Tuesday 24 September 2024
Font Size
   
Wednesday, 06 October 2010 13:00

Depicting the Day After Tomorrow — in Legos

Rate this item
(0 votes)

It’s the end. A lone human—survivor of an unknown calamity—and his robot assistant press on, making sure the processing facility keeps… processing. A tram runs, conveyor belts turn, and a toxic river flows. The landscape encroaches, held back by little more than an electric fence. The remains of a crashed vessel jut from the ground. Creatures have claimed it as a shelter and installed a machine that transforms noxious waste into water. A small fee buys one pot.

It’s a chilling

postapocalyptic vision—at least, as chilling as a postapocalyptic vision made from Legos can be. The giant diorama, titled Containment, was built by Tyler Clites and Nannan Zhang and unveiled at Brickworld in Chicago in June (you can catch it again at the next Brickworld).

Containment stretches more than 7 feet across, with flashing lights, speakers for music, and a working monorail. Many of the smaller vignettes are nods to other Lego architects and dioramas: The monkey with four hooked limbs, for example, is an homage to a sci-fi Lego construction called Omicron Weekend, and the figure chiseling at a rock sculpture is a tribute to Nate Nielson, a Lego builder who died last spring. The scene, Zhang says, is designed to leave us wondering what exactly is being contained—the isolated facility or the chaos outside. “That’s a question for us all to answer,” he says.

Authors: Justin McLachlan

to know more click here

French (Fr)English (United Kingdom)

Parmi nos clients

mobileporn