Day in Moscow. We again ordered a projection on Ostankino tower and more on Poklonnaya Hill. I returned to Moscow, we reanimated all the projectors, distributed debts for the fee and earned money for new equipment. And the festival "Circle of Light" has come.

We hired two video designers and made Rapping Mapping, for which we received the Grand Prix. The arena was talking about himself in the voice of Vladi from Caste - the house was rapping. And after that, orders went well.

Also a very important event was the fact that the “Power of Light” had a partner Alexei Rozov. He is currently in charge of production and finance.

The second powerful step was the collaboration with Stereotactic. We did a Christmas tree mapping at Arma in 2011 and it worked really well.

9 years have passed, and we continue to grow and develop, and it looks like it will be for a long time

How much does it cost

If you want to do an installation, you need to make friends in the lighting and rental business. If you have shown your creativity to the distributors who have the equipment, they will give it to you. If you go head-on, it is very expensive. What we are doing at Outline, at Arma, in the forehead, according to the estimates of the Force of Light, would sometimes cost tens of millions of rubles. We did it for other amounts.

About the technotheater and the cancellation of Outline

The choreographer Oleg Glushkov had a project on the theme of dances and puppets. I offered to place a huge puppet on the main dance floor of the failed Outline festival, he agreed to choreograph it. I have long wanted to make a technotheatre, so that there is a stage, actors. For a very long time they chose what kind of puppet should be. different ideas were, but we wanted to take a blank so that it would not take on anything except the form. Then they began to study puppetry. It turned out to be a separate world - how to make everything move, they began to study the mechanisms.

I remember I did not believe in the cancellation of the festival. I was at home then, went to the site, climbed over the fence past the police to get there.

We wanted her to go to the dance floor, but it turned out to be too expensive. I remember I did not believe in the cancellation of the festival. I was at home then, went to the site, climbed over the fence past the police to get there. The guys and I locked ourselves in the hangar and filmed a reporting video. This was the most important thing for us at that time - the opportunity to capture. We launched the entire installation while the police walked around the plant.

How installations are made

About the closure of "Arma" Abel (co-founder of Arma17 Natasha Abel. - Approx. ed.) told me six months before and asked me to come up with an installation. We started thinking about the image. We decided that "Arma" is made by people, so we need to hang a huge head. I really like the movie "Metropolis" in 1927. There was a metal female robot whose head we took as a prototype. Some kind of androgyne - either a woman, or a man, or a robot, or not. I decided that the object should be huge, five meters, so that the audience was amazed.

After we did everything, the technical director of Arma told me: “Sanya, you missed, I don’t understand how to insert it here, it’s too big.” And we spent a lot of money. I come, we somehow stuff it. Our engineer was afraid that the head would fall off. He was paranoid and had to be sent home. He, of course, could not sleep, called constantly. We answered: "Everything is fine, the head is in place."

Initially, however, there was a different concept. I wanted to completely destroy the wall at the back, on the back of the Arma, build a fake one and slowly destroy it during the party so that the light begins to seep into it. What was needed was the effect of gradual destruction and the end of the world. We were not allowed, and we began to think about what image is better to do.

About "Mumiy Troll" and Bekmambetov

I always want to work on a large scale, it doesn't work in clubs. Now we are doing a concert with the Mumiy Troll group, and this is an outlet. It turned out to be a strange chain of connections with him. I have a friend Yura Kolokolnikov, an actor. As a person who talks about what he loves, he talked about Sila Sveta in a movie crowd. This, in my opinion, reached Bekmambetov, and he already advised us to Lagutenko. Ilya divided his album "Morskaya" into three parts according to semantic blocks that are completely unknown to me. We wanted this scene to look three times different. You come to a concert, first you look at one thing, then with the help of kinetics or light you have a different picture, then - one - a third. But still, the main object was the circle as a symbol of the East and the album cover. And also a circle - such a shape that you can write into it - will look good.

About the tasks of the director

First, you need to come up with main idea, as well as imagine how the show will look and work. Further, do not succumb to provocations and carry the original idea to the end. Already during the work, my task as a director is to connect everything together. You, as a conductor, control each of the services: lighting, video, actors or musicians, depending on the task. It is dangerous to go to meetings all the time. You become a manager, and it annoys me, you can get a lot of orders, and then your creative part of the brain turns off. I feel it from time to time. Creativity is a muscle that needs to be trained, which is why, of course, I like doing projects with my hands more. You start working with the material, you become a practitioner.

For the most part, we are artisans, we just found the formula of beauty over time and work on it. But when we work in clubs and festivals, we get our artist. It's always an experiment where the ending is unknown.

About the time of implementation of the idea

An idea can be formed within six months. Sometimes it happens quickly, but sometimes it takes time for it to mature. The installations in Armagh took three months to mature. With "Mumiy Troll" it turned out differently: I have a notebook with ideas, which I use if possible. So, I have long wanted to work with the projection circle. When you already create directly, things go faster. You have bones, you need them to be overgrown with meat. Accordingly, the painting of the pictures themselves and the creation of images takes about a month of time. The third stage is production, when designers draw all the details and bring the whole project to the end. It all depends on the size of the show, but if it's an hour-long concert, it takes a month and a half. As a result - from three months to six months, but it is stretched in time.

Programs you need to know

If you're an orchestra man, you need to know Adobe Illustrator or Photoshop, where the first sketches are created. Then you need to master the 3D package, the most advanced graphics program- Houdini. Must be able to model and animate. Plus Adobe After Effects, in which you do coloring.

In addition, one must be able to use mapping programs.

On the facade of the hotel "Ukraine" in honor of its 60th anniversary, we used 80 projectors. They need to be placed correctly, to know the lenses, to calculate the brightness using measuring instruments. All this can be done in the program, and then physically. But this may not be enough, you need to know the light control panel with which you program the light.

It is dangerous to go to meetings all the time. You become a manager, and it annoys me, you can get a lot of orders, and then your creative part of the brain turns off

About required skills

Designers come into this art direction and make mistakes. In our business, we need to think not with a screen, but with volume, take into account everything, including the weather and the mood of the public. In addition to graphics, it is important to understand the matter of the show. You can screw up 3D graphics as much as you like, but the effect is zero. You need to have directing and theatrical skills.

About the cost and features of the site

If you want to do an installation, you need to make friends in the lighting and rental business. If you have shown your creativity to the distributors who have the equipment, they will give it to you. If you go head-on, it is very expensive. What we do at Outline, at Arma, according to Sila Sveta's estimates, would sometimes cost tens of millions of rubles. We did it for other amounts.

Due to the fact that each site is different (and this is one of the features of this business), it is impossible to create a price list, develop a ready-made scheme. Each site has its own characteristics, ranging from the place to the materials of the house.

Nowadays, no one will be surprised that LED bulbs can be used not only to illuminate rooms, but also to create amazing light sculptures. But to see one of these installations with your own eyes is like magic. We invite you to immediately plunge into the world of light and art and look at interesting light sculptures created by contemporary artists over the past few years.

LED flower field in Australia

The author who created such an amazing LED show under open sky, became a famous British contemporary artist named Bruce Munro. The light installation was opened in April 2016, its location was national park Australia.

Next to one of the rocks in the park, Bruce took up an entire field, which was filled with light sculptures in the form of flowers. These flowers are made of LEDs, during the daytime they are charged with sunlight This is what makes them glow in the dark.

3D light installation in Hong Kong

LED light installation artist Jim Campbell staged one in Hong Kong in 2014. In a week Town Square Edinburgh Place was lit with a grid of over 1,500 LED flickering lights, creating a unique fairy-tale atmosphere in the city.

The length of this structure was about five meters. If you look at the grid from afar, you could notice interesting lighting effects: the flickering of the bulbs did not occur randomly, but according to a certain pattern - the extinguished lights formed dark silhouettes of passers-by hurrying past. The flickering of light bulbs was controlled using a computer program.

Giant light bulbs in Lyon

Light installations became a feature of 2014 - one more of them took place in December in Lyon, France. The installation was accompanied by a bright and large-scale light show. Nine huge light bulbs the size of a large car were installed on a patch of grounds that resembled a football field in size.

light sculptures styled not like more modern fluorescent and LED bulbs, but like incandescent bulbs. The main theme of the installation is the relationship between man and electricity.

Light sculptures in the form of prisms in Montreal

In late 2014, Toronto-based design studio RAW staged an installation in Montreal of fifty rotating two-meter glass prisms. Colored lighting effects on the prisms were made using built-in light projectors that illuminated each prism: the walls of the prisms, in turn, were covered with a special film that reflected the visible radiation of the spectrum.

This light installation attracted the attention of both adults and children - they especially liked to rotate the light sculptures, which, when unwound, rang a bell.

UK plastic bag Christmas tree

On the one hand, Christmas is a wonderful and bright time that is pleasant to spend with those closest to you, and on the other hand, the entire holiday season is shrouded in huge spending and consumerism. The art collective "Luzinterruptus" from Madrid in 2013 decided to draw attention to Christmas shopaholism with the help of a English city Durham "Consumer Christmas Tree" - a cone-shaped light sculpture constructed from thousands of colored plastic bags. It would seem that even a masterpiece can be made from garbage!

In just one week, volunteers helped assemble the giant conical structure and set up the lighting for the Christmas tree. The same bags were used to decorate the Christmas lights strung between the houses. The period of construction of the tree coincided with the strike of workers of garbage companies in Madrid, so the artists presented the tree as a symbol of solidarity with the workers.

led star in malaysia

In 2015, Malaysian artist Zhong Hao Ong installed a light sculpture in the form of a giant ten-pointed star in one of the unfinished buildings in the city of Butterworth. The light figure is designed in such a way that its rays occupy four floors of the building, as if piercing it through and through. The Zvezda art installation consists of steel cables and five hundred meters of LED strip.

Once Butterworth was one of the richest ports in the country. Now they produce the components required to create LED light bulbs, so Zhong Hao Ong considers his installation symbolic for the city, opening a glimpse of a new future.

Glowing mangrove forest in Sydney

In 2015, students and staff from the Abidian School of Architecture at Bond University in Australia created this stunningly beautiful light installation that looks like a bioluminescent mangrove forest. This art installation is reminiscent of the fairy-tale nature of the moon Pandora from famous movie Avatar by James Cameron.

These light sculptures follow the shape of the Australian mangrove forests with their spreading branches and overgrown roots, creating a fascinating environment for adults and children to watch the color of the LED "trees" change. The light sculptures were highly appreciated by the public - over 50,000 people came to watch the light show on the opening night.

Solar powered light sculptures in Portland

In Portland, Oregon, an art installation was staged in 2013, designed to provide people with a distraction from pressing issues - such was the idea, according to artist Dan Corson.

The light sculptures in the open air in this installation are reminiscent of pitcher plants - bizarrely shaped tropical insectivorous plants with long stems and a "jug" at the end. Light figures reach as much as five meters in height. The basis of each sculpture is a steel frame with LEDs. The shape of each "flower" is fiberglass, each of them is highlighted in a different color. But the most interesting thing is that the energy of the LEDs does not come from electrical power, but from solar panels.

Thousands of glowing roses in Hong Kong

Many light installations are based on such beautiful and safe objects as flowers - this light show in Hong Kong was no exception. The scale of the installation is amazing - 25,000 LED roses were “planted” in the city park in winter. These light sculptures were placed contemporary artist Jang Yong Jin from creative team pancom.

This light show called "Light Rose Garden" was timed to coincide with the holiday of all lovers - Valentine's Day.

Huge Illumination Park in Dubai

The Dubai Garden Glow Illumination Park in Dubai, UAE is a light show that can be seen all year round. There you can see a variety of light installations and the lighting effects used in them. The park opened at the end of 2015 and is one of the largest illuminated parks in the world - an application has already been submitted to the Guinness Book of Records for this.

The light sculptures in this park represent animals and vegetable world: is there and fairy trees, and flowers, elephants, pandas, swans, giraffes, even dinosaurs. It is noteworthy that all these sculptures are made from recycled material, and only energy-saving light bulbs are used that create a bright neon light.

If art, locked in the walls of the museum, always has its place, then the installations on fresh air truly inspiring, giving viewers a wider viewing angle. Usually, these 3D works are assigned to a certain place, which means that they were created for this particular place. Today we offer you ten best examples similar installations.

(Total 10 photos)

1. A cathedral of 55,000 LED bulbs.

During the Light Festival in Ghent, Belgium this year, a magnificent project of 55,000 LED lights was created. The flamboyant cathedral invited viewers to walk through its 27-meter-long entrance to a fabulous gallery filled with light and color. This amazing work, done in a mixed Romanesque-Renaissance style, is one of those installations that you need to see with your own eyes to believe in their existence.

2. Interactive electric cloud.

This large interactive installation called "The Cloud" was created by Canadian artist Caitling Brown. She lit up in September of this year at an exhibition in Calgary. The "cloud" is made from over 5,000 light bulbs, fluorescent bulbs and strings that can be pulled. Visitors could walk "in the rain" of ropes by turning the lights on and off. This gave a funny illusion that lightning was passing through the cloud.

3. A cloud of 10,000 Swarovski crystals.

Using 10,000 Swarovski crystals and wire, artists Andy Kao and Xavier Perrault collaborated with J.P. Pollom created a beautiful cloud at Arbor Terrace in Georgetown, Washington. And under the cloud there was a pond, in clear waters which reflected thousands of crystals.

4. Interactive huge red heart.

If suddenly on Valentine's Day this year you found yourself in Times Square in New York, you must have seen this 3-meter red heart. It was created by Danish architecture firm BIG using 400 clear LED acrylic tubes that pulsed bright red when nearby people touched each other. How? As people gathered in the square, their footsteps gathered like energy being turned into light. Thus, the crowd made the heart burn brighter and brighter. Love each other!

5. Canopy of colorful umbrellas.

As part of the Aguitagueda art festival this July, two streets in Portugal were decorated with beautiful colorful umbrellas. And they not only saved those who were below from the sun, but seemed to be something magical, hanging in the air on "invisible" wires.

7. Horses in the river.

These sculptures were created by Richard Morse. His installation features life-size horse sculptures made from dead horses. apple trees, and installed in the Grand River. This installation symbolizes the struggle and preservation that we all have to go through during difficult situations.

7. Lighted sheets of paper in the wind.

London-based designer Paul Cocksage has created an amazing installation that looks like sheets of paper blown by the wind. He created this masterpiece for the Festival of Lights in Lyon, France. The installation appeared in the courtyard of the Hotel de Ville in Lyon. Its length was 25 meters, and it consisted of luminous electric bulbs. Each of these "sheets" was sculpted by hand in London and then assembled on site.

8. 100,000 lights in the Tokyo River.

As part of the Tokyo Hotaru Festival, which took place in May this year, an amazing light installation of 100,000 LEDs “spilled” through the center of Tokyo. The lights were called "stars for prayer", they resembled fireflies, which are so loved and revered by the Japanese. The LED bulbs were made by Panasonic, and they lit up on contact with water.

9. A river of 10,000 illuminated books.

During the Winter Light Festival in Melbourne, Australia, this installation appeared in the form of 10,000 scattered books with light bulbs attached to them. Passers-by were even allowed to take books with them at the end of the festival.

10. 90,000 plastic grapes.

Canadian architects and designers from Claude Cormier + Associes Inc. paid tribute to the art of Monet, the father of impressionism. They collected 90,000 plastic balloons over the passage to the City Hall. These balls of five different colors visibly cheered up and resembled colorful grapes.

British artist Bruce Munro, born in 1959, studied at the Royal Western Academy, Bristol Polytechnic.
The "horse" of the designer is landscape lighting. Using acrylic tubes with decorative tips and optical fiber, Bruce achieves fantastic effects.

Munro's portfolio includes original lighting fixtures, projects for lighting private gardens and city streets, and much more. And from time to time, his ideas turn into large-scale and spectacular installations, which brought the designer well-deserved fame.

One of the studio's most high-profile projects is the Field of Light installation as part of the Eden Project in Cornwall, England. The installation was installed on a grassy roof exhibition center and consisted of 6,000 acrylic tubes topped with glass sphere tips containing optical fibers.

Munro and five of his assistants created the work within three days. The installation is illuminated by eleven spotlights; in the stems, by themselves, there is no electricity. The area covered with luminous grass is 60x20 meters, 24,000 meters of optical cable were used.


Munro's luminous masterpiece was inspired by a journey through the red desert in Australia. Driving along the Stewart Highway, he stopped nightly at roadside campuses, which often provided a very contrasting view of the surrounding bare desert: oases of greenery embodied in living sculptures of surreal design and proportion.

Munro was amazed by the natural processes in the desert: the bare scorched earth came to life and blossomed after the rain. He made a series of sketches and kept them from his college days.

The Field of Light is a stranger, a stranger in the natural world. Like seeds thrown on a deserted land that wait for rain to come to life, the optic stalks wait for darkness and, together with the kindling stars, come to life and shine, corresponding to the smooth rhythms of the night.

The Light Shower Project at Salisbury Cathedral is a gigantic 2000 piece lamp. fiber optic cable of different lengths, illuminated by powerful spotlights.

In old English Salisbury, the desire to keep up with the times led to the appearance of another very unusual installation on the territory of the old cathedral:


Water-Towers / Water towers are assembled from 15,000 plastic bottles filled with water, through which 69 kilometers of fiber optic cable are passed. Their shape resembles water towers, which explains the name of the project. The fiber optics are illuminated with LEDs that change color to the music, making the columns of water appear to be dancing in the dark.

The main idea of ​​the installation is Divine Light, joy, illumination. "Illumination" is the key word in this project.

Bruce Monroe: "I'm primarily interested in light! And how people react to it different materials. For my project, I was looking for a cheap, malleable, and, most importantly, affordable material. And it dawned on me - it's a bottle."


The rector of the cathedral thought that the installation would be made of glass. And when I found out that they would bring plastic bottles, had to convene a church council.

Mark Boni, pastor: "I won't explain anything! I say - go and see for yourself. Paintings and sculptures are created for us to look and think. Art begins where it is difficult to find words."


In a few days they got used to the "Water Towers". In the evenings, photographers and couples in love gather near them. The city has a new attraction.

CD Sea / Sea from CDs.

Bruce Munro, with the help of the British press and BBC Wiltshire radio, asked readers and listeners to send him unnecessary CDs. People did not remain indifferent, and not only the British, but also residents of other states, and after a while, through the efforts of Bruce, another sea appeared in Britain - laid out from CDs on the grass.

On June 19-20, 2010, Bruce Munro, as well as 140 of his friends, acquaintances and colleagues, started creating the installation. In a field near the village of Kilmington, a patch of grass was mowed down and the discs were laid out in the resulting clearing. The result was an amazing "inland" sea, consisting of 600 thousand CDs), reflecting the sun and Moonlight like little mirrors.

Bruce Munro was inspired to create such an installation by the experiences he received on the seashore in Australia thirty years ago. “The light was so strong that the water seemed to glow with silver. And it suddenly seemed to me that if I put my hand in the sea, it would somehow connect me to my house in Salcombe, where my father lived ... I left the beach at a very good mood", - says the author. On that day, the boy realized for the first time that such a familiar phenomenon as light can affect emotional condition person. The "CD Sea" installation was a recreation of that moment that, as it turned out later, affected the entire later life Bruce Munro.


The installation lasted about two months, after which all the discs were collected and sent to a processing plant.

Longwood Gardens - Longwood Gardens -
called the American answer to the famous gardens of Europe and recognized as an example of a harmonious combination of gardening, architecture, music and theater
Bruce Munro has been invited to create a large-scale exhibition LIGHT!, which will open in the summer of 2012. For the designer, this will be the first light installation in North America. The organizers promise an unforgettable spectacle.


It is assumed that the project LIGHT! will include seven huge light installations on open areas, two - in the premises of the Conservatory with an area of ​​​​16 thousand square meters, as well as a small exhibition of artfully illuminated sculptures.
Glowing balls made of blown glass and plastic will be interconnected by an electrical "root system" and arranged in a large open area.

1. Clusters with 90,000 colorful plastic "grapes"

The installation, created by Canadian architects and designers from Claude Cormier + Associes Inc., is dedicated to the father of impressionism, the great Monet. Peculiar bunches of grapes of five different colors, which adorned the passage to the city hall, significantly improved the mood of the townspeople passing through it.

2. "River flowing" illuminated books


This installation of 10,000 books, illuminated by light bulbs attached to them, could be seen during the days of the Light in Winter festival, held in Melbourne (Australia) this "winter" - from June 1st to July 1st. At the end of the festival, guests of the event were allowed to take their favorite books with them.

3. Glowing Sumida River in Tokyo


On May 5th this year, Tokyo hosted the two-day Hotaru Festival, in honor of which 100,000 LED blue balloons were floated down the Sumida River, which flows through the city center. The light installation was called "Stars for Prayer", and the balls themselves personified fireflies, beloved and revered by the Japanese. The LED bulbs, according to the Panasonic company that provided them, were fully charged with sunlight and large enough to prevent fish from swallowing them.

4. Glowing leaves flying in the wind


This amazing installation was created by London-based designer Paul Cocksage for the 2011 Lyon Festival of Lights, France. A light composition 25 meters long adorned the courtyard of the "De Ville" hotel.

5. Horses running down the river


Life-sized sculptures of horses made from dead apple trees, created by Richard Morse and installed in the Grand River. According to the author, she personifies the struggle and preservation that should accompany us when we experience difficult life situations.

6. Multi-colored "umbrella" canopy


Art festival "Aguitagueda" this summer graced the streets of Portugal. Two of them were decorated with multi-colored canopies of colorful umbrellas, which not only created a feeling of magic, floating in the air on invisible wires, but also hid residents and guests of the city from the hot sun.

7. Interactive heart of all lovers


This 3-meter light installation could be seen on February 14 in New York at Times Square. The huge red heart was created by Danish architecture firm BIG using 400 LED clear acrylic tubes. As soon as the people standing nearby touched each other, the tubes began to pulse with a scarlet-red light. The fact is that as people gathered in the square, their steps gathered into energy, which turned into light. So people helped the heart to burn brighter and brighter. How else can one interpret such an installation on such a holiday? - Love to all!

8. Dream cloud from Swarovski


This delightful cloud of 10,000 Swarovski crystals held together by fine wire mesh was created by landscape designers Andy Kao and Xavier Perrault in collaboration with JP Poll of Bodega Architecture. The cloud graced the Arbor Terrace in Georgetown (Washington, USA).

9. Interactive "Cloud"


An installation under this title, created by Canadian artist Caitling Brown, was shown for one day this September at the Nuit Blanche festival in Calgary. To create the "Cloud" it took more than 6,000 light bulbs - new and burned-out incandescent bulbs, as well as fluorescent bulbs - and ropes that could be pulled, turning on one or another light bulb. Anyone could "get caught in the rain" from the ropes, thereby creating the illusion that lightning was sparkling in the cloud.

10. LED Cathedral


This magnificent light installation of 55,000 LED bulbs was created for the Light Festival in Ghent (Belgium). Magical lights at the entrance to the cathedral invited you to stroll along the 27-meter gallery, fabulously flooded with light. This amazing installation, however, like all presented here, must be seen at least once to believe that such beauty exists.



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