At the entrance of a darkened room the
visitor was invited to take a glass bowl and move slowly
inside. Three streams of video emanated from the ceiling,
disappearing
into the darkness. The content in these columns of moving
imagery were only visible when the viewer caught the vision
inside the bowl, adjusting the position in order to bring
the images into sharp focus. The fragile bowls, blasted with
glass beads, offered a surface like that of early projection
screens, providing beautiful resolution. Layers of sound
continually remixed atop an ambient piece, enhancing our
experience of having entered another realm.
This was Hold: Vessel 1, by Australian artist Lynette
Wallworth, a 3 channel DVD multimedia installation challenging
the traditional
boundaries between visual art and the sciences and examining
the relationship between scientific technologies and human
experience. The projected imagery was derived from the artist’s
studies of lens based visualizing technologies developed
to allow us to view areas, be they the outer reaches of space
or the depths of the ocean, normally inaccessible to the
human eye. The artist worked with scientists who use scanning
microscopy and astronomical photography, and cinematographers
who apply medical imaging technologies to underwater filming
in creating this work. While some of the imagery was identifiable,
there was also a deliberate ambiguity about what we were
seeing in Hold: Vessel 1, and a sense of wonder
was part of what is truly mesmerizing about this work and
our experience.
Funded by the Judith Blough Wentz '57 Museum Programs Fund,
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, E. Franklin Robbins Fund and
Wellesley College Friends of Art.

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