Giant images of flowers and trees cascade across the white screens in the Moose Jaw Museum and Art Gallery, moving into one another, creating a hypnotic, dreamlike atmosphere.
Viewing it is like lying on the ground on a summer’s day, watching nature swirl around.
“I wanted to capture a feeling of joy, and that feeling of weightlessness that seems to go along with it,” said Joanne Lyons, who created the art installation.
One can walk behind the screen, in between it and another screen made of frosted mylar, a much lighter material than the coroplast that results in it lifting off the floor slightly as air shifts in the gallery.
The result is a corridor of shifting and changing light and sound. In fact, the piece is called “Corridor.”
It's on display at the Moose Jaw Museum and Art Gallery until Jan. 3.

