Leo+DadMade for Leo
The Collaborative Installation
Rung 2 of 3 · The method

Arranging, Lighting and Shooting the Room

Now the hands-on part: how to lay the works out, light them, and photograph them so the installation actually works.

Postmodern frame Builds on: where it comes from

Play Drag the works around the floor plan to space them well, then flick the lighting between warm and cool.
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Audio WalkthroughDad & Leo, Two Minutes — Coming Soon
Video ExplainerComing Soon

So you've got everyone's small worlds and an empty room. How do you make them add up to one good installation instead of a jumble? It comes down to four quiet decisions: spacing, height, lighting, and the photograph. Get those right and the room sings; get them wrong and it just looks like a storeroom.

Give It Room to Breathe

The first mistake everyone makes is bunching things up. An installation needs room to walk — clear paths between the works so a person can move through and discover them one at a time. Think about sightlines too: when someone stands in the doorway, can they see a way in, with things revealing themselves as they go? If two works are jammed together they fight each other; spaced well, they take turns. Crowding kills the magic, so leave honest gaps.

Say it plainly: don't cram. Leave clear walking paths, keep the sightlines open so there's always something to walk towards, and let each work have its own bit of space to be seen in.

Height, Light, and the Camera That Finishes It

Height matters more than people think. A work down near the floor reads as small and humble; the same work at eye level feels like it's meeting you as an equal. Decide what each piece should feel like and hang it accordingly.

Then there's lighting, which sets the mood almost on its own. Warm light makes a room feel cosy, golden, alive; cool light makes the same room feel calm, clinical, or eerie. You're not just making things visible — you're telling the viewer how to feel before they've worked anything out. Flick the toggle in the toy and watch a friendly room turn into a strange one with nothing moved.

And here's the part students always forget: for almost everyone, the photograph is the installation. Your room gets packed up in a week, but the photo lasts forever — it's what goes in your folio, what other people see, what survives. So the documentation isn't an afterthought tacked on at the end. Photographing it well is part of making the art. We'll push that idea all the way in the next rung.

Spacing gives it room. Height gives each work its voice. Lighting sets the mood. And the photograph is how the whole thing survives — so shoot it like it matters.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

When we wander a gallery, do we like being herded down one path, or left to roam? What does that tell us about spacing?

Warm light or cool light for our other world — which fits the mood we're after?