FUTURE FLOWERS, OIKOS

MILAN ITALY

CONSTRUCTED OF ALUMINUM BLADES IN "LIBESKIND RED"

AERIAL VIEW

PROJECT TYPE

PUBLIC ART

FUTURE FLOWERS, OIKOS, MILAN ITALY

During Expo week 2015, Milan University’s Farmacia Courtyard was invaded by a matrix of red “blades” whose overlapping lines create the Future Flowers installation. Realized as an architectural emblem for a color palette series curated by Libeskind for the paint manufacturer Oikos, the aluminum blades – painted in a new color created by Oikos and dubbed “Libeskind Red” – form an array of intersecting semi-glossy planes in a complex, non-Euclidian pattern. Future Flowers brings an abstract, architectural paradigm to life—like a landscape of flowers of the future.

GROUND LEVEL VIEW

NON-EUCLIDIAN LINES CREATE AN UNFORESEEN MATRIX

Designed for Oikos

Contextual View

COURTYARD VIEW

EVOKES AN IMAGINARY BED OF RED FLOWERS IN A HYPOTHETICAL FUTURE

COURTYARD VIEW

GROUND LEVEL VIEW

Project by architect Daniel Libeskind in collaboration with Lev Libeskind and his studio Libeskind Design S.r.l.