IMMERSIVE.WORLD | Programs | ALL ARTS: A 10-episode television series that explores interactive storytelling and experiential art, from immersive theater to virtual reality and more. Through interviews with artists, curators, directors, and writers, each episode explores a different aspect of truly immersive experiences.
Click here to view the full episode on Allarts.org - a PBS station.
Elements II, 2018 - installation view
Elements III - Blue - installation view from Beckoned to Blue, SL Gallery, NY, 2019.
Dan Flavin/Dia Art Foundation/Dia Beacon
Radical Light - Aerial view Kai Art Center, Tallin, Estonia
Friday, April 10, 2020
Tuesday, March 17, 2020
Radical Light Kai Art Center
The video clip is an outtake from a 20 min doc video by Stella Saarts for Kai Art Center on Anne Katrine Senstad's monumental and immersive sculptural light installation on the essence of perception, elements of purification, and the sensorial experiences of space, entitled Radical Light. The experiential light environment is defined by sets of matrices and an enveloping horizon and accompanied by en enveloping infinite composition by acclaimed composer JG Thirlwell.
www.kai.center
Exhibition open from January 26 – April 26, 2020
Kai Art Center is proud to present a new large-scale light installation by renowned Norwegian artist Anne Katrine Senstad, created especially for the newly opened art center in Port Noblessner in Tallinn, Estonia.
Senstad’s immersive light sculpture environment is an invitation to encounter the perceptive sensations of light and sound in pure form and their transformational effect on the experience of space. Constructed of neon lights, the unique luminal properties effect our cognitive system where the artificiality of LED lights fall short. As one of Senstad’s largest indoor works to date, the light sculpture is conceived as a monument and a matrix – a vast spectral light sphere which allows the public to experience being enveloped in the radiance of light of the highest spectrums when wandering through the historic former submarine factory housing the 450m2 exhibition space.
With a unique sound environment composed specifically for Radical Light by acclaimed composer JG Thirlwell, spatial audio arrangements engulf the space in luminous sounds in pure form. Senstad has collaborated with Thirlwell on numerous occasions since 2000, most notably Senstad’s solo exhibition during the 56th Venice biennale in 2015, The Vanity of Vanities.
While the exhibition takes place from January through April during some of the darkest months in Estonia, the immense light sculpture illuminates the dark season of the northern hemisphere.
The film and lecture program accompanying the exhibition opens an important chapter in the history of art – from the late 1960s to early 1970s – inspired by minimalist and land art and represented by a number of famous American artists such as Robert Smithson, Nancy Holt, Walter de Maria, Doug Wheeler and James Turrell. Films will include Troublemakers: The Story of Land Art (2015), Spiral Jetty (1970) and Sun Tunnels (1978).
The film program will begin with Troublemakers: The Story of Land Art (2015, by James Crump) on February 5th and 19th at 6pm at Kai cinema. The screenings of Sun Tunnels and Spiral Jetty will take place on March 4th and 18th.
Kai Art Center offers guided tours at the exhibition in Estonian, English, Russian, Finnish, Swedish and German. Please contact us to book a tour.
Supporters: Viru Keskus, Utilitas, Royal Norwegian Embassy in Estonia, NBK/Vederlags fondet, Norway
Special thanks to: ABC Motors, AkzoNobel, JAA Disain, Proplastik, Põhjala Brewery, Red Hat Group Design, Valge Klaar
The Sensory Chamber - Kai Art Center
A short video by Stella Saarts for Kai Art Center with a short interview by Anne Katrine Senstad on her installation the Sensory Chamber as part of the solo exhibition Radical Light at Kai Art Center.
Eternity
- Arthur Rimbaud, 1872
It has been found again.
What? – Eternity.
It is the sea fled away
With the sun
Sentinel soul,
Let us whisper the confession
Of the night full of nothingness
And the day on fire.
From humain approbation,
From common urges
You diverge here
And fly off as you may.
Since from you alone,
Satiny embers,
Duty breathes
Without anyone saying: at last.
Here is no hope,
No orietur.
Knowledge and fortitude,
Torture is certain.
It has been found again.
What? – Eternity.
It is the sea fled away
With the sun.
The Sensory Chamber installation contains a video projection of the video work Beckoned to Blue in seven colors onto a bed of salt and sound composed for the installation in dialogue with the spatial light environment and neon sculpture installation Elements IV that constitutes Senstad's solo exhibition Radical Light at Kai Art Center in Tallinn, Estonia. The colors travel through red, blue, green, white, black, pink and teal and go through mesmerizing monochrome glitched and sparkled spaces into compositions of expanding lines and circles reflecting our inner space confined in our bodies and minds, yet echoes the infinite vastness of space, the universe, time, awareness of self, our emotive and cognitive system. While the video is projected onto a bed of salt, a component found in almost all things known, an element of the human constitution and represents the solidity of the earth and ocean, a grounding element - the whiteness of the salt reflects the projected colors while offering a materiality. The composition created especially for Radical Light is by acclaimed composer JG Thirlwell and accompanies all spaces of the large scale installations in the former submarine factory built by the last Tsar of the Russian Empire in 1911, enveloping the visitor in a sound space reflecting the infinity of light, elements of electricity and nobility of neon gasses.
Friday, February 21, 2020
Monday, February 3, 2020
Sunday, January 19, 2020
HYPERBOREA - Freight + Volume Gallery
Freight+Volume is pleased to announce Hyperborea an exhibition of
recent work by interdisciplinary artist Anne Katrine Senstad. Reflecting a deep engagement with various avant-garde movements, including the Neo-Concrete group of Brazil and California’s Light and Space movement, Senstad’s work is underscored by a fixation with properties of form, sound and color, and specifically their overlap, the neurological phenomenon of “synesthesia”, wherein neural pathways signaling sensory experience are crossed and fused. In her first showing at the gallery, the artist presents a series of photographic works depicting precisely arranged, hard-edged planar forms along with neon sculptures and video installations; despite their apparent grounding in the realm of formal abstraction, Senstad’s pieces are set apart by an enigmatic, ethereal character and ephemerality that runs throughout her practice in all mediums. Working with the most elemental qualities of color, light and form, she corporealizes them into mirage-like objects that quiver between representation and perceptual experience, querying the inevitable slippage amongst our simultaneous systems of perception, sensory experience, and rational cognition. Senstad frequently works with text, and in Forget Flavin, first exhibited at the Zendai Museum of Modern Art, Shanghai, she integrates her work with light and deconstruction of perception into an “ironic insult” to the established hierarchy of art history. The issue of the over-representation of male artists is of special significance to Senstad, who observes a particular dearth of female artists within the spheres of Minimalism, Land Art, and the Light and Space movement. Eschewing LED lights and other artificial materials, Senstad has long used neon heavily in her practice, noting its uncanny formal qualities and literal otherworldly nature, existing in abundance in the earth’s atmosphere and outer space. Recalling the utopian, quasi-mystical roles and participatory models imparted upon abstract geometric constructions by artists throughout the 20th century, perhaps best expressed in the "Manifesto of the Neo-Concrete," stating their desire to “use phenomenology to create art that expresses complex human realities”, as well as the experiments in sensory deprivation undertaken by Robert Irwin and other Light and Space movement artists, the works in Hyperborea transmute raw sensory data into evocative constructions that are often oddly specific and deja-vu like; regarding Beckoned to Blue and Red, two video installations in which flickering projections of grain and grit against modulating washes of color stimulate the movement of gaseous neon particles, Senstad notes their similarity to the “Prisoner’s Cinema” phenomenon, or when as a child, one would push their fingers against their eyes to produce dots and patterns. Senstad’s relationship with color is exacting, with particular tonal juxtapositions imparting a sort of ambient consciousness upon the works, further blurring the lines between abstraction, materiality, and reality, situating Hyperborea in a nether-space between the organic and artificial. Two freestanding neon sculptures, Portal for Perpetuity I and II, display the nuances of the artist’s illusive ability. Fashioned of neon and transparent mirrors, Senstad describes them as “inverted black holes”, objects of seemingly infinite expanse yet having restrained physical bounds. Their respective color pairings (one of red and blue neon, the other pink and yellow) amplify this notion of sheathed potential energy. In her photo-based work, the artist explores similar overlaps between color and sensory perception. Depicting a hot pink gradient on a skewed plane, one piece from Senstad’s large-scale Color Kinesthesia series is on display; captured as a still from another video piece (the artist frequent recapitulates past formal devices), the hyper-saturated and gradated fuschia tones appear both reflective and diffusive, as if flickering between a physical photograph and a window cut to reveal a pink void. Similarly, an otherworldly inner energy emanates from her Concrete Planes series. Consisting of geometric arrangements of hard-edged triangular forms in carefully selected pairings of color, they call attention to the constant tension between physicality and perception, especially the atmospheric spaces and slippages between the two wherein the brain fills in its own hallucinatory simulacra. Organized into triptych and diptych formations, they reflect Senstad’s sensitivity to the fault lines of perception and illusion, as she weaves them into a discourse of color, light, and form. |
Saturday, December 21, 2019
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