top of page

Lightlines

Triple projection interior installation, acrylic, mirror, wood, sound

Installation Dimensions: variable - min 3000cm H x 5000 W x 5000cm D

26 C-type photographic prints mounted in reclaimed domestic frames

Dimensions: 70cm h x 50cm w each approx.

Developed from wider considerations of the interplay between person and place, how it is understood, analysed, or indeed, constructed through art making, Lightlines plays with ideas of the ways in which sight and site impact upon the mind and body space of the viewer. Setting up an interplay between the conscious and the unconscious worlds of the viewer, Lightlines explores ideas of encounter and affect through still and moving image. 

The presentation sets up a dialogue between The Lightstain Series, a collection of photographic works exploring the hidden resonances of interior domestic space, and Mnemonic, a moving image installation which re-presents the images as abstracted forms. Operating discretely and in tandem, the presentation considers memory and recollection as a complex interplay of encounter and remembrance and echos the ways in which memory and the psyche stores, recalls and re-imagines experience. 

 

Mnemonic works with ideas of thin slicing – the photographic image is a thin slice of space as well as time echoing the ways in which the mind stores and recalls perceptual information as conflated incidences of significance – to consider recollection as a collage of image and affects operative in the conscious and unconscious. 

 

Probing the familiar/strange relation operative in the proposal of the uncanny, Lightlines explores the ways in which perceptual stimuli are absorbed and assimilated into new configurations and forms which may be read in infinite variety by the viewer towards a changed relation.

 

The uncanny resonances manifest through the still images of The Lightstain Series become confused and conflated in Mnemonic through ideas of repetition and change, as the peculiar imagery of the stills is presented as an abstracted collage of colour and light. Rhythm, metre and patterning of image and sound play out as an evolving feedback loop, as the work sets into motion ever changing configurations of visual and aural stimuli.

 

In doing so, Lightlines engages with the ways in which the mind and the psyche operate in tandem to facilitate recognition and recollection while acknowledging the slippery relation between remembering/forgetting, the known/unknown, and the conscious/unconscious capacities of the viewer, echoing the operative nature of affect as a moment on moment apprehension of perceptual stimuli continually augmented over time.

 

Photography © Joolze Dymond

bottom of page