A new public art installation by LilahFowler has been completed in a pedestrian walkway, New Bridewell, in the centre of Bristol. The piece, entitled ‘14537/9431’, forms the public art strategy of the New Bridewell student housing development. The work explores how our landscape is intertwined with technology and consists of two brightly coloured patterns cover one large façade, their visibility and arrangement shifting as they are walked past. The angle of the images means each is only fully visible from opposite sides of the walkway, forcing a viewpoint that is temporarily achieved.
‘14537/9431’ connects the two patterns displayed derived from a custom built computer programme, using changing, arbitrary datapoints to generate unlimited unique patterns; two of these computer generated patterns have been applied onto the fins that line the building’s façade. Fowler worked with a programmer to develop the software in response to several aspects of Bristol’s industrial and intellectual history.
This includes the theoretical physicist Paul Dirac (1902-1984) who was born and raised in Bristol and educated at theUniversity of Bristol, and who went on to win a Nobel Prize (shared with, and somewhat overshadowed by Erwin Schrödinger). Dirac established a general theory of quantum mechanics and is considered thefounder of the field of quantum electrodynamics; a field that later resulted in the development of almost every form of our current electronic devices. Subsequently, much later in the 1980s, Bristol became host to technology companies such as IBM, Toshiba and HP, as part of the so-called ‘Silicon Gorge’.
Fowler’s pattern generating software reflects the early stages of data modeling where necessary, but random, parameters are set in order to enable the comprehension and visualisation of data. The results are intricate, unpredictable images that are also mirrors of our time. ‘14537/9431’ forms part ofa body of Fowler’s work that reflects on technology and the contemporary landscape as having become inherently combined. It refers to the changing terms of our sense of space created by digital culture, where landscape is embedded with, and shaped by, technology, and virtual tools create a parallel mental and physical interpretation of our world.
Produced by Ginkgo Projects, and funded by developers Watkin Jones
http://www.lilahfowler.com/work-28.html
http://www.ginkgoprojects.co.uk
Images: ‘14537/9431’. Photo. © Jamie Woodley
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