In an age where we are inundated with advertisements that distract us from what we are doing and where we are going, the “Non-Sign II” does the exact opposite by reminding us of our surroundings.
Lead Pencil Studio’s Daniel Mihalyo says, “Borrowing the effectiveness of billboards to redirect attention away from the landscape… this permanently open aperture between nations works to frame nothing more than a clear view of the changing atmospheric conditions beyond.”
Questioning consumer culture is a reoccurring theme of Lead Pencil Studio’s work. This stunning billboard gives us a break from constant images, colors, and words, and reintroduces us to the simple beauty of the environment.
Perhaps more surprising than the structure itself is that it was commissioned the federal government. This grand gesture is a step towards growing national interest in the environment, and even good taste in art!
+Lead Pencil Studio
Via Freshome
Images by Ian Gill courtesy of Lead Pencil Studio
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If you are driving through Washington state, a very strange billboard may catch your eye as you zip past on the highway. What you’re seeing is Lead Pencil Studio’s “Non-Sign II”, a roadside anti-advertisement that may at first appear to say nothing, but
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Built near the U.S. and Canadian border in Blaine, Washington, the massive structure is made of thousands of stainless steel rods.
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The rods have been said to resemble everything from hairpins, to a swarm of locusts, to television static.
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The tangled steel create a thick dark frame around an opening in the skyline.
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In an age where we are inundated with advertisements that distract us from what we are doing and where we are going, “Non-Sign II” does the exact opposite by reminding us of our surroundings.
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Lead Pencil Studio’s Daniel Mihalyo says, “Borrowing the effectiveness of billboards to redirect attention away from the landscape… this permanently open aperture between nations works to frame nothing more than a clear view of the changing conditions
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Perhaps more surprising than the structure itself, is that it was commissioned the federal government. This grand gesture may be a step towards growing national interest in the environment and even good taste in art!