Weighting is a kinetic video installation which attempts to realise what initially seems to be an impossibility; how the movement of performers contained within a digital video can have a direct physical impact on their surrounding environment. The piece works on three levels, literal, empathetic and analogous. The literal is a technical trick: the physical work as witnessed by the viewer. This takes the form of a number of performers depicted in video on two large LCD monitors connected together by a 3 meter horizontal piece of trussing. The monitors show these performers standing and waiting in a Beckett like fashion; why they are waiting is never disclosed. The five performers are distributed between both screens. Every so often one ...
A critique of social media, An Elevated Platform echos the polarised and often fickle intereactions ...
Gravity understood scientifically is normally accepted as a dictate, however when encountered creati...
Falling Up, Dancing Down was a performance/installation that is part of my ongoing research interest...
Gravity Shift is a video installation that looks at how we might read gravity through witnessing ano...
Double colour video monitor installation, silent, looped, dimensions variable (the work should be sh...
“Movable Measures” is a participatory artwork that will confront gallery-goers with installed object...
No abstract availableThis article was originally published by Parallel Press, an imprint of the Univ...
New media artists working on interactive installations often rely on different monitoring techniques...
Lightness is a new moving image work commissioned by Film and Video Umbrella, and funded by the Well...
New media artists working on interactive installations often rely on different monitoring techniques...
This research project originated in the questioning of the object in the physical space of the galle...
Gibson/Martelli investigate the relationship between fgure and landscape via modes of moving, and bo...
The impact our physical presence can be overlooked easily in everyday life. Monitoring a visitor’s m...
Relative Realities, a media installation by Volkmar Klien, realized in co-operation with Thomas Gril...
This is an open-instrumentation work written in graphic notation. Each music gesture is specific in ...
A critique of social media, An Elevated Platform echos the polarised and often fickle intereactions ...
Gravity understood scientifically is normally accepted as a dictate, however when encountered creati...
Falling Up, Dancing Down was a performance/installation that is part of my ongoing research interest...
Gravity Shift is a video installation that looks at how we might read gravity through witnessing ano...
Double colour video monitor installation, silent, looped, dimensions variable (the work should be sh...
“Movable Measures” is a participatory artwork that will confront gallery-goers with installed object...
No abstract availableThis article was originally published by Parallel Press, an imprint of the Univ...
New media artists working on interactive installations often rely on different monitoring techniques...
Lightness is a new moving image work commissioned by Film and Video Umbrella, and funded by the Well...
New media artists working on interactive installations often rely on different monitoring techniques...
This research project originated in the questioning of the object in the physical space of the galle...
Gibson/Martelli investigate the relationship between fgure and landscape via modes of moving, and bo...
The impact our physical presence can be overlooked easily in everyday life. Monitoring a visitor’s m...
Relative Realities, a media installation by Volkmar Klien, realized in co-operation with Thomas Gril...
This is an open-instrumentation work written in graphic notation. Each music gesture is specific in ...
A critique of social media, An Elevated Platform echos the polarised and often fickle intereactions ...
Gravity understood scientifically is normally accepted as a dictate, however when encountered creati...
Falling Up, Dancing Down was a performance/installation that is part of my ongoing research interest...