Monday, August 30, 2010

TOM CHAMBERS


Spring's Landfall (2006)


This piece of work explores the idea of lucid dreaming and how we get ourself into unknow situations in our mind. It is about making things a reality in our minds and dreams. When we are left without our sense of sight we can dream up more things in a way that we would not normally explore in our normal state.




ANDREJ GLUSGOLD







Ballerinas (After Degas)
The use of lighting creates a sad and isololated mood in the photographs. It is almost saying that like ballerinas people have to hold their grace, posture and self during dark and uncomfortable times.



Past Works of Synaethesia











Here are some examples of past synaesthesia works. I particularly like the last on as it explores lucid dreaming in a beautiful and calm way.




BillViola

Emergence, 2002
Video Installation
Color High-Definition video rear projection on screen mounted on wall in dark room
Photo:
© Kira Perov

Two Women, 2008
Color High-Definition video on plasma display mounted on wall
Performers: Pamela Blackwell and Weba Garretson
Photo: Kira Perov



We have all come from a place of the unborn and we
are all here for a short period of time. we have to cross a
threshold of water and light to arrive and to leave. we will
ultimately all go back to this eternal non-spatial, non-temporal
world of potentiality. a lot of my work deals with questions
like this, of giving birth, death and human transition.

(http://www.designboom.com/eng/interview/viola.html)

Eadward Muybridge




Eadweard Muybridge was a pioneering photographer in the late 1800’s. The story is that he set out to answer a question: “Is there a time in a horse’s gallop when all four hooves are off the ground?” To do this he developed an ingenious method of rapidly taking sequential images. As a result, he both answered the question (”Yes.”), and embarked on the creation of the first formal sets of high-speed sequential photographs of both animals and people in motion. His photographic sequences of humans, horses and other animals walking, running, turning, carrying and moving in other ways are still an invaluable resource for artists today.