Check out these works and artists that fuse the difference between technology and art. Kinetica Museum hosts an exhibition space in London that features kinetic, technological, and electronic artworks. Links to artists web pages are below!
Neon Works by Diane Harris
Diane Harris
Photo By Alex Robertson
Dianne Harris is co-founder and artistic director of Kinetica Museum.
Whistling Sea 2009 by Jun Ga Yung at the Kinetica Art Fair 2011
Jun Ga Young
Photo by Alex Robertson
Jun Ga Young
I take motifs and principles for my work from music. I produce visible music and audible colour by visualizing the sense of hearing and auralising the sense of sight. I combine sound with colour, creating conditions by which music and colour can communicate. The squares filling The Whistling Sea installation refer to musical measure. When the colour changes, notes can be heard, and melodies bring forth harmony when these notes link together.
Ga Young Jun, South Korea 2010
Fiber Optic Drawing By Carlo Bernardini
Paper is simply paper as long as it is white, but once you draw on it, it becomes ‘a drawing’. A design in light is a mental drawing that uses dark space.
Fibre optic drawings are in harmony with the place itself, the light creating an interrelation by overcoming the physical walls and transforming the environment in a deceptive way, pushing it to the limits of an illusionary dimension.
An imaginary drawing, executed with the light of optical fibre, can go beyond the walls, where the wholeness can only be reconstructed as a puzzle in the viewer’s mind. The installation takes over the space and incorporates it.
Spatial forms develop a challenging relationship within the space as the optical fibre line passes from room to room piercing the walls and the floors, combining the external environment with the internal one: ‘Permeable space’, the place where light generates space.
Carlo Bernardini, Milan 2009
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