Lightcrawlers are a series of modular, illuminated sculptures that bring a sense of quiet mystery and playful sentience to the garden landscape. Composed of translucent, bulb-like segments, each articulated at a subtle fifteen-degree offset, these forms can be gently rotated to alter posture and gesture. Their serpentine bodies—ending in claw-like or exploratory “heads”—evoke the slow, searching movement of nocturnal creatures, part botanical, part animal, and entirely imagined.
The modularity extends to their leg structures, which can be repositioned to refine stance and balance, allowing each Lightcrawler to adopt its own attitude and presence. Whether upright in a moment of alert curiosity or stretched in a tentative reach, no two assemblies present quite the same silhouette.
Designed as luminous interventions within the outdoor environment, Lightcrawlers function as sculptural garden lights. During daylight hours, their translucent surfaces catch and refract sunlight, giving the impression of growths that have just emerged from the soil. At night, solar-charged LEDs illuminate the interior chambers, transforming the forms into softly glowing sentinels that activate automatically at dusk. Their name playfully echoes the “nightcrawler,” suggesting both biological inspiration and an otherworldly reinterpretation of familiar earthbound life.
By day reflective, by night radiant, Lightcrawlers inhabit the threshold between object and organism—quiet companions that animate and enchant the spaces they inhabit.