Tuesday, January 20, 2015

PNEK report on my ISEA Dubai 2014 participation



http://www.pnek.org/archives/2547





ISEA Dubai 2014 – The 20th Symposium on Electronic Art


The original piece I proposed was going to be a transformative electronic Bedouin tent located at Al Fahidi Fort in the Al Fahidi historic district of Dubai. But the project was under constant transformation as to where to locate it and the possibility of producing it at all.

I participated in ISEA Dubai 2014 with an immersive multiple video projection and sound installation project entitled Interlacing Worlds. As part of the ISEA participation three ISEA artists were offered a one month sponsored residency at Abu Dhabi Art Hub who partnered with ISEA Dubai 2014 and Zayed University who were the hosts of this years ISEA. The other ISEA residency artists were Simone van Groenestijn (Cym) from the Netherlands and Yoshiyuke Abe from Japan, both have participated in ISEA previously. Yoshiyuke Abe was one of the founding members of ISEA, but has now withdrawn from that position and mainly participates in the symposiums. He is a pioneer in visual computer media and computer generated graphics, algorithms and his own hardware and software development dating back to the 1960’s. Cym develops computer games as social interaction and invites kids as participants through workshops. ISEA Dubai happened from October 30th to November 8th, while the residency lasted from October 10th to November 10th. PNEK supported me with a travel grant for the participation.













Measuring the Desert, by Anne Senstad

My initial project proposal was actually first entitled Interlacing Worlds – UNIVERSALS, referring to my installation at the 55th Venice Biennale in 2013, and transforming the ideas of perception of space to the idea of culturally and philosophically interlacing east and west. The original piece I proposed was going to be a transformative electronic Bedouin tent located at Al Fahidi Fort in the Al Fahidi historic district of Dubai, based on the shape of a sculpture from my UNIVERSALS series. The semi transparent tent fabric would be projected through so the structure would appear to be, and be experienced as in continuous transformation; the perception of the structure would be experienced as a non-static immersive and sensorial structure. There would be 3-4 projectors placed in the interior as well as speakers. The two video pieces I brought and prepared for this specific installation were Colour Synesthesia VI , 2014, and Sonoptic Parallels, 2014, with sound composed by the legendary electronic sound composer, mathematician and philosopher C.C. Hennix, so speakers and sound quality were an important element of the installation. The transformational Bedouin tent would be experienced from both the exterior and interior through color, sound and aroma with the added use of traditional local incense. The interior would also have traditional Bedouin carpets, pillows and seating on the floor, so participants could engage in the use of the structure over time. That was the initial proposal. The curatorial team hadn’t gotten permission from the city nor funding for the installation from their sponsors, so the project was under constant transformation as to where to locate it and the possibility of producing it at all.













Liwa Projections, Liwa Art Hub, UAE, by Anne Senstad

In leading up to departure from New York to Abu Dhabi it became clear that the last of several offered locations, which was the large Maraya Art Park in Sharjah, was not going to happen for me. So I refocused the whole concept to be located at the Abu Dhabi Art Hub as it became obvious that I could not have a tent custom manufactured and that the residency actually had a traditional tent available I could borrow. One has to be flexible and work with what is available. This meant that the whole exterior idea was transformed to purely an interior immersive installation where I could still stay with my concept with the planned projection, sound and interior seating arrangement. In preproduction I tried to secure projectors through the residency, as well as other technical equipment I needed for the set up. The residency had 1 projector available for me and we managed to get hold of another one on loan through the Zayed University branch in Abu Dhabi. This installation was exhibited as part of the Abu Dhabi Art Hub exhibition for the International Art Month including other artists in residency who had been selected through their own internal process. These consisted mainly of painters and sculptors from various countries in Europe. The International Art Month exhibition opened in conjunction with the opening of ISEA October 31st. The installation of my piece was moved to the interior gallery space of the Art Hub building, abandoning the tent and site specificity altogether, but still recreating the interior experience of the tent. The focus was to keep with the initial proposal idea, allowing for projections and sound to be properly represented.















In the first week of the residency I simultaneously became more engaged in what the residency itself had to offer outside of being an ISEA participating artist, which turned out to be quite unique. They had a satellite residency in the Liwa oasis in the desert locally named The Empty Quarter, 20 km from the border of Saudi Arabia and bordering Oman. Known to be the largest sand desert in the world and the harshest to cross. It is also home to the Bedouin and rich in local heritage and history. I decided I would utilize that opportunity to create new work informed by the oasis and desert location, as well as bring my projection installation to experiment with it there and see what could be done. The Liwa Art Hub residency where I spent all in all two weeks out of the 4 weeks in the UAE turned out to be the most enriching and interesting emersion, as well as pleasant since there was not only a swimming pool but excursions out to the desert for sunrise with breakfast in the dunes and late night music and dinners in the oasis art hub. The group of artists in residency there were from Kuwait, Irak, Iran, Hungary, Italy, Germany, Syria and so on and had spent a month there already. None of who work with electronic art, sound or photography. Except for a French documentary filmmaker who was working on a film about the oasis artist residency and the artists.

The Liwa artist group was working on an exhibition with the impressive title The First International Historical Memory Art Festival – The Age of Transformation, organized by Iranian curator Nasser Palangi, focused on the history of the UAE from the Bedouin culture to the unification of the Trucial states under Sheik Zayed. I became part of the exhibition without intension and found myself working intensely on a human scale sized burka sculpture made of date palm material, a dual camel bone installation in gold and black referring to the history of oil in the UAE, and I also made a video projection installation for the opening night of the exhibition in a large transparent empty greenhouse with a sand floor using one projector, fabric and a smoke machine, where the fog created a weather condition installation. Sadly the meditative sound composition by C.C. Hennix for the video piece suffered as the only speakers available were karaoke speakers. The exhibition is currently travelling and there is a book being produced from it. There are about 30 artists in total in the show, where the work is interchanging depending on the exhibition location.












Liwa projection with fog, Liwa Art Hub, by Anne Senstad

Back to ISEA Dubai 2014, the foundation ISEA itself is focused on electronic art, symposiums and exchange of information on technology, education, academia and scientific research. According to other participants and also my own experience, the schedule for the smaller symposiums, workshops, talks, exhibitions and meetings were problematic. There were last minute changes, cancellations, didn’t happen, couldn’t be found. There were major problems with information and the website was very confusing to navigate. A lot of the registration information was also lost along the way unfortunately due to technical glitches within the system. The challenge of technical equipment was also a source of production problems for the artists who were invited as singular artists not associated with a sponsoring university or foundation. However most artists I came across I found to be easy going, make the most out of it and go with the flow. It should be noted that everyone was very helpful, friendly, generous with their time and energy, as were the local UAE people I met.
In preparation and pre production for site specific and international projects, I find that for installation of any kind of digital and electronic work, being visual or sound, one has to always have additional back up material, hard copies of digital video and sound files like DVD’s and CD’s for worst-case scenarios. I ended up using my PAL DVD’s on basic DVD players. It became clear that digital files are non-compatible with the local equipment when produced on equipment outside the UAE. I’m not familiar with the technical reasons for that, but from what I saw of the various ISEA installations, there were major problems with either the sound or image from video files due to incompatibility. In addition, all participating ISEA artists would have to buy tickets for each workshop or talk which I found strange, rather than be invited as guests in exchange for participating and having come from abroad. The ISEA talks I did go to were courtesy of Abu Dhabi Art Hub as a sponsor of ISEA, at least I said I was a sponsor when entering, coming across as a sponsor and not an artist. Getting between Abu Dhabi and Dubai turned out to be a challenge as well and I couldn’t manage to get to the various Universities and exhibitions with the long distances without a car and enough time. One of the main openings was supposed to happen at Maraya Art Park in Sharjah, and by convincing a local American friend to drive me to the exhibition opening at the American University in Sharjah to the Maraya Art Park, bringing along a lone jetlagged academic from Kansas we found in the hallways at the American University, it started to rain which never happens in that region – so all the site specific electronic art around the park had to be turned off, the opening cancelled and the VIP’s stayed home. This was the main opening gala evening with ribbon cutting. One can’t predict the weather, but a plan B is always advisable especially with site specific electricity run installations.

















Liwa Art Hub, photo: Anne Senstad

The third ISEA installation I produced in the UAE, was a singular projection onto the exterior of the Al Fahidi Fort building in the historic Al Fahidi district in Dubai. Ironically this location was my first proposed location, which then had been moved to quite a few other potential locations in the whole UAE after the initial no-go for the proposed location. Here fellow Norwegian artist Frank Ekeberg and his partner Krista Caballero exhibited Birding the Future amongst the group of international artists. The Al Fahidi historic heritage district is a touristic neighborhood with labyrinthian quarters, shops, cafes, museums and a library. The small buildings lent themselves well to installations, creating small galleries and projection spaces. But due to the historic nature of the location there was a challenge of electricity, equipment and installation organization. I had initially been given the exterior of the fort walls for my installation, but this was changed last minute the day of the opening to a small side wall within the quarter due to lack of permission. In general the neighborhood exhibition at this location came across well for the artists and what we had to work with.
In the end, the hosts are not to blame for the multiple technical, organizational problems and confusion, but rather the system of the organization itself could be run better. It was a very large endeavor to take on for this years hosts having not had any kind of electronic art happening on this scale before in the region. The ISEA artists I came across and spoke with out of the over 170 participants and who mostly seemed to be returning artists, enjoyed the reunion, commeraderie, seeing and experiencing new parts of the world, exhibitions and exchange of information and knowledge. Having created a large body of new work during the residency, experienced the oasis and desert, and gotten to know people from the middle east and locally in the UAE has been the reward.











Abu Dhabi Art Hub - ISEA 2014, installation of Sonoptic Parallels, by Anne Senstad



Sunday, November 16, 2014

The Biennale Tables in Interior Design Magazine


















The Biennale Tables by Anne Senstad in Interior Design Magazine, November 2014 issue.

Available through Art Objectified


Saturday, November 8, 2014

Abu Dhabi Art Hub/ISEA Dubai installation documentation





Sonoptic Parallels - The Infinitisemal, 2014
An immersive installation at Abu Dhabi Art Hub in conjunction with ISEA Dubai 2014.

Supported by Production network for electronic art, Norway: PNEK.org
By Anne K Senstad

Sound by Catherine Christer Hennix and Chora(s)san - Time-Court Mirage: Blues Dhikr Al-Salam (Blues Al Maqam).
The mixed media installation Sonoptic Parallels , is accompanied with music by the electronic sound pioneer C.C. Hennix and is a collaboration between Senstad and Hennix. The immersive projection installation environment consists of video projections, multiple transparent fabrics , wind, incense, Bedouin carpets and pillows. 

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

MAAP Magazine Interview


Link: MAAP Magazine 


L’OPERA INFINITA DI ANNE KATRINE SENSTAD
  interviste ai confini dell'arte

Sunday, October 5, 2014

The Nature of Now - Prospect 3







PROSPECT 3 New Orleans Biennial 

October 24, 2014 – January 24th, 2015

I'm pleased to announce I will be exhibiting The Sugarcane Labyrinth as an immersive multi sensory installation and premiering the video piece The Swamp, both installations with sound composed by  JG Thirlwell. Located in a 1920's New Orleans theatre, the exhibition The Nature of Now serves as a new tapestry; a multi-sensory experience of aesthetic thread, woven together to create a lyrical story focusing on the impasse of nature and man.

Opening reception October 24th, 6-9 pm, 2014
Dance Party 9-11 pm


3308 Magazine Street, New Orleans

Curated by Pamala Bishop


Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Material Way opening September 30th 2014




Material Way

Curated by Kathleen Kucka 
SHIRLEY FITERMAN ART CENTER
Opening Reception: Tuesday September 30, 6-9pm
ON VIEW: SEPTEMBER 30 – DECEMBER 1, 2014
81 Barclay St
New York, New York 10007
Today 12:00pm - 6:00pm
Phone (212) 220-8020

For many artists, materials and process are the starting point from which the work is made. These fourteen artists delight in their materials: using everything from paint, canvas, tables, coffee cups, thread and plastic. They experiment with scale, engage the viewer’s sense of play, and transform their materials with unique processes, offering us a startling new vision.”

Artists: Kellyann BurnsDon ChristensenLauren Clay

Diana CooperPeter FoxLisa HokeJae KoHolly Miller

Nicholas MoenichPaul PagkAnne Senstad

Sandi Slone, Wendy Small, Jan Maarten Voskuil



Thursday, August 28, 2014

Gallery nine5 opening September 20th 2014




















Graphic: of or relating to visual art

Opening reception September 20, 6-8 pm
September 18 - October 29, 2014

gallery nine5
24 Spring Street, 
New York, NY 10012 
T 212 965 9995 
www.gallerynine5.com

Artists: Rubin415,  Ye Hongxing, Anne Senstad, Jessica Lichtenstein, Jeremy Flick,  
Oona Ratcliffe

Graphic: of or relating to visual art examines the influence of the digital age on art. Whether through the changing of mediums, as in the prevalence of video art to document concepts, or in the use of new colors that appeared first on a computer screen, artists have responded to the social changes that currently surround us. A new language of shapes and palettes has entered into the artistic dictionary; though their relevance is debatable, their presence is permanent. By presenting this presence without judgment, gallery nine5 continues to manifest its mission to accept and analyze art from all spectrums and angles.

Friday, July 25, 2014

The Swamp excerpt


The Swamp by Anne SenstadMusic composed and performed by JG Thirlwell.
16:9
Stereo
3.40 min




Thursday, May 8, 2014

Berlin Art Link April 8 2014 by Sarah Corona

Anne Katrine Senstad:

Light Writes Always in Plural


Article by Sarah Corona in New York; Tuesday, Apr. 8, 2014
From Goethe to Octavio Paz, from James Turrell and Dan
Flavin to Douglas Wheeler, they are all trying to get to one 
thing: light, in all its shapes and colours. Light as an 
object, as an architectural element. Light as a
philosophical motto. Light as a political and moral frontier.
That is to say, “Light writes always in plural,” for its range
is boundless. It occupies space and seeps everywhere — like 
water – altering it physically and psychologically.


The media that Anne Katrine Senstad uses to express
her ideas range from neon installations to projections, 
from photographic printing to site-specific land art. 
Senstad inserts light and luminous bodies in everyday 
spaces, whether exterior or interior, inhabited or not. 
And these physical places often serve as messengers 
from a world in which human emotions and 
existence are reduced to a minimum.
And it’s precisely the neon work Light Writes 
Always in Plural which opens the discourse on 
the artistic production of Senstad. Inspired 
by the title of Octavio Paz’s essay “Water Writes
Always in Plural,” on the art of Marcel Duchamp
the neon work not only emanates its bluish
light into all crevices, but it is also a witty play
on words and concepts about philosophy and life. 
Underlying this florescent tube is a careful 
analysis and critique of our use of language
as a means of mass communication.


Anne Katrine Senstad – “Light Writes Always in 
Plural” (2008), neon tubes, transformer

The literature and philosophy of the great thinkers
have inspired other neon works by Senstad.Forget
 Flavin comes from the title of Baudrillard‘s 
“Oublier Foucault” (1977), simultaneously an
ode to and critique of Foucault that remains 
unanswered. Senstad appropriates Baudrillard’s 
concept, declaring through the artwork her
admiration and antagonism of the American 
minimalist artist. Translated into Chinese 
characters, the title takes on a significance 
beyond visual translation that reflects 
the charged relationship between image
and word. A third example is Light Owes 
Its Existence to the Eye, a quote from Goethe
and a reference to his obsession with light 
and colour. The works and phrases in neon
become a subliminal reminder and visual 
symptom of an intellectual concept, 
translated into tangible objects.
Senstad’s installations in nature, or land art,
take on a political twist. A prime example is 
The River of Migration (2010), comprised of 
72 lights planted in a hilly Californian landscape 
in order to create a line that interferes 
with the local geography. It is not just an
intervention in the landscape, but a strong 
gesture of opposition to the policies of 
migration — a silent memorial to those who have 
lost their lives trying to cross the U.S.-Mexican 
border. The solar-powered lamps represent the 
victims of 2010, the year she realized the project. 
The long line of lights down a hillside talks about 
the nature of migration and how bodies of people 
crossing long distances will naturally walk in a 
sequential manner according to age, physical 
health, group importance, and their delegated task. 
The phenomena of artificial lights in a natural, 
untouched landscape evokes notions of light and 
darkness, nature and the artificial, the environment
and the untouched landscape, providing a scenario 
for interaction and intervention.


Anne Katrine Senstad – “The River of migration”, 
(2010), video still, 4.53 min

The works with which Anne Senstad most captures 
the attention of the viewer are the large environmental 
installations. Through the projection
 of coloured lights, she tints entire spaces 
in red, blue, yellow, green, and all shades in between. 
Combined with specifically composed sound, 
the visions of colour create a visual poetry leading 
the viewer to a sensory experience approaching a 
synaesthetic phenomenon. “The optical illusions 
experienced when physically enveloped in artificially 
projected colors, shapes, and sound,” Senstad 
explains, “give way to the momenta of 
kinesthesia.” Such is the experience of her work 
Kinesthesia for Saint Brigid (2011-12), an 
installation consisting of a continuous 
projection of colours in a former church in 
Ottawa (Canada). Accompanied by pulsating 
background music, composed by JG Thirlwell
the work gives rise to a transcendental experience 
of art. “It’s about creating life in an 
enclosed and uninhabited space,” says Senstad. 
Inspired by Plato’s “Cave and Pharmakon,” the 
sensory and perceptive aesthetics are 
combined with spatial relations, structures of 
architectonic spaces, and retinal experiences of 
the prisoner’s cinema.


Anne Katrine Senstad – “Kinesthesia for Saint Brigid”
(2011), video still

Evolving from this work is Universals (2013),
exhibited as part of the 55th Venice Biennial of 2013. 
A polygon made of transparent plexiglass tubes inhabits 
the center of the exhibition space and is continuously 
exposed to fields of coloured light. Divisive fields of
projected light, and the subsequent re-assembling 
into a solid, create the sculpture. The work challenges 
the boundaries of architecture, video, and traditional
 concepts of sculpture and strengthens Senstad’s ideas
of using light and colour to solidify space. A similar 
concept is expressed in her photographic 
prints, where we can observe foldouts of hypothetical
sculptures — impossible solids made of coloured rays, 
visible only “thanks to a perfect combination 
between the distribution of shadow and light
reflected from a transparent object.” (Goethe)
_______________________________________________________________________________
Sarah Corona holds a BA in Fine Arts and a MFA
in Communication and Management of Art 
(University of Bologna). Based in New York, she 
works as independent curator, art historian and
journalist for international art magazines with a 
focus on the intersections between technology 
and art. www.sarahcrown.com

OR NOT Magazine - Light Writes Always in Plural

http://www.ornotmagazine.it/project/light-writes-always-in-plural/

May 8th  2014

Light writes always in plural – Anne Senstad

di Sarah Corona

Da Goethe a Octavio Paz, attraverso James Turrel, Dan Flavin
e Douglas Wheeler, per arrivare a una sola cosa: la luce in
tutte le sue forme e colori. La luce come oggetto, come
elemento architettonico, la luce come motto filosofico. La
luce come confine politico ed etico.
Come per dire, “La luce scrive al plurale”[1], ponendo l’accento
sul fatto che il suo raggio d’azione non ha confini. Si comporta
come l’acqua, s’infiltra dappertutto, occupa lo spazio e lo altera
fisicamente e psicologicamente.
media che Senstad usa per esprimersi variano dal neon alla
proiezione, dalla stampa fotografica all’installazione site-specific
e la land-art. Senstad si occupa di inserire la luce e/o corpi
luminosi nello spazio quotidiano – sia esterno o interno,
abitato o non. E questi corpi fungono spesso come metafora
o messaggeri di un mondo umano in cui emozioni ed esistenza
sono ridotti al minimo.
È proprio l’opera al neon “Light Writes Always in Plural” che
apre lo scenario alla produzione artistica di Senstad. Ispirata
dal titolo di Octavio Paz nel saggio sulle opere d’arte di
Marcel Duchamp “Water Writes Always in Plural”, il neon
non solo emana la sua luce bluastra dovunque, come
l’acqua, ma rappresenta anche un gioco intelligente di
parole e concetti di filosofia e vita. Sotto il tubo fluorescente
si nasconde un’attenta analisi e critica della nostra lingua,
intesa come mezzo di comunicazione di massa.
Alla letteratura e alla filosofia di grandi pensatori sono ispirate
anche gli altri lavori al neon. “Forget Flavin” nasce dal titolo
dell’articolo di Baudrillard “Oublier Foucault” (1977),
un’ode/critica a Foucault che è sempre rimasta senza risposta. 
Senstad si appropria del concetto trasformandolo in opera 
d’arte luminosa “Forget Flavin”, dichiarando all’artista 
minimalista americano la sua ammirazione e antagonismo. 
Tradotto in ideogrammi cinesi, la frase assume poi non 
solo un addizionale valenza visiva/iconografica, ma la 
relazione immagini/parola è caricata di ulteriore significato. 
Un terzo esempio è “Light Owe’s it’s Existence to the Eye”, 
una citazione di Goethe e un riferimento alla sua ossessione 
per la luce e il colore. Le opere/ frasi al neon sono quindi 
subliminali promemoria e sintomi visivi di un 
concetto intellettuale/artistico, tradotti in oggetto tangibile.
Un aspetto più politico assumono le installazioni nella natura,
land art. Un’opera esemplare è “The River of Migration” 
(2010) realizzato nella bassa California e fatto di 72 luci 
piantate nel paesaggio collinare, in modo da creare un 
una linea spaziale che interferisce con quella geografica. 
Non si tratta solo di un intervento nella geografia, ma di 
un forte gesto di opposizione alle politiche di migrazione: 
un’opera/monumento silenziosa a quelli che hanno perso 
la vita cercando di fuggire oltre il confine del Messico. 
Le lampade a energia solare rappresentano le vittime del 
2010, anno di realizzazione del progetto. La sequenza delle 
luci ricorda l’atto di processione migratoria, il raggruppamento 
dei membri secondo età, stato di salute, compito nel gruppo. 
Il fenomeno di luce artificiale in un paesaggio naturale e 
incontaminato riflette sulla nozione di giorno e notte, luce 
e buio, proponendo un pretesto d’intenzionale interazione.
Le opere nelle quali però riesce a catturare maggiormente
l’attenzione dello spettatore sono le grandi installazioni
ambientali. Attraverso la proiezione di luce colorata tinge
interi ambienti di rosso, blu, giallo, verde e tutte le loro
sfumature intermedie. Combinato a suoni prodotti appositamente,
si crea una poesia visiva e lo spettatore è indotto a
un’esperienza sensoriale che, attraverso visioni di puro colore
e suono, confina a un fenomeno sinestetico. Senstad spiega:
“È la percezione oculare che si sperimenta in natura, combinata 
a un’illusione ottica vissuta fisicamente, perché avvolti da campi 
di colore, forme e suoni artificiali, a creare momenti di totale 
sinestesia.”
Cosi è l’opera “Kinesthesia for Saint Brigid” (2011-12),
un’installazione composta da una continua proiezione
di colori in una chiesa sconsacrata ad Ottawa (Canada).
Accompagnata da un sottofondo musicale incalzante,
composito da JG Thirlwell, l’opera dà origine a
un’esperienza d’arte trascendentale. “Si tratta di creare 
vita in uno spazio chiuso e inabitato” dice Senstad.
Evoluzione di quest’opera è “Universals” (2013), esposta
nell’ambito della 55. Biennale di Venezia del 2013. Un
poligono realizzato con tubi di plexiglass trasparente
abita il centro dello spazio espositivo ed è continuamente
esposto a campi di luce colorati. La scultura nasce
dalla scissione dei campi di proiezione di luce, e la
seguente ricomposizione in un solido. L’opera sfida i
confini dell’architettura, del video e dell’idea tradizionale
di scultura nell’ambito di uno spazio chiuso e definito
ed evidenza il tentativo di solidificare lo spazio che
luce e colore abitano. E chiusi e ben definiti sono
anche le sue stampe digitali nelle quali possiamo
osservare piante d’ipotetiche sculture, solidi impossibili
fatti di raggi colorati e visibili. Come direbbe Goethe,
“visibili solo grazie a una perfetta combinazione tra la 
distribuzione dell’ombra e della luce riflessa da un 
oggetto trasparente.”


[1] Da Octavio Paz on Duchamps work “Water writes alway in plural”

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Downtown Art Fair, NY May 8-11 2014


http://www.downtownfair.com

No Longer Empty, May 8-11 at the new Downtown Art Fair in NY during Frieze Art Fair.
Adr: Downtown Armory, 68 Lexington Avenue at 25th Street, NY

Curated by Sarah Corona

Anne Katrine Senstad
Title: Tears on a Coffin, 2013. 
Neon, transformer, Size: Variable.

Curtesy of Gallery Nine5, NY

http://www.gallerynine5.com





Friday, March 14, 2014

AIVA Video Art Festival

Screening of The Coop with Oslo Screen Festival on tour:

AIVA - Video Art Festival
May 28-31 2014
Finspång
Sweden






The Coop is a video piece about the imagined narrative ongoings in a chicken coop. Subjectively examining the nature and territorial behavior of chicken, roosters and hens in a coop, we see through the camera placed at a birds eye view inside the coop the unfolding of feathered characters. The piece is created mostly in slow motion, but with chops in speed and an introduction of an outsider animal towards the end. The well known sound of the rooster has been distorted to the unfamiliar, creating a disturbing effect.
The video is shot on an eco farm upstate New York.
16:9
8.40 min
Stereo