One work that I have found inspirational is the installation made by Nader Tehrani at the Moma in 1998. It is a sculptural piece,
essentially just an orthogonal grid push thru and projected across a distorted plane. The work is made of intricately folded metal, and
was completely custom fabricated. It was one of the first explorations in computational design in architecture aside from the work of
Frank Gehry. I was fascinated at how small the margin of error in the construction was due to the precision of the computational work
and its inherent intricacy. One can look at the work and only see the orthogonal grid, but as the move around the work, it begins to
distort from that shape heavily.