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Output details

35 - Music, Drama, Dance and Performing Arts

University of Hertfordshire

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Output 12 of 19 in the submission
Title and brief description

Icara-Icara : [audio-video installation for 2-channel synchronised HD video and surround sound – 10’ 14’’ loop]

Type
M - Exhibition
Venue(s)
St Albans Museum, England
Year of first exhibition
2012
URL
-
Number of additional authors
1
Additional information

Icara-Icara is a reworking of the Icarus myth. The work is structured as a non-narrative set of symbolic material arranged in cyclical form, and conceived to provide a new and enlarged meaning of an important myth that touches on some fundamental themes of timeless relevance. Alternative interpretations and outcomes are explored by substituting a female protagonist who, unlike Icarus, decides to fly at night.

The unique design of the installation chamber and the particular arrangement of the screens take the work beyond the flatness of the video format, exploiting several perceptual strategies to provide, instead, a tri-dimensional audio-visual environment for an immersive and inclusive audience experience. The particular angle and distance of the projection walls envelops the viewer and gives rise to a ‘stereo’ image – two separate streams of visual information that are channelled discretely through each eye and then re-combined in the brain. The large mirror covering the entire back wall further augments audience participation by reflecting at once the viewers and the screens, thus placing the viewers right inside the screened images and making them, effectively, part of the artwork. Four channels of audio are delivered by speakers concealed in the chamber’s walls. The soundtrack takes the practice of sound design to a higher level – not bound by notions of ‘realism’ in matching sounds and visual events, but free to explore metaphorical correspondences to convey directly states of mind, situations, and symbolical connections. Special emphasis is placed on the production of auditory spatial information designed to draw the audio-viewer in the midst of the screened events – from the claustrophobic setting of the protagonist’s suburban dwelling to the limitless space of the open sky. By this strategy, the two poles of narrative tension portrayed in the images (imprisonment and freedom) are communicated sonically to the audience.

Interdisciplinary
-
Cross-referral requested
-
Research group
None
Proposed double-weighted
No
Double-weighted statement
-
Reserve for a double-weighted output
No
Non-English
No
English abstract
-