

Sizhu Li’s ongoing touring installation project Moonment inspired by the Tang Dynasty Chinese poem (Gazing at the Moon, Longing from Afar) by Zhang Jiu Lin borrows from the idea that when the moon rises above sea level, it connects all humans irrespective of their geographical location.
Sizhu Li’s site-specific version of the installation Moonment creates a futuristic wave landscape, with an intense and hypnotic atmosphere of sound and movement. The series installation was made out by machine component and aluminum sheets, digital control systems, found objects. Moreover, the lasted specific iteration in the east wing of Viborg Kunsthal, Moonment creates a futuristic wave landscape, with an intense and hypnotic atmosphere of sound and movement. The installation consists of six machine components and three suspended aluminum plates that, using digital control systems, a motorized lifting system and gravity, create metal waves that elegantly, harmoniously and easily flow through the space in choreographed movements.
Moonment translates the sensual understanding of the natural movement – in this case the kinetic wave movement – with the dynamics of the machines. Even as the technology sets the kinetic sculpture in motion, the installation creates a new way to appreciate the beauty of life and nature.





