
Artworks from the 2024 festival
Nobel Week Lights 2024
Nobel Week Lights 2024 took place between 7–15 December, showing light art across central Stockholm.
Read more about each artwork below.
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BioCanvas
Giant bacteria have taken over the walls at Benny Fredrikssons torg. Their vibrant shapes grow, bringing light and colour to the monochromatic walls.
BioCanvas. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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De Aderton
“De Aderton” is an architectural light installation consisting of ten pavilions, dedicated to female Nobel Prize laureates in literature.
KTH School of Architecture, De Aderton. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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Experiment
“Experiment” is an interactive installation that visualizes the brain’s grid cells through moving triangular patterns, inspired by the Mosers’ research.
Eva Beierheimer, Experiment. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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FLUX
“FLUX” is an immersive light installation by Ksawery Kirklewski that visualizes the invisible data streams, such as video calls, into a dynamic visual experience.
Ksawery Kirklewski, Flux. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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Hope
A light art installation by Aleksandra Stratimirović that highlights Malala Yousafzai’s powerful message about children’s right to peace and education.
Aleksandra Stratimirović, Hope. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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Leading Lights
“Leading Lights” by Les Atelier BK is a luminous tribute to the brilliance of female pioneers.
Les Ateliers BK, Leading Lights. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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Lotus Pods
With “Lotus Pods”, artist David Ram invites the audience to become curious and be intertwined with a mysterious playful world.
David Ram, Lotus Pods. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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Love at First Sight
What complex web of coincidences lead us to where we are today? “Love at First Sight” explores fate, destiny and the mysterious forces that shape our lives.
SMASH, Love at first sight
SMASH, Love at first sight. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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Luciferin
Through this installation, visitors immerse in the world of bioluminescence by exploring and interacting with a multisensory space with their body.
NAVET (KTH och SKH), Luciferin. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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Nematode
This installation is a glowing dynamic presence, inspired by the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discovering how the activity of genes is regulated.
STUDIO DUKTIG, Nematode
Photo: Benoît Derrier
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Solar Glory
“Solar Glory” is an interactive light and mist installation, that encourages visitors to imagine alternative realities.
Uljana Baykevych, Solar Glory. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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The eye
“The Eye” is a video installation designed to interrupt the everyday flow of passersby, encouraging them to pause and reflect on climate change.
KRAM (Hyper Island), The Eye. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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The Waterfall
The artwork “The Waterfall” by Studio UxU is in conversation with Nobel Prize laureate Rabindranath Tagore’s play “The Waterfall”.
Studio UxU, The Waterfall. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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The Wave
“The Wave” explores invisible and visible waves, inspired by how cutting edge technology helps us understand an age-old entity – the human body.
Immersive light and sound installation.
Vertigo, The Wave. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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Translucens
“Translucens” offers an experience inspired by the world of REM-dreams, where everyday objects and realities can transform and change shape.
Niko Tiainen, Translucens. Photo: Benoît Derrier
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Where is My Land
The artwork “Where is My Land” features the phrases, displayed in capital letters using LED lights on a freestanding structure.
Runo Lagomarsino and Carla Zaccagnini, Where Is My Land. Photo: Benoît Derrier

Nobel Week Lights
Art lighting up Stockholm
Read about Nobel Week Lights, a free light art festival taking place in Stockholm during the darkest time of the year.