The Clearing, 1994
Interactive Installation, dimensions variable
An interactive installation artwork that focuses
on the language of American print media's representation of the
Bosnian crisis during the 1993-1994 period based on material culled
from the archives of the Oakland Data Center.
Navigation
In its dormant stage, the program features an image going in and
out of focus with breathing sounds. The program is to be activated
by gallery audience viewers with the use of the mouse. Through the act
of search and information gathering of bits and pieces of news data,
viewers assemble a narrative concerning this event by exploring the surface of an old hunting photograph
visible in a fragmented mode.
The experience of navigating through the program's interface speaks
to technology's origins in medical and weapons design and philosophy
as discussed by media theorists Jonathan Crary and Paul Virilio.
The viewer explores the surface details of an old hunting photograph
to search for meaning encoded beneath its surface. This image functions
as a 'stand-in' for world events as chronicled to us through public
media, a mode of communication which positions us as distanced,
removed spectators unable to distinguish between the cinematic and
the real. The Clearing's interface speaks to the origins of vision
tools in medical and weapons design as technologies of domination
and spectacle in the search for knowledge and truth. The interface
accentuates the logistics of perception or piercing gaze of this
mode of seeing in its aggressive search mode, quick stimulus response
and the viewer's insatiable need for consumption.
Production Credits & Publications
Rosemary Comella, HyperReal Media Productions
Production by base.Arts publications, John Sappington
Exhibitions
"Spread", SOMArts, San Francisco (2011)
"Can it Digit?", Postmasters Gallery, New York (1996)
"Das digitale Wort", Word Up Festival, Vienna (1996)
The 6th Fukui International Video Biennale, Fukui (1995)
International Video Fest, Berlin (1995)
[The Clearing], New Langton Arts Gallery, San Francisco (1994)
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