

45-calibre revolver that carried gold dum-dum bullets with silver jackets. Olafur Eliasson: Experience is published by Phaidon on 15 October.In Ian Fleming's novel, the golden gun is a gold-plated. Olafur Eliasson will be at the Southbank Centre as part of London Literature Festival on 26 October. But the people being there is what made it work so well.
Solar fire gold display comments install#
When you install something like this, you don’t think about big crowds being there – or at least we didn’t back then. It completely changed the way you saw the space and helped connect everything together. As you walked in you saw them reflected in the ceiling. There were already visitors there when we arrived to see it on opening day. We pre-mounted about 20 panels on the floor that then had to be lifted up with this kind of spider’s web construction and combined together. In the end, the mirror manufacturers, along with our team, joined forces and we did it ourselves. None of the established companies who normally do this kind of work were crazy enough to go for it. We couldn’t find anyone willing to install the mirrors. The reflection had to be perfect so that people could still recognise themselves with the mirrors 25m in the air. But we found this German company that made very delicate, thin aluminium mirrors with incredible reflective quality. I thought the idea of 4,000 sq m of mirrored ceiling was impossible. Putting a mirror on the ceiling did the opposite – it doubled this huge space. Normally, the way to make a large space accessible to humans is to divide it up into smaller parts. but in such a large space you really have to focus on one thing so we went with the sun. At first we’d experimented with all kinds of weather: rain, snow, wind.

This was the first large-scale project that I’d help realise for Olafur. High culture … the mirrored ceiling was 25m up. It was just a mirror and a half circle of light! The lights were maybe not as strong as we’d wished for, and the bridge in the middle of the Turbine Hall, which separates the space in two parts, was a problem – we were afraid that as you entered, the work would not be strongly expressed. I did not feel secure about the project when it opened, and neither did Olafur. Then they introduced their 10-year-old daughter: “And this is Tate.” Sebastian Behmann, head of design at Studio Olafur Eliasson When I was at the Venice Biennale last year a Bulgarian couple who were both architects told me how they’d been to see it in London and it inspired them. But – 15 years later – I still hear about the effect it had on people. The Weather Project is currently in my basement, wrapped up in a few boxes. He’d do the forecast with my sun behind it and then at the end say: “And here at the Tate the sun is still shining.” Within a week, millions of people had seen the work on TV. We also had a BBC weatherman set up a little studio and do the forecast from the Tate every day for a week. I liked how the whole thing became about connecting your brain and your body. When President Bush visited London some people arranged themselves on the floor to spell “Bush go home” as a protest – to do that in reverse so it read in the mirror is actually pretty difficult. There were yoga classes that came, and weird poetry cults doing doomsday events. I pictured them looking up with their eyes, but they were lying down, rolling around and waving. What surprised me was how people became very physically explicit. Protesters at Tate Modern in November 2003. I took away everything – even the suggested donations box in the entrance! Have you any idea how much stuff there is on museum floors? Trash cans, coat hangers, signage … We had to clear it all out so people didn’t see it reflected in the mirrors. But there was a lot of work involved that you might not see. Technically it was not a very difficult project. Then I put in a little haze, a little fog, which helped take attention away from the hall’s rather robust walls. I was thinking of the way the sun sets against the sea, or the reflections in Edvard Munch’s paintings. We used a semicircle of light, reflected in a mirror. But I kept stripping away from this idea until all I had left was the idea of creating a sun.

At first I wanted to do a little display replicating all different kinds of weather. So when Nick Serota invited me to take over the Turbine Hall, my idea was to play with this. All countries talk about the weather, but the British really take ownership of it.
