Opening: tx-reverse 360°
A room installation by Martin Reinhart and Virgil Widrich
Wed, October 10, 2018 6:30 pm CEST
- Location
- Lecture Hall
At the opening of the exhibition »tx-reverse 360°«, the artists Martin Reinhart and Virgil Widrich present historical backgrounds, development processes and technical peculiarities of their spatial installation.
In a way never before seen, »tx-reverse« shows the collision of reality and cinema and draws its viewers into a vortex in which the familiar order of space and time seems to be suspended.
What is behind the cinema screen? It is not surprising that cinema-in-the-cinema scenes are often used in horror films. For they irritate and unsettle by reminding us – the immobile viewers hidden in the cosy darkness – of our own questionable position. What if the forces of unlimited imagination penetrate through the canvas into our reality? What if the auditorium dissolves and with it the familiar laws of cinema itself?
Back in the 1990s, Martin Reinhart invented a film technique called »tx-transform«, which exchanges time (t) and space axis (x) in the film. Normally, each individual film frame represents the entire space, but only a brief moment of time (1/24 second). In the case of tx-transformed films, however, the opposite is true: each film frame shows the entire time, but only a tiny part of the space – in cuts along the horizontal spatial axis, the left part of the image thus becomes the »before«, the right part the »after«.
20 years after Martin Reinhart and Virgil Widrich used this film technique for the first time in a short film (»tx-transform«, 1998), they again deal with the question of which previously unseen world arises when space and time are interchanged, aptly in a cinema and at full 360°: at the Babylon Kino in Berlin they filmed with the OmniCam-360 about 135 actors and calculated the installation »tx-reverse 360°« for the ZKM from this material.