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Holding Questions
General
Flux Nodes are hosted by individuals and organisations seeking to strengthen the quality of their environments through structured spatial placement.
Custodians typically include:
• Architects and interior designers
• Creative and cultural institutions
• Studio founders and team leaders
• Organisations responsible for shared environments
• Individuals attentive to spatial coherence
Hosting is based on contextual alignment rather than ownership.
It is suited to those who understand that atmosphere influences behaviour, perception, and collective experience.
A Custodian is not an owner or collector.
A Custodian is a temporary host within the Flux Node system.
To become a Custodian is to provide a defined spatial context in which a Node is installed, experienced, and maintained for a set placement cycle.
Custodianship is grounded in responsibility and alignment rather than possession.
Flux Nodes remain part of a calibrated spatial framework.
1. Discovery & Alignment
Hosting begins with a short consultation.
We discuss:
• The function of the space
• The environmental quality you wish to strengthen or introduce
• Current transitions or developments within your organisation
This ensures the selected Flux Node responds precisely to context.
2. Spatial Review
A placement assessment evaluates:
• Architectural geometry
• Spatial orientation and circulation
• Light, proportion, and perceptual flow
Placement is not decorative.
It is calibrated and intentional.
3. Installation
The selected Node is prepared and installed according to spatial calibration guidance.
4. Hosting Period (1–3 Months)
The Node remains in place for a defined term, integrating with the architectural and human environment.
Hosting cycles are structured to maintain clarity, freshness, and system circulation.
5. Release & Transition
At the end of the cycle, the Node is professionally deinstalled and returned to circulation within the wider system.
Flux Nodes may be placed within residential, studio, professional, or cultural environments.
Suitable contexts include private residences, architectural and design practices, leadership or executive spaces, galleries, and other settings where spatial quality and perceptual coherence are considered integral to daily use.
Placement is determined through contextual review rather than space type alone.
Nodes are not selected directly.
Each placement is determined through a structured review process that considers:
• The environmental quality to be strengthened or introduced
• The architectural character and spatial conditions
• The perceptual context in which the work will be experienced
The purpose of this process is to ensure the Node functions coherently within its environment rather than serving a purely decorative role.
Final selection and calibration are determined by the artist to maintain alignment, balance, and continuity within the Flux Node system.
The Artdesha emblem combines foundational geometric forms and universal archetypal motifs representing perception, continuity, protection, and human presence.
It functions as a structural diagram of the Flux Node system rather than a religious, cultural, or esoteric symbol.
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