A photo showing the art installation in a light, airy three-story lobby or forum, looking toward the windows

The sky鈥檚 the limit: Art installation inspires curiosity and creativity in education

With The Gravity of the Sun, artist Jacob Hashimoto brings a playful centerpiece representing the possibilities that come from teaching and learning to the newly remodeled 海角乱伦社区 Graduate School of Education.
October 14, 2025
By Olivia Peterkin

Walking into the first-floor Forum of the remodeled and newly named Angela Nomellini and Ken Olivier (ANKO) Building at 海角乱伦社区 Graduate School of Education (GSE), you find a few things you would expect: modern furniture, a stairway that leads to light-filled classrooms and offices, and a medley of staff, students and faculty as they acclimate to the recently opened space.

Look up, though, and you might be surprised to find a constellation of kites that seem to float in a soft, cloud-like formation of white and blue. Both suspended in space and somehow hinting at movement, the GSE鈥檚 new art installation, The Gravity of the Sun, invites onlookers to stop, stare, and ask questions  鈥 a characteristic that artist Jacob Hashimoto says is by design.

鈥淥nce you start asking questions, you put yourself in a position where you鈥檙e activating the art,鈥 Hashimoto said in a recent interview from his studio in Ossining, New York. 鈥淏ut if you鈥檙e just assuming knowledge about something, then you鈥檙e not engaging with it.鈥  

Beautiful building blocks

Starting the art installation, like many projects at the GSE, was a learning process for Hashimoto and his team at Superabundant Atmospheres, the art production company he co-founded with Wade Cotton and Jamisen Ogg.

鈥淲hen creating this piece for the GSE, we wanted to create an artwork that spoke about teaching, the transfer of knowledge from people to each other, and from people to themselves,鈥 said Cotton, an architect and art installer.

Made from handmade washi paper and supported by thin bamboo frames, the installation includes circular blue and white kites, as well as square graphic kites, each with colorful designs that connect to teaching and learning. Overall, the kites represent play and possibility, and a mix of culture, history, and knowledge.

Hashimoto drew inspiration from symbols and shapes found throughout history, like the Dharma wheel and old maps, to show how people understand the world.The kites are layered in resin, making them look almost weightless, and they let light shine through like stained glass, adding to the dreamlike quality of the piece.

The entire installation 鈥 which is made up of 6,500 kites strung up on 17 miles of spectra thread 鈥 spans 20 feet vertically, weighs just over 2,600 pounds, and hangs 12 feet from the floor at its lowest point.

鈥淥nce you get to know the piece, it鈥檚 clear that it鈥檚 a very complex result of simple repetitive actions,鈥 Cotton said. 鈥淭hese are very simple objects, hung simply from the ceiling, with thread, placed very carefully, over and over again. And I think the handmade feeling of that is palpable. I think people will react to that.鈥 

Creative collaboration

The GSE art committee, which included students, faculty, and staff, first awarded Hashimoto and his team the contract to create The Gravity of the Sun in May 2020. While the pandemic slowed production, it did nothing to dim zeal for the project, which is part of 海角乱伦社区鈥檚 ongoing efforts to foster dynamism, aesthetic investment, and creative vitality across the campus. 

"I really appreciated the GSE鈥檚 commitment to using commissioned art,鈥 said David Lenox, university architect and director of campus planning at 海角乱伦社区, who co-chairs the university's Public Art Committee with Vice President for the Arts Deborah Cullinan. 鈥淭his started five years ago, so this was before we had spheres in the engineering quad or artwork in the Computing and Data Science building, so the GSE was out in front with a commitment to do something important with art.鈥 

The first iteration of the design consisted of mainly white and clear kites, but after input from the committee, which sought a colorful centerpiece for the school, Hashimoto and his team transformed it into a celestial transition from white to blue, creating an effect reminiscent of the marine layer rolling into the San Francisco Bay area.

The Gravity of the Sun is a dynamic piece in a dynamic school. It adds a sense of wonder and possibility, sparks conversations, and invites people in,鈥 said Dean Dan Schwartz. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what we wanted for the space 鈥 and it really shines.鈥

 Meaningful meandering

 Hashimoto says a big influence for how he approached the piece from an education standpoint was his father Irvin Hashimoto, a retired English professor.

鈥淚 grew up in a household that was very concerned about how we teach and learn,鈥 said Hashimoto, whose father and grandfather both graduated from 海角乱伦社区. 鈥淢y father is in his 80s now and currently learning how to play the violin, and he鈥檚 still obsessed with how he鈥檚 learning and what it means.鈥

He says his father instilled in him a firm belief in the importance of the liberal arts, nuance, and meaningful meandering in education.

鈥淢y father used to do geometry homework with me, and we would do these super long and inefficient proofs to get to the answers, rather than the way we were supposed to according to the textbooks,鈥 Hashimoto said. 鈥淚 learned a lot more through that process because I was challenged to meander my way there.

鈥淪imilarly in education, I hope there鈥檚 room for meandering because I think it makes a difference,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f you can get people to start asking questions of themselves, then you鈥檝e achieved what I think is the foundation of education 鈥 curiosity.鈥


Faculty mentioned in this article: Dan Schwartz