Posts Tagged ‘light’
TOMORROW THINGS, 2015
September 24, 2015
Tomorrow Things @ ARCHIVE Tomorrow Things is an object-oriented experiment, a performance of figures yet to emerge from the primordial jelly. Formally posed as a collection of “blank objects”, each work presents a scenario: a potential artwork that is in the process of being selected, transformed or permanently erased from the artist’s oeuvre. Using perceptive […]
2015 | WORK | Media: installation | Tags: 2015, ARI, installation, light, object, painting, projection, propositions, provisional, scenarios, sculpture, unfinished
Future Spaces @ Paper Plane Gallery
June 28, 2012
5-22 July, 2012 OPENING WEDNESDAY 4 JULY, 6-8pm FUTURE SPACES | Connie Anthes, Tully Arnot, Bababa International, Biljana Jancic, Teo Treloar. As humans, our curiosities take us to the unknown and drive us to explore new realms of possibility. We desire what is different, unique and new, yet relish in the familiar and safe. We […]
2012 | NEWS | Media: installation, painting | Tags: Ainsworth, Anthes, ARI, Arnot, Bababa, Curator, door, excavation, Future, gallery, installation, Jancic, light, painting, PaperPlane, Rozelle, space, Sydney, Treloar
SCIENCE FICTIONS, 2011
March 30, 2011
Science Fictions This installation was developed as part of Collisions, a group show of unlikely collaborations staged as part of Art Month Sydney at Index Studios. A week of light-based experiments with collaborator and physicist Dr. Julian Berengut culminated in the exhibition of a double peepshow: Plato’s Dream and Tantalum.
2011 | WORK | Media: installation | Tags: 2011, aperture, Collisions, experiment, index, installation, landscape, LED, lense, light, Plato's Dream, retort stands, science fiction, space, studios, Tantalum
GEEK PEEP SHOW
March 13, 2011
Artist Connie Anthes and physicist Julian Berengut have teamed up to create science-fictional landscapes and futuristic effects, using light alone. The examples staged for ‘Collisions’ are Tantalum (East wall) and Plato’s Dream #1 (South wall). The genre of science fiction is widely attributed to humble beginnings in the 18th Century with two stories by French […]