Untitled
(Agora) 1995
Interactive video and computer installation. Collaboration
with Jim Campbell.
Untitled (Agora) is an interactive installation that combines
memory of movements external to a space, videodisc images and
text. A software
algorithm controls the videodisc selecting sequences from it; the
combining of images in layers; and display of these elements. The
viewer enters a space with a video screen suspended a few feet
from the entrance and parallel to the wall containing the door.
The screen
is translucent and the viewer sees an image from the backside upon
entering. Moving around the screen to the front the viewer sees
an image of the outside of the space. The image is comprised of
layers of digital video. These layers contain ghost like images
of the viewers recent entrance into the space, combined with
similar images of the history of other activity external to the
space. Additional layers contain an outline of a figure filled
with text that moves about the image, and text that fills the
image of
the doorway to the space.
A camera is mounted outside the space of the installation facing
the doorway. A computer numerically tracks amount of movement seen
by the camera. The computer also stores a seven-second image of
the movement that is continuously played back in a loop. As people
pass the camera the movement is continuously layered in the memory
of the computer. New images from the camera erase a portion of the
previously stored image. The display and recording of the stored
image occur at different speeds.
An outline image of a figure, stored
on videodisc, moves about the image. The figure and the image of
the doorway are filled with text. The text is the symptoms of agoraphobia
and the side effects of medications used to treat the disorder.
A software algorithm evaluates the amount of movement tracked by
the computer. It then determines the speed of playback and record,
the movement of the figure, the text filling the door and the figure.
If there is a great amount of movement the piece becomes "anxious."
The figure moves about the image in frantic and eccentric ways,
the symptoms displayed in text relate anxieties and the recording
and display of the image of movement becomes rapid. As movement
decreases the figure calms, text is less anxious and the display
of the recorded image slows.
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