The Tasting Tongue - Art Installation By Studio Deng: Sensory Exploration in MontpellierThe Tasting Tongue - Art Installation By Studio Deng: Sensory Exploration in Montpellier

The Tasting Tongue - Art Installation By Studio Deng: Sensory Exploration in Montpellier

UNI Editorial
UNI Editorial published Story under Architecture, Installations on

The Tasting Tongue, designed by Studio Deng, is an immersive art installation that transforms ordinary objects into playful, imaginative extensions of taste. Completed in 2025 for the Festival des Architectures Vives in Montpellier, France, the installation occupies a compact courtyard of the historic Hôtel de Rozel, inviting visitors to explore synesthetic interactions between the body, space, and imagination.

Article image
Article image

Concept and Inspiration

Studio Deng’s concept poses the provocative question: “What if every object has an invisible tongue?” Each element—the columns, windows, and flowerbeds—symbolically tastes its surroundings, transforming the sensory experience of space. The installation explores subtle, ephemeral sensations: the wetness of rain-soaked grass, the umami of a mild breeze, or the velvet-like texture of melting cheese. By linking taste to environment, the project creates a collective sensory fiction, engaging visitors in a novel, interactive way.

Article image
Article image

Design and Interaction

The installation features a metallic tongue that flows from a windowsill and unfolds toward the courtyard center. From this tongue grow 130 taste buds in four categories—sweet, sour, bitter, and salty—each inspired by microscopic imagery of real taste buds. Visitors are invited to insert their own taste buds into the structure, amplifying the act of tasting and contributing to a shared archive of flavor memories.

Children reshaped the buds, neighbors observed changes over time, and strangers compared contributions, creating an impromptu communal stage for playful experimentation. The work transforms the courtyard into an interactive space where architecture, art, and sensory perception converge.

Article image
Article image

Adaptive Journey

After the festival in Montpellier, the installation traveled to the chamber room of a 14th-century monastery during Architecture en Fête, exploring how the "invisible tongue" adapts to a historic context. Following the exhibitions, materials—including pink felt and metal sheets—were donated to Children’s Relay, supporting art education and extending the installation’s life beyond the gallery.

Article image
Article image

Materials and Spatial Experience

  • Materials: Metal, pink felt
  • Scale: 10 m²
  • Photographs: Paul Kozlowski
  • Site: Hôtel de Rozel, Montpellier, France

The Tasting Tongue exemplifies temporary installations, public art, and interactive architecture, merging playfulness, sensory exploration, and community engagement.

Article image
Article image
Article image

All the photographs are works of Paul Kozlowski

UNI Editorial

UNI Editorial

Where architecture meets innovation, through curated news, insights, and reviews from around the globe.

Share your ideas with the world

Share your ideas with the world

Write about your design process, research, or opinions. Your voice matters in the architecture community.

Comments (0)

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

Similar Reads

You might also enjoy these articles

publishedStory1 week ago
Olio Towers: A Mid-Rise for Performers That Fuses Housing, Rehearsal, and Stage
publishedStory1 week ago
Oasis: Modular Green Housing Carved into Dhaka's Urban Fabric
publishedStory1 week ago
Black Hole: A Floating Megastructure for the Post-Physical Era
publishedStory1 week ago
Compact & Sustainable Living in Piraeus: A Four-Level Family Home Built Around Light and Air

Explore Architecture Competitions

Discover active competitions in this discipline

UNI Editorial
Search in