LIGHT MOTION PROCESS 2013 NUIT BLANCHE INSTALLATIONS Jan 27 - Feb 24, 2014
From sunset at 6:51 pm on Saturday, October 5 to sunrise on Sunday, October 6, Toronto was transformed by more than 112 art projects for the Scotiabank Nuit Blanche 2013 festival. Four of these installations were conceived and realized by teams associated with the Department of Architectural Science. Each team, consisting of students, faculty, and external collaborators, worked independently to create these installations. The four projects were designed with the intention of engaging with their audience by reshaping their spatial, temporal, and even emotional experience. Ad Astra, [R]evitaLight, the Hybrid Globe, and Light_Scape, represent distinct approaches to the challenge of public engagement through art and design. Light, Motion, Process is a reflection on these four projects and their resultant artifacts, which were brought to life concurrently but independently under one roof in the Department of Architectural Science. Despite being objects that operated discreetly on the night of the festival, it is interesting now, months later, to bring them together in the Paul H. Cocker Gallery. As much as these projects were informed by different intentions, they are imbued with a host of similarities. Light and motion figure as prominent themes across all four projects, as do the processes that each team engaged in while giving form to their ideas. All in some significant way make use of digital technologies to sense their environment and respond to audiences.
This is a processual exhibit, inviting its audience to enter a landscape of tests, experiments, conceptual propositions measured against technical solutions, and resolution through the iterative act of making - all integral steps in the process of collective design. The space of the Paul H. Cocker Gallery has been reconceived to showcase both the experience of ‘living through’ an attenuated design process and to present a sense of the experience of the Nuit Blanche event without replicating the installations. The ‘vestibule’ showcases the design timeline of each project, arranged from right to left, starting from November 2012, when each team began its work. The timelines lead the audience toward the present where, beyond the curtain lies the collective ‘work-space’ of the projects. This display is curated to present fragments of the original installations, along with other fragments, scrap objects and prototypes that may initially appear to be a random collection of ‘stuff.’ The common elements that run across all four projects are not explicitly described, giving visitors of Light, Motion, Process a chance to engage with these projects in a new way and discover underlying overlaps.