Cloud Foam Landscape | Kohei Nawa

Cloud Foam Landscape, the Japanese artist Kohei Nawa has created a new spatial installation definig space with borders. It looks like a foam bath. Or another visual proposal could be a cloud foam landscape. Others could see it as a still sculpture of a flood. I’ll go more for the second proposal.

Courtesy of Kohei Nawa

Although you’ll be walking on the ground, you will feel the fluidity, the fragility and transparency that lies within the stiffness of the material used. When the sky meets the ground, that’s a proposal of what could happen. As if the structure is floating creating zones disregarding the human structure elements that are reduced in just walls, floor and ceiling.

Courtesy of Kohei Nawa

That’s a new type of space with a new spatial character. Creativity- Infinity ! I imagine if I went there, what would I want to experience, or see. Because of just looking to the pictures I feel myself in a whole different world of white and black, porous white and black. The great thing about this installation and about art in general is that each one of us would experience it in a different way because art can be seen with more than one eye, more than one perspective, more than one feeling.

Anastasia Andreieva
Anastasia Andreieva

Anastasia Andreieva is an accomplished Architectural Projects Editor at Arch2O, bringing a unique blend of linguistic expertise and design enthusiasm to the team. Born and raised in Ukraine, she holds a Master’s degree in Languages from Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. Her deep passion for architecture and visual storytelling led her to transition from translation and editorial roles into the world of design media. With a keen eye for conceptual clarity and narrative structure, Anastasia curates and presents global architectural projects with precision and flair. She is particularly drawn to parametric and digital design, cultural context, and emerging voices in architecture. When I’m not analyzing the latest architectural trends, you’ll probably find me searching for hidden gems in cityscapes or appreciating the beauty of well-crafted spaces. After all, great design—like great connections—can be found in the most unexpected places. Speaking of connections, because architecture isn’t the only thing that brings people together.

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