You know that moment when you see something so clever you wonder why it hasn't been done before? That's exactly what happened when I came across Denis Turitsyn's Radius Clock. This isn't just another minimalist timepiece fighting for wall space in your Pinterest feed. It's a genuinely fresh take on something we look at dozens of times a day without really seeing anymore.
The installation draws reference from both lived and imagined meals, translating familiar rituals into a spatial and mechanical composition. Rather than focusing solely on , the table incorporates the broader environment of a festive dinner, including decoration, movement, sound, and atmosphere. A series of mechanical systems animates glass objects, triggers light sequences, and releases scents, creating a layered sensory experience distributed along the length of the table.
To imag­ine our­selves into the time of Leonar­do da Vin­ci, we must first imag­ine a world with­out such things as heli­copters, para­chutes, tanks, div­ing suits, robots. Yet those all exist­ed for Leonar­do him­self - or rather, they exist­ed in his imag­i­na­tion. What he did­n't build in real life, he doc­u­ment­ed in his note­books, leav­ing behind mate­r­i­al for appre­ci­a­tions of his genius that would con­tin­ue half a mil­len­ni­um lat­er.
The Aquarium's defining characteristic is motion achieved through analog mechanics. Rotate strategically placed dials and watch a fish traverse its path, coral sways in invisible currents, a crab emerges from cave shadows, and a treasure chest opens to reveal secrets. These aren't battery-powered gimmicks. They're hand-cranked rituals that reward interaction, transforming passive viewing into active participation. The design language here speaks to an older era of mechanical toys and curiosity cabinets, where engagement meant touching, turning, discovering.