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The
"Submerged" project brief specified the site and the context
of the work (see appendix) and was selected from an open submission
advertised in the national press.
My
approach to the work involved several stages. Initially working
from plans and archive photographs of the space and a written description
of the venue, I devised an initial treatment, referring back to
aspects of my previous installation work from which I could draw
connections.
The themes implicit in the project brief were very suited to my
approach and to the themes and concerns of my installation work
generally, and I found it useful to draw parallels with a number
of previous works, specificallyStreamline (1991) and Cross-Currents
(1993) . The project brief identified an interest in establishing
an internet "web site", and I was particularly attracted
to the idea of developing an aspect of "liveness' which had
been a central feature in Cross-Currents.
For me there were a number of important connections with Cross-Currents
. The work had also been site-specific, commissioned by Camerawork,
London to be exhibited at the Cafe Gallery in Southwark Park for
the exhibition "River Crossings". Both Cross-Currents
and Merging/Emerging were concerned with establishing connections
with an historical aspect of the site. The lido adjoining the Cafe
Gallery in Southwark Park and the spa at the Old Royal Baths were
both derelict, both involved a relationship between the architectural
space and the human body and both were about a current absence of
water.
In
Cross-Currents I made a feature of a link between a "live"
outdoor video camera and an interior pre-recorded image sequence
to draw together representations of space and time- the "present"
outdoor live camera image (with superimposed date and time in the
display) with the "past" of the interior projection.
In
Merging/Emerging I was particularly interested in the historical
aspects of the site, both in terms of the architectural space and
the specific purpose of the original building. My plan for the installation
was to draw together historical images (using archive photographic
records of patients in treatment at the spa) with details of the
building interior using video projections. The archive photographs
were recorded onto videotape and digitally manipulated to create
a continuous video sequence of liquid flow.
Each photo was made to gradually turn fluid, progressing from a
static frozen image to flowing liquidity, creating an illusion of
movement within the photographic frame as well as building a progressive
sequence from the cyclic flow of individual images.
The resultant video sequences were projected onto two key architectural
features within the building: a wall niche and an adjacent circular
well in the centre of the floor. Two synchronised video sequences
were made, linking a vertical movement down the length of the wall
niche to a continuous dissolving of the well image projected into
the hole.
These two video projections were monitored via two ceiling-mounted
"web-cams" which provided "live' images of the installation
to a dedicated web site. The two alternate camera views were continually
switched using a simple surveillance vision mixer.
In
all my installation work since 1990, and to a lesser extent in earlier
single screen video tape work such as The Stream (1987) , notions
of flow have been an important recurring theme. In Merging/Emerging
the flow of still images was made to move across the space of the
building. The vertical progression of each photograph, the gradual
transformation from frozen still to fluid motion within each frame,
and the layering and stratification of the images in the well, all
contributed to this visual experience.
A
further layer of the fluid theme is encountered through the installation's
relationship to the internet. The 'live' video cameras provide a
'video stream' to the web-site. Experienced as a series of grabbed
frames (the video stream cannot be displayed on the web as continuous
video) the animated video of the live installation is reconverted
into still images in order to become part of the flow of information
on the "World Wide Web". I was particularly attracted
to this cyclic structure- the fluid flux of "real life"
becomes a frozen representation of the past, it is converted and
re-animated using contemporary digital imaging technology and projected
into the present, which in turn is reconverted into a series of
still moments. Beginning as historical B&W photos, these images
are converted into video, digitally animated, colourised and given
an illusory fluidity, projected into the architectural space they
were originally photographed in 50 years before, they are finally
returned to a sequence of static moments in order to become information
floating in virtual space.
Site-Specificity
There is a sense in which all video installations are site-specific,
insofar as works installed in a gallery must be placed and tuned
to the particularities of the site. Characteristics of site include
such factors as entrance positions, scale of space, acoustics, light
levels, type of space (it's "normal" function) etc. The
most important issue in question here is the extent to which a work
is site-specific. Merging/Emerging was planned to have a particular
relation to the site, this idea was built into the original commission,
and furthermore was a condition of it. The installation's "site-Specificity"
has a series of interleaved layers, or inter-related aspects. Firstly
there is the relationship of the installation to the building itself.
the original purpose of the building, its history and its use. Following
on from this are the physical properties of the building- its archetectural
details, its condition, the physical layout, the fabric of the building-
it's light, colour and scale.
The ideas for the work, it's "look", function, utilisation
of display technology, the projection of sound, the type of images
presented, and their mode of presentation are all linked to the
site and are tied into the generation of meaning and the sense of
experience it produces in the viewer. The context of a site-specific
work are complex and are the most significant factor in both the
making and the rerading of the work- a notion of the significance
of the site is a pre-requisite in both cases. This may or may not
be exp;licit in the case of the viewer, but in cases where it is
made apparent by the artist, this fact will enhance the undertanding
of the work by the visitor. The artist must take into account the
specific nature of the viewer's physical experience of the space,
but canmnot assume the viewer's knowledge of the history and purpose
of the building. the work can attempt to present aspects of it's
history and purpose and to integrate them into the content of the
piece.
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