Fang Tsai
Embedded
Expanding Spaces — Summer 2020
Eye Simulation
Micro/Macro (Course) — Summer 2020
In Between
Island of things — Summer 2021
Nahweh: the Unreachable
Free Projects
Put Yourself in Someone's Shoes
Navigation, Orientation, Information — Summer 2019
reMOUSE
Unstable Objects (Short-term Project) — Summer 2020
Time Different
Poetics of Repetition (Course) — Winter 2019
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Carte Blanche — Summer 2022
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Matters of thinking (Course) — Summer 2022
Fang Tsai — Nahweh: the Unreachable
Free Projects
In German "Fernweh" describes a feeling of desire to go to a faraway place, a desire toward the "Fern"(distance). On the other hand, it also contains the meaning of escaping the desert of the familiar, which is our current surroundings. To emphasize this, I use Nahweh as a term to describe the nudge we feel.
Nowadays, the internet enables us to see images of faraway places with just a few clicks (i.e. Google Street View), but instead of bringing us the space, it brings us incomplete information about the space, a limited imitation of the experience.
Nahweh: the Unreachable is a window that displays spaces that are accessible through the internet but inaccessible immediately in real life. It uses screenshots from Google Street View to generate a series of half-realistic but dreamy spaces, displayed towards the streets, inviting pedestrians to interact with them. A window to the reachable yet unreachable space.