We completed a second interactive lo-fi sculpture in 2012:
- it is composed of shaped plexiglass with LED display, a sound dome, a sculpted seat for the viewer, and a handheld orb that is the interface for activating the work
- the viewer has a role within a dynamic cycle of order and disorder – not really as controller or controlled, but somewhere in between
- the sculpture shows very low-res video via optical cable that is connected to custom LED boards
- the imagery appears highly abstract, but actually it displays synthetic nano-particles settling into a pattern and then unsettling
- the viewer sits, picks up the small flashing orb, and transitions among different video/audio states
- WinWin is likely to thwart viewers’ expectations about interactivity.