Gas sculpture
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gas sculpture is a proposal made by Joan MirĂ³ in his late writings to make sculpture out of gaseous materials.
There is an example of gas sculpture in the sculpture garden at the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra. A large bank of very small nozzles is arrayed on the edge of a small rush-filled pond, and when the power is switched on a fine mist of fog billows out. The 'sculpture' has a continuously changing shape as it is affected by the water, the rushes and the air-currents in the area.
Some kinetic sculptures contain gaseous elements, such as the fog nozzles of Jean-Paul Riopelle's La Joute, which also includes fire jets, a fountain, and bronze sculptural elements.
The idea of a gas sculpture also appeared in the book Gog, by Giovanni Papini (1881-1956).

