D-N SF 12 PG VI
2012
Reinforced fiberglass, titanium dioxide paint, LED lights, high intensity fluorescent lights, black UV fluorescent lights, quartz halogen lights, LEP lights (TBD), DMX control.
1201.6 x 1201.6 x 746.7 cm (473 1/16 x 473 1/16 x 294 in.)
D-N SF 12 PG VI 14 is an in situ installation in the Palazzo Grassi's atrium in which viewers experiment a fuzzy environment through an ubiquitous, variable light and a soft floor coating that sags when they walk on it. In the absence of any external indicator, visitors grasp this environment through they physical experience: their footsteps replace meters, and their breathing, seconds.
The installation's characteristics formally quote Wolfgang Metzger's “Ganzfeld Protocol” (1930). Metzger studied the neurological activity of a subject when projected in a homogeneous, undifferentiated space, such as a snowy landscape. Developed at the same time as anechoic chambers, this concept is used by the Minimalists, such as Doug Wheeler, in their artistic work.
D-N SF 12 PG VI 14 was installed in the Palazzo Grassi's atrium in 2014 for the exhibition The Illusion of Light.
The installation's characteristics formally quote Wolfgang Metzger's “Ganzfeld Protocol” (1930). Metzger studied the neurological activity of a subject when projected in a homogeneous, undifferentiated space, such as a snowy landscape. Developed at the same time as anechoic chambers, this concept is used by the Minimalists, such as Doug Wheeler, in their artistic work.
D-N SF 12 PG VI 14 was installed in the Palazzo Grassi's atrium in 2014 for the exhibition The Illusion of Light.
Exhibitions
© Doug Wheeler
Ph: ORCH orsenigo_chemollo
© Doug Wheeler
Ph: ORCH orsenigo_chemollo
© Doug Wheeler
Ph: ORCH orsenigo_chemollo
© Doug Wheeler
Ph: ORCH orsenigo_chemollo