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Group 1 – Art Projects utilizing Projectors

Art projects that incorporate projectors as their medium often belong to the realms of installation, video, or projection mapping. These forms of art are marked by their ability to transform physical spaces and the intriguing interplay between light and surfaces.

  • Tony Oursler’s Video Projections – an American multimedia artist, is celebrated for his inventive use of projectors in his artwork. He projects distorted, surreal, and uncanny images of human faces and body parts onto a variety of objects and surfaces, such as dolls, fabrics, and walls. Oursler’s work delves into themes of identity, psychology, and the influence of technology on human consciousness. By generating unsettling, dream-like environments that merge the physical and digital worlds, his installations provoke viewers to question their perceptions of reality.

  • Krzysztof Wodiczko’s Public Projections – Polish artist Krzysztof Wodiczko is renowned for his politically charged public projections on buildings and monuments. By projecting images and messages onto historical landmarks, Wodiczko confronts social issues like homelessness, war, and human rights. His projections encourage viewers to re-evaluate the meaning and significance of public spaces, while fostering dialogue around critical social and political issues.
Krzysztof Wodiczko on his 1988 Hirshhorn Museum projection - YouTube
https://wamu.org/story/18/02/13/startling-public-art-display-coming-hirshhorn-mean/
  • Pipilotti Rist’s Video Installations – Swiss artist Pipilotti Rist is known for her vibrant, immersive video installations that blend projections, sound, and sculpture. Rist’s work frequently explores themes of gender, sexuality, and the human body through dreamy, abstract visuals. By transforming galleries into multi-sensory environments, her installations challenge traditional notions of space and invite viewers to experience art in novel and unexpected ways.

  • Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s Interactive Projections – a Mexican-Canadian artist, creates large-scale, interactive projections that involve audience participation. Incorporating elements of surveillance, biometrics, and robotics, his work examines the relationship between technology, power, and human connection. Lozano-Hemmer’s installations often require viewers to engage with the projections using their bodies or voices, which blurs the distinction between spectator and performer.

  • TeamLab’s Digital Art Installations – a Japanese art collective, specializes in crafting immersive, large-scale digital installations that integrate projections, sensors, and computer-generated imagery. Their work often showcases breathtaking visuals of natural phenomena, such as waterfalls, forests, and flowers. These immersive environments respond to viewers’ movements in real-time, creating a unique, interactive experience. TeamLab’s installations push the boundaries between art, technology, and nature.
teamLab Borderless Odaiba (Closed) Official Site: MORI Building DIGITAL ART MUSEUM
https://www.teamlab.art/e/borderless_odaiba/

 

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