Light Sculpts Life

There are 1.6 billion people in the world without access to electricity, and there is another billion without consistent access to power. This means that about a quarter of the world’s population does not have reliable access to energy.

Little Sun is a solar-powered lantern, and although we won’t solve the world’s energy problem with a lamp, we will do two things: we will bring light to many people who need it, and we will address the energy problem on a global scale. Access to energy is not just about having light; it is not just about the pragmatics of having light for your daily doings. It has more profound implications because light defines a much deeper sense of Being-in-the-world. As an example: when you start an education, you start thinking about how educating yourself is also a part of sculpting your own identity.

Light is physical in the sense that it shapes your life by giving you the means to reflect upon yourself. This is why, in my work, I have always thought of light as not just something that falls on a surface so that you can see the surface. Light is something that shapes the surface. It shapes it both in colour and shade, but also physically – it gives it a body. Light and physicality are connected. If something has a body, it also takes up space. And in a physical space, you can meet another person. This creates a feeling of collectivity. This is why light and physicality are things I have worked with for a long time.

 

“For the Tate, I’ve thought a lot about how to raise the issue that light is not just a means to illuminate something else; light is actually a physical action.”

Olafur Eliasson