The digital age has changed our perceptions of physical space. The rise of the internet, cinema and new media such as VR brings new, indefinable realities. Contemplating this evolving definition of the world, a selection of today鈥檚 leading practitioners have looked into swapping traditional artistic media for the visual language of technology to create immersive installations and performances. Pioneering artist Anthony McCall鈥檚 (b. 1946), work is currently on display at the Hepworth Wakefield (until 3 June), which exemplifies this. Highlighting parallels between his practice and the all-encompassing nature of the moving image, he notes: 鈥淚 was drawn to cinema, rather than light.鈥
The exhibition, entitled, premieres three large-scale light installations which mimic the act of scribbling on paper 鈥 embodying the transition from analogue to digital. White light projected in geometric outlines gradually transforms flat forms into three-dimensional projections. Combined with a thin mist, these illuminating investigations dominate the unending darkness of the gallery. Despite the works being perceived as sculptural, the artist emphasises how he was 鈥渄rawn to the question of what was irreducibly 鈥榝ilm.鈥欌 Expanding on this notion, McCall explains: 鈥淢y work actually exists at the point where drawing, sculpture and cinema overlap. When projected, the drawing produces a sculptural form in three-dimensional space, but that sculptural form has a cinematic structure, which means that the form is not constant but shifting, and it discloses these changes gradually, over time.鈥

The intersection between art and film is further explored by at Marciano Art Foundation, Los Angeles (until 26 August). The monumental piece challenges the visible borders of a confined gallery space whilst referencing the space鈥檚 former function as a theatre. Engaging with the city鈥檚 rich history of filmmaking, the piece turns the space into an abstract, three-dimensional film. The 13,500 square foot floor is consumed by video, with ever-changing shadow play abstracting the architectural structure. Reality Projector draws on the engrossing effects of technology, as viewers are lost in a new, light-induced physicality. As McCall reflects: 鈥淰isitors become absorbed by the paradoxes and they tend to stay for quite a time in the installations; 30 minutes to an hour is fairly normal.鈥
In a similar way, Mischa Kuball鈥檚 (b. 1959) pieces, on display as part of at Jewish Museum Berlin (until Summer 2019), fill 350 square metres with rotating projectors, light fields and sound. The addition of sound 颅鈥 which comprises 60-second clips by 150 different musicians 鈥 to a never-ending loop, mirrors over-stimulation in the contemporary age. The exhibition will periodically flow onto Berlin鈥檚 streets, expressing how spatial boundaries can be distorted, blurred and challenged by artistic practice.

Running concurrently at Jewish Museum, James Turrell鈥檚 (b. 1943) (until 30 September 2019), offers another alternative environment. Using bold coloured light to mirror the surroundings, the pure, stark light engulfs the space, offering a mesmerising and otherworldly experience which simultaneously reflects and offers an escape from everyday culture.
By illuminating the complexities of material forms whilst representing sensory information, these works push the boundaries of their media. Finding renewed importance in today鈥檚 increasingly saturated landscape, the exhibitions offer tranquillity in simulated realities whilst reflecting the wider world, proving the medium鈥檚 potential as an agent for change. As McCall concludes: 鈥淟ight may be intangible but it isn鈥檛 uncontrollable.鈥
Credits:
1. Anthony McCall. “Solid Light Works.” Installation view, Pioneer Works,聽Brooklyn, 2018. Photograph by Dan Bradica.聽
2.聽James Turrell,聽Ganzfeld Aural.
3.聽聽Olafur Eliasson鈥檚聽Reality projector聽in聽Marciano Art Foundation鈥檚 Theater Gallery. Photo by Joshua White/JWPictures.com.



