Supporting A Conversation’s argument, A Moment illuminates the limitations of digital communication methods in translating meaning.
Mimicking the reduction of physical experiences to just images and text when presented online, details of participants and transcripts of their physical gestures are unmoored from the original contexts, projected into empty rooms. Far removed from these original inputs, the projection installations become nothing more than superficial fragments of physical moments. It is imperative to note the totality of this fragmentation through this very documentation, where even the projection installations themselves become dissolved into mere pictorial representation.
Supervised by Kate Mansell.
Mimicking the reduction of physical experiences to just images and text when presented online, details of participants and transcripts of their physical gestures are unmoored from the original contexts, projected into empty rooms. Far removed from these original inputs, the projection installations become nothing more than superficial fragments of physical moments. It is imperative to note the totality of this fragmentation through this very documentation, where even the projection installations themselves become dissolved into mere pictorial representation.
Supervised by Kate Mansell.