Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts

Friday, 30 January 2015

MIRROR at the LEVEL Gallery

Have just completed the installation of MIRROR [s] at the LEVEL Gallery, Derbyshire, UK. MIRRORS comprises three interactive screens programmed to react as people pass. Each screen is located in the corridor and has an optical camera which is used as a motion sensor as well as a image capture device. This work forms a part of the Inter-ACT + Re-ACT programme at the LEVEL Centre and has been commisioned as a part of my role as Atist in Residence. Images from the screens below.

Friday, 24 October 2014

Pulse

Just completed my first real installation as Artist in Residence at the LEVEL Centre. This multi media event formed a part of the large-scale environmental artwork, DERWENT PULSE created by Charles Monkhouse. This work comprises pulsing spheres flowing along the river Derwent from its source to the point it merges with the river Trent in Derby.

Image above: Light costumes worn by children to create an electric parade for PULSE.

Thursday, 28 August 2014

AKT - Video Installation


Currently working on a new video + audio installation based upon images of the body in performance art events. This project is the result of a collaboration with performer and model Jojo Shaw and will be completed by the end of December 2014. Currently material comprises still images and video taken of improvised live performance events at the Studio @ Via Gellia, Derbyshire and in two rural locations.


Monday, 11 November 2013

Some Images from the first Trajectory Installation

Images taken by Dave White & Lucy Stevens at the first Trajectory Installation at the Richard Attenborough Centre for the Arts, Leicester University, November 2013.



IMAGE: Dave White

Thursday, 19 September 2013

Images from DIMENSION at the South Bank Centre, London


September 13th, 2013 - DIMENSION [VI] installed at the South Bank Centre.

Images from Dimension: a multi media video installation created by Andrew working with members of Random Line - see previous blogs for more information


Image: part of the large video screen for DIMENSION

Tuesday, 13 August 2013

Representing Re-formation

A new video screen for Representing Re-formation has been created by Andrew Williams, Leverhulme Artist in Residence at the Space Research Centre, University of Leicester.

It employs the 3D laser scan of the monuments of Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, and Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Richmond, both in St. Michael’s, Framlingham, Suffolk, as the basis of an artistic re-imaging.

Both monuments were originally designed to stand in the Cluniac Priory Church in Thetford

The video can be seen as a part of the 'Thetford's Lost Tudor Sculptures' Exhibition at the Ancient House, Museum, Thetford, Norfolk until the end of March 2014 (information provided below).



Still images from the video
 




Funders and Organisations involved in the project.


Thetford’s Lost Tudor Sculptures
ANCIENT HOUSE MUSEUM,THETFORD, NORFOLK
On until 29 March 2014

Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, planned two elaborate tombs for Thetford Priory. One tomb was for himself, the second was for Henry VIII’s illegitimate son, Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Richmond. However, the tombs were never finished.

After Thetford Priory was closed some parts of the monuments remained in the Priory, others went to Framlingham where Thomas Howard was buried in 1554.

In the 19th century two of these pieces were discovered in Thetford and donated to the British Museum. In the 1930s more fragments were excavated.

Today, researchers have tried to reconstruct what the tombs should have looked like, using fragments from archaeological excavations, 16th century manuscripts, 3D laser scanning and computer aided design software.

This exhibition reunites all these pieces - bringing together loans from the British Museum and English Heritage for the first time - and attempts to realise the sculptors’ original designs for Thetford’s Lost Tudor Sculptures.

Visitors to the displays can also see films, models, interactives and portraits which set the scene all displayed within the Ancient House, a Tudor timber framed building from the period. The extensive ruins of Thetford Priory, an English Heritage site, are a short walk from the Museum.


Thursday, 18 April 2013

Trajectory at Embrace Arts

It has just been confirmed that Embrace Arts will hold a series of Trajectory events over a two day period in November (8th & 9th) These will take place within a multi media installation using still images, video and sound. Trajectory (working title) will display some of the material developed during the residency at the Space Research Centre and will also provide the opportunity to present current research to a wider audience. The programme is very much still under development.



Trajectory - is currently a research and development project which will lead to more events in the future at a regional and national level. As a result this event gives scope for experimentation and the opportunity to develop new ways to communicate or comment upon research and the work undertaken by the SRC.


See Current Work for further details
also

Monday, 15 April 2013

IMAGES OF THE MOON

April 2013 has at last provided the first opportunity to view anything through a telescope for over two months. I feel that we have suffered the longest period of cloud filled night skies, poor visibility and freezing temperatures I can remember. These conditions severely dampened any enthusiasm for lugging a telescope to the moors above Matlock- even the promise of Comets only resulted in a half hearted attempt, quickly curtailed by frozen hands and a need for heat and a warm drink  However, I felt that I needed/wanted an image of the moon (I am not sure anybody really needs an image of the moon in an artistic context - discuss) and was determined that the photo was to be original. So at long last I managed to capture some using a Nikon D90 from the comfort of my studio window. My only use for such images is as a background for text forming a part of the video screen installation at Leicester University but it was worth the wait. As during the same session I have good images of Ganymede, Io and Europa (three of the four Galileon moons of Jupiter) as well as the ‘Eye of Jupiter’ (nebula) and a, as yet, unidentified pattern appearing just under Jupiter.  

Moon Image 1
Moon Image II