plastique fantastique installs fossil-based inflatable sculpture on korea’s shoreline

Plastique Fantastique’s POLYMETER reflects on material life cycle

 

Installed on the shoreline of Dadaepo Beach for the Sea Art Festival 2025 in Busan, Korea, POLYMETER by Plastique Fantastique examines the relationship between material permanence and natural decay through a dual-layered inflatable installation.

 

The work consists of two membranes made from materials with distinct temporal properties. The outer shell is constructed from fossil-based polyurethane, representing industrial material durability. Inside, a handcrafted membrane of locally harvested kelp introduces an organic, time-sensitive counterpart. Exposed to environmental conditions, the kelp layer gradually reacts to heat and humidity, and may eventually disintegrate, revealing the vulnerability and transience of organic matter within a synthetic enclosure.

all images by Changsu Yoon unless stated otherwise, Ⓒ Busan Biennale Organizing Committee

 

 

POLYMETER reflects on industrial permanence and natural decay

 

Through the two layers’ material contrast, the installation reflects on the coexistence of two temporalities: the enduring and the ephemeral. The work by creative studio Plastique Fantastique frames a dialogue between fossil-derived longevity and biological impermanence, acknowledging the tension between industrial production and ecological regeneration.

 

Positioned at the interface of land and sea, POLYMETER engages directly with its coastal setting. The structure operates as both a sculptural form and an environmental marker, prompting reflection on the entanglement of natural and artificial systems in a changing climate.

POLYMETER by Plastique Fantastique stands along the shoreline of Dadaepo Beach in Busan

the installation was created for the Sea Art Festival 2025

the work consists of two layered membranes with contrasting lifespans | image Ⓒ Plastique Fantastique

the installation contrasts fossil longevity with biological impermanence | image Ⓒ Plastique Fantastique

POLYMETER visualizes the coexistence of human-made and natural systems

the polyurethane layer symbolizes industrial durability and fossil-based production | image Ⓒ Plastique Fantastique

an outer shell of fossil-based polyurethane forms the project’s structural surface | image Ⓒ Plastique Fantastique

the inner membrane is crafted from locally harvested kelp | image Ⓒ Plastique Fantastique

the kelp membrane introduces an organic, biodegradable counterpart to polyurethane | image Ⓒ Plastique Fantastique

each material represents a different temporality—synthetic endurance and organic fragility | image Ⓒ Plastique Fantastique

exposed to heat and humidity, the kelp reacts visibly to environmental change | image Ⓒ Plastique Fantastique

POLYMETER explores the intersection between material permanence and natural decay

over time, the organic layer may dissolve, exposing the synthetic structure beneath

 

project info:

 

name: POLYMETER – Sea Art Festival 2025, Busan, Korea

designer: Plastique Fantastique | @plastique.fantastique

location: Dadaepo Beach, Busan, South Korea

 

lead designers: Yena Young, Marco Canevacci

curator: Keumhwa Kim, Bernard Vienat

design team: Sebastian Podesta, Valeria Landete, Maria Eleonora Ledesmam, Sarah Müller, Eunsoo Ko

special thanks to: Busan Biennale, The Busan Biennale Team, and Mina Choi

dimensions: 6m diameter, 4m height

photographer: Changsu Yoon, Plastique Fantastique

videographer: Marco Canevacci, Yena Young, Busan Biennale Organizing Committee, Lee TaeHoon

 

 

designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

 

edited by: christina vergopoulou | designboom

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