Monday, October 25, 2010

art audience and biofeedback


This work relies on the breath of the viewers to make virtual jelly fish move on a screen. I find works that touch on the potential of biological feed back fascinating. At the moment these works seem to be in the technical sence in a kinda of infancy, however they are an incredibly potent mechanism for making the viewer aware of the body as a collection of automatic processes. The dialogue between body and space is replaced between body and virtual space or the space created in a virtual sense in the body.








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