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Site Plan of Kingsland Basin, London 
(1871) showing past industry. E. Morris. 
Pencil on trace



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The Archive of Atmosphere:  
Installation as an interior architectural event

Installation at the Bartlett,  
London, September 2010

Emma Morris

To create an interior micro-ecology, this archival project uses the technique of in-
stallation and an organisational strategy analogous to the ‘natural archive’ of an 
ice core. Ice cores archive climate history: the ‘memory’ of past temperatures is en-
coded in air bubbles, and trapped in ice crystals. Scientists analyse this ‘informa-
tion’ to forecast future global climate patterns. The longest ice core from Antarc-
tica is “3207 metres long and covers the last 650,000 years” (Chandler 2005).

The Archive

The Archive of Atmosphere is an eccentric scientific endeavour. Installed at the 
Bartlett, the archive used materials sourced from the Kingsland Basin off the Re-
gent’s Canal, a remnant of the industrial revolution in East London. The time-
based system operated by collecting water from the canal, feeding it into water 
catchers and mixing it with various chemicals. As “an access to the remains of the 
past” (Shanks 2010), it sought to make the site’s historical narrative visible. 

The solution crystallised into solid forms through capillary action and evapora-
tion. The atmospheric particles within the water became embedded in the crystal 
lattice structure, and preserved for the future. Crystallisation produces a slowly 
growing build-up of material: as an emergent building technology, it is a synthetic 
analogue system which manufactures matter (Armstrong 2009). 

The archive is a chemical computer, a machine-for-remembering (Borges 1984: 72). 

The human technician as archivist interacted with the installation, activating the 
water flow and phase changes, controlling light, wind flow, and humidity, generat-
ing a micro-ecology in the room.

Left: Diagram of the molecular structure 
of ice, a hexagonal lattice, which forms a 
container for air bubbles. E. Morris. Pen 
on paper.

Right: Crystal specimen study.  
Chemical mix on pewter.



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141

Diagram of molecular change during 
crystallisation. E. Morris. Watercolour  
and pencil on paper.



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The archive is an open system, which “interchange[s] matter and energy with the 
outside” (Fernandez-Galiano 2000: 104). Its collection is sourced from the canal 
and its form continuously reconfigured according to the crystallisation produced 
by chemical reactions, as well as the internal climatic conditions of the room.

By recording activities, the installation produces its own ‘drawings’. On the paper 
placed on the floor, there are piles of particles, elements drawn in from the canal: 
clay, lead, carbon, ash, spices from past industrial trading. Water overspills, drips 
onto the particles that provide the medium for the drawing. 

Archival practices are researched in this project to investigate their creative po-
tential for an architectural strategy. Archival practice is an active and ongoing 
process of collecting, storing and interpretating of information, where informa-
tion is “an action which occupies time (Barlow 1994). Archival practice examines 
the repetitive, obsessive, immersive nature of collecting. It challenges the archi-
tect to consider her work as both contributing to and co-producing “an archive in 
the making” (Foster 2004).

The Installation

The installation makes reference to the “archival impulse” (Foster 2004) of Kurt 
Schwitters’ Merzbau, his studio as a growing, living archive, a continuous process 
of collection and transformation (Meyer-Buser 2000); Gerhard Richter’s Atlas, his 
dense installation of work creating a spatial “environment” (Dietrich 1985: 130); 
and Cornelia Parker’s Cold Dark Matter: An Exploded View (1991), a transforma-
tion of objects found on site, reassembled and installed in the gallery (Parker 1996). 
Gego’s use of steel wire to draw in three-dimensional space is directly referenced 
in the geometrical structures of the installation (Ramirez 2006). Installation as a 
technique reveals the archive as an immersive, interior experience, engaging di-
rectly with those who access it. It “force[s] the visitor, both mentally and physical-
ly, to enter the work and to succumb with all their senses to the rules of the game” 
operating in it (Meyer-Buser 2000). For an architectural proposition, the power of 
the installation is its potential to create an interior immersive experience through 
the viewer’s physical and sensory engagement with the space. The Archive of At-
mosphere’s ambition is to investigate the potential of archival strategies in these 
contexts. 

The Archive of Atmosphere can be read as an architectural event which gives a 
physical presence to the invisible – the fragile and unstable atmosphere. Archives, 
as interior conditions, are a necessary safe-keeper of past collections enabling the 
prediction of vast external change. 

Analysis of atmospheric particles.  
E. Morris. Pencil on paper.



143

References:

Armstrong, R. (2009, August 8). Material (or Chemical) Computing: Protocell example. Rachel 

Armstrong Living Architect Scrapbook. Retrieved June 10, 2010, from http://grayanat.posterous.

com/material-or-chemical-computing-protocell-exam

Barlow, J. P. (1994, March). The Economy of Ideas. Wired. Retrieved August 18, 2011, from http://
www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.03/economy.ideas.html

Borges, J. L. (1984). Atlas. London: Viking.

Chandler, D. (2005, November 24). Record Ice Core Reveals Earth’s Ancient Atmosphere, New 
Scientist. Retrieved June 10, 2010, from http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn8369-record-
ice-core-reveals-earths-ancient-atmosphere.html

Dietrich, D. (1985). Gerhard Richter: An Interview. The Print Collectors Newsletter, 16(4).

Fernande-Galiano, L. (2000). Fire and Memory, On Architecture and Energy. Cambridge, 
Massachusetts: The MIT Press.

Foster, H. (2004). An Archival Impulse. October, 110. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.

Parker, C. (1996). Avoided Object. Cardiff: Chapter. 

Meyer-Buser, S. (2000). On Disappearing in Space, Walk in Collages from Schwitters to the 
Present Day. In S. Meyer-Buser & K. Orchard, (Eds.), Merz: In the Beginning Was Merz: From Kurt 
Schwitters to the Present Day. Ostfildern-Ruit: Hatje Cantz Publishers.

Ramirez, M. C., Manrique, J., de Zegher, C. (2006). Gego: Between Transparency and the Invisible, 
Houston: Museum of Fine Arts.

Shanks, M. (2010, February 18). Animating the Archive. Retrieved June 10, 2010, from http://
documents.stanford.edu/MichaelShanks/186 

Left: Residue of activity on floor: water 
drips into particles of various elements. 
Photograph E. Morris.

Right: Wall drawing traced from projec-
tions through installation. E. Morris. 
Pencil on paper.



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Installation, photographs by Nina Morris. Steel wire, plastic, filter paper, laboratory glassware, crystals.



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