INSTALLATION 
Rome, Italy 
Bik Van der Pol
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Bik Van der Pol | 
The new installation by Bik Van der Pol – a house with hundreds of  butterflies inspired by 
Mies van der Rohe’s popular 
Farnsworth House –  is the work chosen to inaugurate the new wing of the MACRO museum.
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| Photo © Courtesy of Bik Van der Pol | 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Bik Van der Pol | 
Are you really sure that a floor can't also be a ceiling? won the fourth  edition of the 
Enel Contemporanea Award in March 2010, an invitational  award, sponsored by Enel, seven artists invited by prominent  representatives of international contemporary art, a prestigious jury in  charge of selecting the winning project. A Scientific Committee,  including curators and critics from all over the world, selected seven  internationally prominent artists to create a work of art that focuses  on energy in its different forms and modes. The winning project has been  awarded on the 9th of March 2010 by a Honor Committee of esteemed  representatives of the cultural field, who enriched 
Italian culture and  made it known on an international level. 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Bik Van der Pol | 
In this time of increasing globalization, not only economies, financial  markets, nations and people become more and more dynamically intertwined  with each other. Also the global ecological system, the biosphere,  integrating all living beings and their relationships and interactions  on our planet, is influenced by the continuous increase of human  activities. Slowly, the 
world population is starting to become aware of  their impact on their environment. The climate summits in Kyoto and  recently in Copenhagen, where all the world leaders gather to negotiate  possible solutions, are proof of that, though outcomes of these tops are  still uncertain. Is it enough, is it early enough, or is it already too  late?
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| Photo © Courtesy of Bik Van der Pol | 
In recent years, a significant loss of pollinators has been noticed. In  the case of bees, for example, whole colonies of bees leave their hives;  they go on the run, collapse and die, and these observed losses have  already significant economic impacts. Explanations for this decline  include increasing urbanization (causing a lack food and longer travel  times), use of pesticides, and climate change. Butterflies are  considered by scientists to be ‘
indicator species’ because they are  particularly sensitive to 
environmental degradation; their decline there  for serves as an ‘early warning’ on environmental conditions. 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Bik Van der Pol | 
With The Farnsworth house (1951), architect Mies van der Rohe emphasized  on the tight relationship between man and nature: "We should attempt to  bring nature, houses, and the human being to a higher unity". It is  considered one of the most radically minimalist houses ever designed.  Glass walls and open interior space are the features that create an  intense connection with the outdoor environment, while the exposed  structure provides a framework that reduces opaque exterior walls to a  minimum. Mies van der Rohe conceived the building as an indoor-outdoor  architectural shelter simultaneously independent of and intertwined with  the domain of nature. The Farnsworth House is located in the landscape,  parallel to a river, and has been carefully maintained and restored  throughout the years. In 1972, the house was restored to its original  state. The house was purposely built on poles: the architect calculated  the expected rise of the river, and made the elevation such that the  house would able to resist flooding. Still, the past decennia, several  floods heavily damaged the interior of the house, since waters have  risen above the raised level six times in 60 years, caused by increased  building in the surrounding area.
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| Photo © Courtesy of Bik Van der Pol | 
The concept of the butterfly effect is a term from chaos theory, to  describe the sensitive (inter) dependence of different tendencies on  initial conditions: how tiny variations can affect giant and complex  systems. The butterfly effect suggests that the flapping wings of a  butterfly represents a small change in the initial condition of the  system, causing a chain of events leading to large-scale alterations of  events. These small gestures eventually potentially would lead to  significant repercussions on wind and movements throughout the weather  systems of the world, and theoretically, could cause tornadoes around  the world. True or not, had the butterfly not flapped its wings, the  trajectory of the system might have been vastly different. Small actions  can certainly affect change in complex systems in unexpected and  unpredictable ways.
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| Photo © Courtesy of Bik Van der Pol | 
Liesbeth Bik and Jos van der Pol have been working collaboratively as  Bik Van der Pol since 1995. Their works invite the audience to think  about places, their architecture, their function and their history. They  explore the potential of art to produce and transmit knowledge, as well  as to create communicative situations. Recent projects and exhibitions  include Istanbul Biennial; Volksgarten, Kunsthaus Graz; Plug In, Van  AbbeMuseum, Eindhoven; Models For Tomorrow, European Kunsthalle,  Cologne; Moscow Biennale (2007); Fly Me To The Moon, Rijksmuseum,  Amsterdam; Naked Life, MOCA, Taipei (2006); Secession, Vienna; Cork  Caucus Cork (2005); Nomads in Residence, a mobile workspace for artists,  Utrecht (2003, with Korteknie/Stuhlmacher architects). Part of their  practice includes publishing books, such as for example Catching Some  Air (2002), With Love From The Kitchen (2005), the ongoing series Past  Imperfect (2005, 2007), Fly Me To The Moon (2006) and The Lost Moment  (2007).
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| Photo © Courtesy of Bik Van der Pol | 
The people
Artist: Bik Van der Pol
Location: Rome, Italy
Creative Fields: INSTALLATION
Photographs: Courtesy of Bik Van der Pol