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Bigert & Bergström (Mats Bigert, Lars Bergström)

(Sverige)
Utropspris
100 000 - 125 000 SEK
9 300 - 11 600 EUR
10 500 - 13 100 USD
Klubbat pris
Återrop
Köpinformation
För konditionsrapport kontakta specialist
Karin Aringer
Stockholm
Karin Aringer
Ansvarig specialist samtida konst och fotografi
+46 (0)702 63 70 57
Bigert & Bergström (Mats Bigert, Lars Bergström)
(Sverige)

"Tornado Trail"

Utförd 2012. UV-printat fotografi på vinyl, glober i akryl, LED lampor, kabel. Höjd 50, bredd 45, längd 170 cm. Podium i trä. Höjd 111,5, bredd 60, längd 145 cm.

Nyckel finns.

Övrig information

Text från Bigert & Bergströms hemsida om verket "Tornado Trail", som ingår i projektet "Space Molecules":

"But in the Inverted Space Molecules, the viewer is instead positioned outside a 360-degree photographic reflection of a particular location. By connecting these images into molecular structures, the entire physical form of a site or a situation can be documented.

The shape of the molecule is often used to amplify the concept of the work. In the 2007 work Weather Station, the molecule forms a flowchart-like description of the station’s different functions—how it gathers weather data from the atmosphere, processes it, and finally transmits it as legible information. In the 2006 work Expedition, which documents an ice breaker’s trip to the North Pole, the spheres reflect the different rooms of the research vessel, from machine room to laboratories, but also the various time zones the ship passes through as it navigates the thick arctic ice in its journey toward the pole.

One of Bigert & Bergström’s earlier works using the technique of attaching stitched panorama images to globes is the 2004 piece Nauseum. In this work, the spherical photographs hang in a circle, mimicking the inside of the Biologiska Museet in Djurgården, Stockholm. Built in 1893, it was the world’s first 360-degree panorama in which animals were placed in their natural surroundings. In Nauseam, the images, created using modern virtual-reality technology, document the panorama—itself a revolutionary spatial-representation technology of its day."