May 30, 2003
RAFAEL LOZANO-HEMMER: RELATIONAL ARCHITECTURES
In the past fourteen years Rafael Lozano-Hemmer has developed interactive art installations that transform urban spaces and create connective environments. Using movement sensors, computer graphics, positional sound, Internet interfaces, tele-robotics and other custom-made technologies, his pieces aim to explore the intersection between architecture, interactivity and performance art. His work has been presented in biennials in Havana, Istanbul, Graz, Valencia and Liverpool, as well as in museums and festivals worldwide.
The exhibition Relational Architectures includes the following pieces:
Frequency and Volume, Relational Architecture 9
Created for the large church nave at the Alameda Art Laboratory, this installation invites members of the public to scan the radio spectrum using their bodies. A custom-made sensor tracks the projected shadows of participants, and tunes specific radio signals based on their position and size. The piece can sweep all frequencies from 150kHz to 1.5Ghz, allowing monitoring of broadcasts like air traffic control, taxi dispatch networks, wireless phones, short wave radio and many others. Free access to the radio spectrum, a contested public space, is presented in the context of the increased surveillance of the body.
THE ALAMEDA ART LABORATORY IN MEXICO CITY IS DELIGHTED
TO ANNOUNCE THE FORTHCOMING EXHIBITION:
RAFAEL LOZANO-HEMMER: RELATIONAL ARCHITECTURES
MAY 27 – JUNE 23, 2003
OPENING RECEPTION: MAY 27, 8 PM
ROUND TABLE: MAY 29, 7 PM
Relational Architectures is Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s first solo exhibition in his native Mexico. Five interactive installations will be shown, including a large-scale intervention designed specifically for the Alameda Art Laboratory main exhibit hall, a 40 meter-long colonial church nave from the XVI century.
A round table discussion will take place the 29th of May at 7 PM, with the participation of philosopher and author Manuel de Landa, art historian María Fernández from Cornell University, curator Priamo Lozada and the artist.
In the past fourteen years Rafael Lozano-Hemmer has developed interactive art installations that transform urban spaces and create connective environments. Using movement sensors, computer graphics, positional sound, Internet interfaces, tele-robotics and other custom-made technologies, his pieces aim to explore the intersection between architecture, interactivity and performance art. His work has been presented in biennials in Havana, Istanbul, Graz, Valencia and Liverpool, as well as in museums and festivals worldwide.
The exhibition Relational Architectures includes the following pieces:
Frequency and Volume, Relational Architecture 9
Created for the large church nave at the Alameda Art Laboratory, this installation invites members of the public to scan the radio spectrum using their bodies. A custom-made sensor tracks the projected shadows of participants, and tunes specific radio signals based on their position and size. The piece can sweep all frequencies from 150kHz to 1.5Ghz, allowing monitoring of broadcasts like air traffic control, taxi dispatch networks, wireless phones, short wave radio and many others. Free access to the radio spectrum, a contested public space, is presented in the context of the increased surveillance of the body.
Vectorial Elevation, Relational Architecture 4
A large-scale interactive installation originally designed to transform Mexico City’s historic center using robotic searchlights controlled over the Internet at www.alzado.net. In 2002 the installation was staged again, for the inauguration of the Basque Museum of Contemporary Art, ARTIUM, in the city of Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain. The exhibition at the Alameda Art Lab features video, Internet and printed documentation of the Mexican and Basque versions of the project.
1000 Platitudes
A photomontage and video project featuring words commonly used to describe the generic globalized city. Each letter of the alphabet was projected on a different building using the World's most powerful projector, with 100,000 ANSI lumen intensity and images measuring up to 75 x 75 meters (250 x 250 feet). Public housing projects, malls, government buildings, industrial wastelands and corporate headquarters were transformed by fast tactical projections, under the radar of potential regulators. This project was made during Lozano-Hemmer's "Huge and Mobile" (HUMO) Workshop in Linz, Austria, in early 2003.
33 Questions per Minute, Relational Architecture 5
A computer that uses grammatical rules to combine words from the dictionary, automatically generating 55 billion unique, fortuitous questions. The questions are presented at a rate of 33 per minute on 21 tiny liquid crystal displays. The software has been programmed to avoid repeating the same question, and will take over 3 thousand years to present all the possible word combinations. A keyboard allows participants to add their own questions to the automatic flow.
The exhibition also includes a video program documenting previous pieces made in Spain, Austria, Holland and France.
THIS EXHIBITION IS POSSIBLE THANKS TO THE GENEROUS SUPPORT OF THE JUMEX COLLECTION, LG MEXICO AND TELEVISA CULTURAL FOUNDATION.
LABORATORIO ARTE ALAMEDA. Dr. Mora 7, Centro. CP 06050, Mexico City.
Telephone / Fax (5255) 5510 2793 and (5255) 5512 2079
artealameda@correo.inba.gob.mx

