Floating Black Balloons Explore Contradictions in Artist Tadao Cern’s Installations

All images © Tadao Cern, shared with permission

Artist Tadao Cern often considers dualities and contradictions—lightness and heaviness, minimal and intricate, inanimate and lively. He channels these relational tensions into “BB,” installations featuring black balloons that float in parallel planes and incline in rows. “These boundaries are a result of our own mental rule-making, and at the end, we surround ourselves with many limitations,” the artist shared with Colossal. “(The) notion of contradictions is nothing more but a man-made concept…A feeling of nothingness and absence of all the ideas became the objective for me.”

Based in Lithuania, Cern has brought the ephemeral project to Tokyo, Beijing, New York, Paris, Venice, and Cologne in recent years. At each site, the artist revives and replaces the balloons as they lose helium and shrink. Each time, he’s reminded of the same concept that he explains on Behance:

They represent nothing, a true emptiness. Which is felt every single time looking at the cloud of these black floating objects, eagerly waiting to be forced to react to our presence…react with no message, no notion. It’s just a dialog between us and them; here and now. Which will develop into a reminiscence of an idea once balloons will deflate and the work will become nonexistent again.

Cern releases prints of his work on Patreon, and you can dive further into his spatial projects on Instagram and Behance. (via This Isn’t Happiness)

 

Floating Black Balloons Explore Contradictions in Artist Tadao Cern’s Installations

Floating Black Balloons Explore Contradictions in Artist Tadao Cern’s Installations

Floating Black Balloons Explore Contradictions in Artist Tadao Cern’s Installations

Floating Black Balloons Explore Contradictions in Artist Tadao Cern’s Installations

Floating Black Balloons Explore Contradictions in Artist Tadao Cern’s Installations

Floating Black Balloons Explore Contradictions in Artist Tadao Cern’s Installations

©