Seattle Demo Project: “Last Gasp”
A temporary transformation reflecting on
space, perception, and impermanence.
The Inspiration
“The Frame”
“The Spear”
Set within a soon-to-be-demolished cabin on Herron Island, Last Gasp was a two-part installation exploring impermanence, perception, and the architecture of transition. As part of the Seattle Demo Project—a rotating collective of artists, architects, and designers—we transformed the space into a temporary site of reflection.
The first piece, "The Frame," reimagined the home as a minimalist retreat. A singular view across the water was carefully composed through a cantilevered aperture, physically unreachable yet visually dominant. The interior was wrapped in black plastic, creating a sensory void that heightened light, sound, and presence—suspending visitors in a state of perceptual quiet.
"The Spear," the second installation, pierced vertically through all three floors of the cabin. Clear plastic descended from a ceiling cutout, threading through each level and culminating in a basin of water at the base. Lit from within, the column shimmered with movement and shadow. It invited a different kind of procession—upward instead of across—disrupting the horizontal rhythm of domestic space. Water, visible and contained, became both anomaly and anchor: a quiet inversion of what’s expected inside a home.
Together, the installations offered a final breath before erasure—one last moment to look, move, and feel differently inside the ordinary.
Location
Herron Island, WA
Installation
2014
Collaborators
Tony Kim, Aaron Trampush, Robert Arndt