Documentary of artworks

Simon Ingram: Radio Painting Station: Looking for the Waterhole

2017, Installation, Radioteleskop mit malender Maschine

i6083_18_vpl_w_gp_fj_radiopaintingstation_ingram.jpg
Date
-
Duration in Seconds
129
Duration (H:m:s)
2:09
Width
1920
Height
1080

Description

In 2002, physicist Stephen Wolfram asserted that »our whole universe may be governed by a single underlying simple program.« [1] The complexity we experience in our life world, including us, is the result of a simple program, perhaps one or two lines, that has been running for a long time and for which we have not cracked the code. »Radio Painting Station: Looking for the Waterhole« [2] takes up this proposition and sets out to observe the cosmos above Karlsruhe at 24:00 hours and plot differences in a series of four compositions.

The subject of »Radio Painting Station: Looking for the Waterhole's« observations is the hydrogen line: the spectral emissions produced as neutral hydrogen atoms in the interstellar region undergo state transitions as they absorb energy. The work itself is a »mise-en-scène« where a radio telescope concentrates, filters, amplifies and digitizes these emissions [3] for a mechatronic system to codify as a series of paintings in a durational format from December 15, 2017 to January 14, 2018. The chosen concentric mode of visualization has an onomatopoeic relationship with its atomic referent, and allows, through comparison, a language of difference to emerge. 

Supported by Kamahi Electronics, ZKM | Karlsruhe, The University of Auckland and the Chartwell Trust.

Video Documentary:

ZKM | Videostudio

Camera: Frenz Jordt
Editing: Frenz Jordt
Interview: Jenny Starick

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