W I L L A
F I L M
Willa, (Light Ship) 2015-ongoing
Light, Glass, 1978 Sportscoach RV
26 x 7.5 x 10 feet
Willa (Light Ship) is a Light, Land and Sky Sculpture that will be permanently installed in a remote area of the high desert in Northern New Mexico. Consisting of a chamber of light and glass hidden inside a 1978 Sportscoach Recreational Vehicle and large enough for 4 people to sit inside, Willa is an immersive environment for experiencing the cycles of light and time that exist in nature.
Inside Willa, hundreds of handmade cast glass objects collect light from the sky. The interior changes as light shifts throughout the day, sunrise to sunset, or as clouds pass overhead. There is no electric light in Willa. Light enters through a transparent roof, directly connecting the piece to the sky and its' cycles of day and night, weather, and seasons. Willa is lit solely by the sun and moon.
Long cast the glass for Willa herself in her studio in Taos, New Mexico using the slow and labor intensive process of lost wax casting. Because each mold is destroyed in the firing process, each of the hundreds of glass objects inside Willa is unique, there are no multiples. Long builds her "Light Ships" by hand, slowly. It took 4 years to build Willa.
Long uses glass and this labor intensive process to access light in her
work. Long explains, "Glass catches light in extraordinary ways. It
acts a strong collector and amplifier of light, allowing light
collection in my work even under low light conditions like twilight and
moonlight."
A search is underway for a permanent site to install Willa in a remote area of the New Mexico desert. Visitors will stay overnight in an onsite cabin, allowing access to the piece at sunrise, sunset, or midnight on a full moon night. The journey to reach Willa at this remote site will be an important part of the experience of the work, an invitation to slow down and have an embodied experience of the work, land, and sky over time.
The next stage of the Willa Project is fundraising for Land for Willa's permanent home and to build an onsite adobe cabin for visitors.