Close your eyes and picture this:

A symphony of rustling leaves and silent creaking bamboo stalks surrounds you. A gentle breeze caresses your face as you take a deep breath which smells of damp forest and moss. The rays of the morning sun filter brightly through the softly swaying stalks, casting ever-changing shadows on the lush undergrowth. Coolness is deep within the bamboo grove.

Calmness, tranquility, zen-ness, serenity and peacefulness – these are the feelings associated with being in a bamboo grove, which is the therapeutic element I want to bring to the hospital.

I chose to depict the bamboo forest in a relatively abstract manner because:

1. I believe that the window art should set an immersive mood

– There are already enough distractions along the J-Walk
– Users are just buzzing through; seldom will they take the time to admire the art pieces

2. I thought that I could play with light

– Production of varying shades of green shadows which will mimic a forest undergrowth

As such, I came up with a few drafts using the traditional collaging method. And after some digital modifications, I shortlisted four of the designs but couldn’t decide on which to choose.

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So I sent them for test-prints to study the effect of light on each of them. I first printed on tracing paper (substitute for translucent decal) because I wanted to block out, as much as possible, the shadows of the rows of bars outside the windows. However, I found that it restricts too much light.

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I then tried it out on transparency. After which, I realized that there weren’t significant differences among the casted shadows and that is when I decided on submitting the last piece because unlike the others, it gives the most sense of depth.

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Bamboo is flexible – bending with the wind but never breaking, capable of adapting to any circumstance. It suggests resilience, that we have the ability to bounce back even from the most difficult times.

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As such, I feel that the spirit of a bamboo is a very apt for the hospital setting.

References

Description
Japanese Court Poetry by Robert H. Brower and Earl Roy Miner, Page 366