The TEETER-Totter pattern seat calls for a common-huge ground

In the Garden of Generations in Inbec, Germany, the new installation is playful of parks to find a balance with their neighbors.
“Balance Bench” is the latest project for a Berlin -based artist Martin Bindnder. He was installed in his hometown, and interactive artworks interfere with a central cylinder instead of four legs, which requires at least two people sitting on both sides of the level. He says: “It cannot be used alone – it requires awareness, consensus and cooperation among people to become a functional general space.”

Binder originally depicted the piece, made of oak and powdered steel, for the first day at the General Art Festival in 2021, but this event was unfortunately canceled because of Covid-19. Emerging now four years later, the minimum installation raises questions about how to change the methods we collect and participate in external activities.
He says: “We have made the epidemic very familiar with proximity in public places,” he says. “This seat is interrogating this awareness by playing. It asks how we share space after the recipe-not only physically but social.”
In addition to its usefulness to enhance the conversation and interaction between the pioneers of the park, “Balance Bench” is also a less volatile version of the equipment that was less common these days due to the opening of the eye Safety concerns.
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