Berndnaut Smilde's Incredible Indoor Clouds

Source: Berndnaut Smilde, Nimbus NP3, 2012, digital C-type print on dibond, 125185 cm, courtesy the artist and Ronchini Gallery Imagine working numerous hours to accumulate the perfect combination of both moisture and dust. Eventually, a faint white fog forms, and you snap a photo of the pale indoor cloud. Moments later, the formation is gone,

Indoor Clouds

Source: Berndnaut Smilde, Nimbus NP3, 2012, digital C-type print on dibond, 125×185 cm, courtesy the artist and Ronchini Gallery

Imagine working numerous hours to accumulate the perfect combination of both moisture and dust. Eventually, a faint white fog forms, and you snap a photo of the pale indoor cloud. Moments later, the formation is gone, and you’re left in an empty room. Although meticulous and drawn out, this is life for Berndnaut Smilde, the brilliant artist who is well known for his stunning indoor cloud formations.

Indoor Clouds in Ballroom

Source: Berndnaut Smilde, Nimbus Green Room, 2013, courtesy the artist and Ronchini Gallery

Clouds Created Indoors by Berndnaut Smilde

Source: Berndnaut Smilde, Nimbus Cukurcuma Hamam I, 2012, c-type print on dibond, 125 x 184 cm, Courtesy the artist and Ronchini Gallery, Photo Onur Dag

Berndnaut Smilde was born in 1978 in the Netherlands, and now lives and creates art in Amsterdam. As an artist, he is interested in impermanent states of being, a theme that resurfaces in much of his work. While Smilde’s indoor clouds look as fluffy and white as those you see perennially dusting the sky, in reality, they last just mere seconds. Few people have had the pleasure of seeing Smilde create the indoor clouds, though many individuals have borne witness to his stunning photos.

Photos of Clouds for Harper's Bazaar

Source: Berndnaut Smilde, The In Cloud – Karl Lagerfeld, 2013, Courtesy the artist, Harper’s Bazaar and Ronchini Gallery. Photo credit Simon Procter.

Berndnaut Smilde for Harper's Bazaar

Source: Berndnaut Smilde, The In Cloud – Alber Elbaz, 2013, Courtesy the artist, Harper’s Bazaar and Ronchini Gallery. Photo credit Simon Procter.

Model Poses With Indoor Cloud

Source: Berndnaut Smilde, The In Cloud – Donatella Versace, 2013, Courtesy the artist, Harper’s Bazaar and Ronchini Gallery. Photo credit Simon Procter.

Berndnaut Smilde’s formed his first indoor cloud—displayed as an installation named “Nimbus”—in a bright blue room that evoked summer skies. Smilde’s desire to use clouds as an art medium, particularly indoor clouds, comes from his interest in how they can temporarily change a space.

To create the indoor clouds, Smilde must maintain a specific temperature that’s warm enough to condense dust particles, yet cold enough to keep water vapor from fully condensing into rain. Smilde also maintains a specific moisture level.

Here’s a video of Smilde in action:

First Indoor Cloud Installation

Source: Berndnaut Smilde, Nimbus-Probe, 2010, Photo Jessica Helbach, Courtesy the artist and Ronchini Gallery

Nimbus II Cloud Installation

Source:
Berndnaut Smilde, Nimbus II, 2012, Cloud in room, c-type print on Dibond, 75 x 112 cm, Hotel Maria Kapel, Hoorn, NL, courtesy the artist and Ronchini Gallery, Photo Cassander Eeftinck Schattenkerk

Nimbus II Cloud Installation by Berndnaut Smilde

Source: Berndnaut Smilde, Nimbus Green Room, 2013, courtesy the artist and Ronchini Gallery

While Smilde has received generous praise worldwide for his incredible indoor clouds, he’s also created numerous installations, sculptures and photographs that have nothing to do with cloud formations. Smilde has exhibited his various artwork over most of Europe.

Surreal Rainbows by Berndnaut Smilde

Source: Bernadnaut Smilde, Unflattened, 2012, 200 x 300 cm, Photomural, Prism, Light, courtest of the artist and Ronchini Gallery

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