CAL-IN Technology Transfer, L.L.C.
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SoLux is a patented light source that provides an unparalleled replication of daylight minus potentially harmful ultraviolet and infrared light. You will find a wealth of information about daylight and how to improve your lighting on our website. In our website we offer the following:
September 2008 "We
are pleased to announce the Musée d'Orsay in Paris France has chosen
the SoLux light source to relight their entire collection. The Musée
d'Orsay is best known for housing one of the most extensive collections
of French Impressionist art in the world. Works by Degas, Monet,
Renior, Van Gogh, and Cézanne will now be bathed in a safe and
controlled natural light (SoLux) bringing out the true beauty and
genius that was hidden under the old lighting."
January 2007, Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art chooses SoLux to illuminate, Cradle of Christianity: Treasures from the Holy Land Exhibition.
December 2006, Tailored Lighting is pleased to announce the National Palace
Museum in Taipei, Taiwan is the most recent museum to install SoLux to
illuminate its extraordinary collection of Chinese art. Click here
to visit museum's website.
September 2006. As a result of efforts begun in September 2005, Tailored
Lighting President and SoLux Inventor Kevin McGuire traveled to Cologne,
Germany to attend the Grand Opening of the Wallraf-Richartz-Museum French
Impressionist floor lit by SoLux. SoLux has received positive press
and enthusiastic feedback from the museum's director, Andreas B.
"Mr. Breuer and his team have finished the gallery no. 3.
We have also moved a small Van Gogh painting into our temporary exhibition space
lit by - you guessed it - SoLux. The effect is striking. It is going
to blow everybody's mind" Click here
to see images.
September
2006, George Eastman House, Pete Turner Exhibit, chooses SoLux as
the exclusive light source. Click here
for more stunning images.
"The show looks incredible. I doubt anyone has seen a show of
color photography so well lit."
Rick Hock, Director Exhibitions
"Each print is dramatically spot lit like a gem, I couldn't ask for
a better presentation."
Pete Turner, Photographer talking about SoLux in American
Photo
Featured Story on SoLux Light Bulbs -- Brenda Tromblay of member station WXXI reports from Rochester, New York on the collaboration between inventor Kevin McGuire and an art consultant that produced a new type of lighting for art galleries. The Memorial Art Gallery in Rochester, The National Gallery of Art, Washington, and now the Los Angeles County Museum of Art are all using the technique to illuminate its Impressionist paintings. Click here to listen to the report.
Andreas Bluhm, former Head of Exhibition & Display, Van Gogh Museum, currently Director Wallraf-Richartz-Museum Cologne, Germany:
"Artists and art historians alike do not need to know the physics of light, but both are deeply affected by it. We were thus very glad and felt privileged to meet the maker of SoLux, Kevin McGuire. The Potato eaters, one of the most popular works in the collection of Van Gogh among the other Van Gogh paintings can now be seen with the best museum lighting we know, and the museum is proud to be among the first European museums to use SoLux."
11/01/2005
"We have recently moved a small Van Gogh painting into our temporary
exhibition
space at the Wallraf. It is now shown in front of a creme-colored background
and lit by -
you guess it - Solux. The effect is striking."
Grant Holcomb, Director, Memorial Art Gallery, Rochester New York:
"The Memorial Art Gallery takes great pride in being the first museum in the world to use SoLux lights. It enhanced the perception of both color and space in works by Cézanne, Monet, Maxfield Parrish, and many others in our collection. Comments by our patrons indicated that they were impressed. "It's almost like seeing the works for the first time," wrote one and "The colors seem to jump off the walls," wrote another. We look forward to equally enthusiastic experience and responses by using SoLux lights in future exhibits."
Quoting a review of the Van Gogh-Gauguin Exhibit from The Independent, a British publication :
"The show will delight Van Gogh and Gauguin groupies and academics alike, for the best gourmet-gourmand reason: the paintings seem naked, new and endless...the hi-tech radiance (SoLux) that shines down on The Sower, and other paintings, is thoroughly democratic, there is no bias towards bleak chaos; the slightest variation in colour density, the plasticity or patterning of brush strokes, even the micro-thin shadow lines - all are even-handedly revealed. And, in most of Van Gogh's canvases and later Gauguins, all seems forever young... the effect is electrifying: the paint still looks wet; one waits instinctively for a waft of linseed."