The Art Oasis exhibit, A Green Vision, opened yesterday. Elizabeth co-curated the show along with Beth Carruthers, an artist from Vancouver. It is a great show with a lot of interesting work and it is receiving excellent reviews so far. We’ll continue to bring updates on the show, with a focus on the piece that Elizabeth and I created for the residence, The Ibn Al Haytham Pavilion for Mushrif Park.
Gita Meh – Simorgh: To Think Locally is to Act Globally
Anupama Jain – Untitled
Michael Bray – The Tipping Point Duet
Michael Bray – Deserted Hare
Nividet Saha – First Entry Series 1
Jala Abuthina – New Surroundings
Ozant Kamaci – Pause Series
Mohammed Buleiyah – untitled
Rebecca Rendell – Anian Dau and Anian Tri
Zain Mustafa – Carousel
Abdul Rahim Salim – Tyre Landscape
Noora Dakhan – Foog o Tahat
Rob and Elizabeth win an award for their piece
Sarah Lahti (not in picture) – Relocated Elements of the Crazy/Happy Scientist
Installation being used by crazy/happy kids as intended.
(left to right) Nerissa + Nick, Elizabeth, Beth, and Hetal
After Party!
This is for Mom
Rob instigating silly games.
Ibn Al Haytham Pavilion for Mushrif Park
cross-posted at bLAGI
Concentrated photovoltaic (CPV or HCPV) technology concentrates sunlight through a lens onto a high performance solar cell, thus increasing the electricity generated over conventional PV panels. Typical photovoltaic panels only convert about 10 to 15 percent of incoming light into energy. CPV cells utilize multijunction photovoltaics which can reach efficiencies of 40 percent. Typically the CPV solar cell lies directly beneath the fresnel lens or parabolic mirror concentrator.
In the Ibn Al-Haytham Pavilion, this type of system is modified to create beams of vertical light with the power of 800 suns by concentrating sunlight through fresnel lenses at the roof. These beams are then re-concentrated at the raised floor level by a second fresnel lens field and onto the CPV cells which are arrayed in a naturally cooled plenum space at ground level.
The beams are set against an interior of mirrored walls to increase the effect of the visual field. The relative darkness of the room that houses the beam field insures that the beams are clearly visible inside it. The beams themselves change position as the heliostatic dual-axis hinges follow the exact location of the sun. This ever-changing composition is visible in two locations: the horizontal viewing aperture at the North elevation, and from within the camera obscura room on the South side of the pavilion.
View as seen from the North viewing aperture. The aperture itself is completely open with the concrete shell creating a cantilevered structure with steel reinforcing. Since each beam has the real ability to set fire to anything combustible in its path, the inside of the aperture has protective glass.
The first camera obscura was built by Arab scientist Abu Ali Al-Hasan Ibn Al-Haytham, born in Basra (965-1039 CE), who carried out practical experiments on optics in his “Book of Optics”. In his experiments, Ibn Al-Haytham used the term Al-Bayt al-Muthlim, translated in English as dark room. In the experiment he undertook in order to establish that light travels in time and with speed, he wrote: “If the hole was covered with a curtain and the curtain was taken off, the light traveling from the hole to the opposite wall will consume time.” He reiterated the same experience when he established that light travels in straight lines. A revealing experiment introduced the camera obscura in studies of the half-moon shape of the sun’s image during eclipses which he observed on the wall opposite a small hole made in the window shutters. In his famous essay “On the Form of the Eclipse” (“Maqalah-fi-Surat-al-Kosuf”) he commented on his observation: “The image of the sun at the time of the eclipse, unless it is total, demonstrates that when its light passes through a narrow, round hole and is cast on a plane opposite to the hole it takes on the form of a moon-sickle.”
Estimated (and perhaps optimistic) statistics:
> Area of lens field: 576 square meters
> Assumed operating efficiency of system: 15%-30% (40% cell efficiency – loss from lenses, angle obstructions, and heliostatic tracking)
> Resulting peak energy capacity: 86 KW – 172 KW
> Typical output per day: 1200 KWH
> Typical output per year: 400 MWH
> Cost per MWH: AED 300
> Cost savings generated per year: AED 120,000
> Construction cost: AED 4,000,000
> Payback: approx. 30yrs (cultural payback hopefully sooner than that)
Entrance to the camera obscura room from the South Elevation
Cairo #1 (preview)
Went to Cairo for a meeting. A quick overnight at the Four Seasons. Since it was such a quick visit, many of the shots are taken from the car window. Beth and I plan on going back for a short week in early July, so we’ll get some more quality time in with the city.
Mushrif Park
Downtown Dubai from Nad Al Sheba
bLAGI
Our blog site is up at The Land Art Generator Initiative site. It’s called bLAGI. Get it?
It will be the go-to site for the design competition(s) that we would like to have in the future. But it will immediately act as the site for our posts that pertain to art, clean energy, science, and the environment.
Deconstruction near Jumeirah Beach Residences
Doha, Qatar
I went to Doha for business on Monday. Didn’t get to take too many photographs since I flew back the same day.
The new convention center under construction.
Main Post Office
Taste of Home
Perfection!