

Scanning images of crumpled aluminum foil, artist Pae White made this mind-bending main stage curtain for the Oslo Opera House. The digitized image was fed into a computer driven loom to weave the curtain, creating the illusion of a 3D surface.

Called “Metafoil,” it's a modern take on the centuries-old tradition of weaving, but with a digital twist. “Metafoil takes advantage of the captive gaze of the audience, introducing a foil, a false reflection, an illusion of depth, a novel typography that disrupts expectation and challenges perception,” says White. A few feet away, you can see the individual threads but from the audience's perspective it looks like a metallic, three-dimensional sculpture. The enormous tapestry is made of cotton, wool and polyester.

“My work has attempted to subvert the viewer's expected relationship to an everyday object, nudging them off balance, encouraging a deeper look,” White has said. “My goal is to cause viewers to stop and consider the bits and pieces of our lives that are most often overlooked, perhaps suggesting a more comprehensive reconsideration of the world around us, even to ask ourselves: What is important to us? What are we seeing? What are we not seeing?”





Pae White at Cal Fund