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December
1995. The
Tunnel Under the Atlantic, televirtual art installation, established a link
between Montreal and Paris, two towns physically distant by thousands of miles.
The
Tunnel enabled hundreds of people from both sides to meet. From each side, a two-meter-diameter
tube, made us think of a linear crossing of our planet, as if it were dug under
the ground, shouting up in the middle of the Contemporary Art Museum in Montreal
on one side, and in the lower floor of the Pompidou Centre in Paris. |
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route that lies between the two spots is no simulation of the ocean underground,
it is a block of symbolic matter in which the geological strata leave the place
to iconographic strata. They are layers of pictures taken in the history of the
two cultures that everybody can reveal each time they dig. The collective exploration
uncovers fragments of rare or familiar pictures, which are as may opportunities
to wake up the collective memory of the participants. Helping us to loitering
and talking to people, these remains transform everybody's digging route into
a unique experience, into a personal assemblage made up of sounds and pictures
amidst a three dimensional space architectured through their moves. While digging,
the visitors can talk with their partners across the Atlantic Ocean. The sounds
of their voices are anchored in space and they enable everyone to find out the
directions where to meet the other. I takes six days to built and pave the symbolic
space before the de visu meeting of the two-continent diggers.
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from the physics constraints, Space then is a function of Time. There, speed is
not the best way to speed up the meeting, but a way of specifying everyone's position
within information. The Tunnel architecture created by each visitor determines
the editing of the picture in the time of their moves and in the built space.
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 | Altered
and shaped by the newly dug tunnel, the revealed images conjure up the very matter
of scenery that redefines itself as the aftermath of each explorer's/visitor's
decision. Their sequencing in Time and assemblage in Space are neither merely
elements of predetermination nor elements of randomisation. Through the things
they deal with, and through the selected images, both come from each visitors
own way of digging, If we cannot master what we are going to discover, what we
find out depends on our own way of doing things. If we let ourselves enjoy the
tantalising immediate feeling of euphorical capacity of digging at high speed,
we do not come across the same iconographic remains as the ones we can see when
explore the discovered elements carefully and curiously. Everybody's interest
in some details in the documents accounts for the theme and the semantic developments
that will come afterwards. The writing process then does not concerns a definitely
established building up of sounds and pictures any longer, but does concern the
creation of their appearance conditions thanks to the visitors exploratory behaviour.
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combination of chance and determination which defines the result architecture,
makes the world-to-explore similar to our current experience of life. The "Gadevu",
the agent developed in a basic version for the Tunnel under the Atlantic has become
the Z-A Profiler we can use for the dynamic and intuitive exploration of complex
databases. Combining the spontaneous actions and dialogues, the music composed
by Martin Matalon alters in the course of event and is organised around personal
routes, as it is the case with the pictures then revealed. | |
 | The
televirtual event -i.e. a remote connection of people in an interactive symbolic
space- is filmed with four virtual cameras. What they get is automatically mixed
and edited and that takes into account each participant speech. They can discover,
in the event of a counter-shot, their own live pictures floating within the space
they have just dug up. They will not be able to see each other before the two
sides of the tunnel meet. The exchange, essentially made up of sounds so far,
then becomes visual. When the meeting is achieved, other persons can at last take
the same way or create new ones as if they were in a collective quest of a shared
memory. maurice
benayoun 1995-2003 | |