A measurement of isolation
TEAM: Junchao Yang, China, Columbia University – Sen Zhang, China, Columbia University
A measurement of isolation.
“What is new, what is new.” Such is the question that Joe wonders when it turns to dusk. Sure, the all-time-favorite is charming, but he wants a little bit of more adventurous uncertainty, that he recalls from his very first visit to a dance place at age sixteen.
“The collective movement of the goofy dances shaped into a beast.” he thought, “hard to believe those people just meet for the first time two beers ago. Dancers were isolated in their own world. “Who was who, what was what, that was of no importance.”
The idea of a club in the size of a pocket interests him. It shall transform an everyday location into a place that feels new and old simultaneously. Let their surge be reminded by the glare of the rings, reflecting on the newly claimed territory enclaved by loss networks of the measuring tapes, marking the magnitude of crowd sizing.
So with a perturbed voice, he is ready. Open the tape to set a tempo. Wrap a gift and crowd shall follow. Share the rings, detach the moment. Claim the isolation from the acquaintance you know.