Feb
05

The Kinetica Art Fair 2010 at the Ambika P3 gallery on Marylebone Road in London

By admin

image

Homos Luminosos by Roseline de Thelin, which uses fibre optic cable to show the human form

image

A work by Balint Bolygo entitled Trace Yorself’, in which a revolving plaster cast of a person’s head is slowly deconstructed into a mathematical diagram

image

A solo transatlantic sailor gave up a lonely life on the high seas to create ocean-themed 3D art using thousands of tiny, synchronised lights. Artist Anthony Rowe, 45, unveiled his latest piece Ocean of Light at the Kinetica Art Fair and admitted the loneliness and isolation of the sea has inspired his work…

image

…In his early 20s the sailor made several daring long-distance expeditions, including the perilous solo voyage from Britain to America. Now, with his international art group, Squidsoup, Mr Rowe uses interactive light patterns – which respond to sound – to create flowing movement inspired by the sea

image

Vivid pools of colour representing the Olympic rings ripple and splash on a giant 2012-inspired artwork. The hypnotic light projection was co-created by a London art student who grew up in the shadow of the Olympic site in Stratford. Nimra Javaid, 23, created Liquid Athletes – along with five other Thames Valley University students – with nothing more than an overhead projector, some coloured plastic, a stereo and a bit of home-plumbing…

image

…Water drips from the projectors’ arms into coloured pools of light creating mesmerising ripples which symbolise the chain reaction of events and synchronise with the amplified beat of a human heart

image

A visitor views a 3D head made of LEDs. Vincent LeClerc of Revolver brings to life 3D objects with perspective so that they can be viewed from all angles in real 3D. Unlike other 3D display technologies, Revolver creates true volumetric video by controlling the light emitted from thousands of LEDs in rotation so that viewers really see in 3D with no need to wear any visual prosthesis

image

Outside The Box by Giles Walker, who spent six months visiting homeless people around London and recording the conversations he had with them. These voices have been programmed into robots which will be placed in public spaces across the country in the hope that observers are challenged by the existence of lives that they might prefer to ignore

image

Bruce Lacey – R.O.S.A B.O.S.O.M. (1966): Radio.Operated. Simulated. Actress. Battery. Or. Standby. Operated. Mains.

In 1965, Lacey created a robot for a poetry convention at the Albert Hall in London. The radio controlled robot called John Silent came on stage making farting and belching noises which were Lacey’s comment on poetry. In 1966 John Silent had a sex change and became R.O.S.A B.O.S.O.M.

image

An installation titled Interactive Agents by Robin McGinley. The Hydro Acoustic Big Bang Filter is effectively a large musical instrument that allows members of the audience to not only experience the sound of the Big Bang but also to play it. The sound used in the installation is an audio manifestation of the Cosmic Microwave Background widely believed by cosmologists and astrophysicists to be residual radiation from the Big Bang itself, some 15 million years ago

image

Jason Bruges with his artwork reflex portraits, a series of giant eyes which react and blink to movement

image

A gallery assistant demonstrates artist Rudolf Pacsika’s work by pushing a TV screen attached to a pendulum. The TV shows the artist moving in time with the swing of the pendulum

image

An orchestral milk float being driven by its creators, Ben Parry and Jacques Chauchat, tours the outer circle of Regent’s Park in London

image

A work by Dominic Harris entitled Flutter, showing a butterfly moving along a series of screens at 24 frames per second

image

Moiresphere (2010) by Dianne Harris, who curated the Kinetica Art Fair

image

A kinetic sculpture by the Urban Kinetics Research Centre Creative Campus Initiative

Categories : Uncategorized

1 Comments

1

I have already seen it somethere…
Thanks

Leave a Comment