Ninfa Atlas
Exhibition view, UCR ARTS, Riverside, CA, 2021 (photographed by Jason Gowans)
Exhibition view, UCR ARTS, Riverside, CA, 2021 (photographed by Jason Gowans)
5-channel video installation with sound: 5 display monitors and 5 wheeled stands with integrated speakers | 10:50 (looped) | 2021
Ninfa Atlas manifests a translation process that carries the human figure from historical archive to digital asset through embodied performance. The project takes as its starting point Aby Warburg’s Bilderatlas Mnemosyne (1924–29), the influential image archive in which Warburg identified recurring motifs in Western art and culture. One of this atlas’s protagonists, the ninfa (Italian for nymph), embodies the female figure-in-movement across cultures and time periods. Ninfa Atlas tracks the afterlives of this multifarious figure and her gestures as she traverses technological eras, social contexts, and historical situations. The project highlights the complexities of cultural categorization and the stakes of visual literacy.
Working from a 72-image score, which the artist produced by isolating and animating feminine figures mined from Warburg’s atlas, five performers were invited to reflect on, enact, modify, contest, and invent gestures as a way to diversify and extend this archive. They then performed short dance phrases in a volumetric video-capture studio, which were later recomposited into 3D image assets. Importing these assets into a game engine, the artist refilmed them in the round using virtual cameras in a digital approximation of the capture studio that she outfitted with generic filmic backdrops sourced from an online catalogue. In the installation, each of the five figures inhabits a large screen oriented vertically like a smartphone and propped up on a mobile stand.
Credits
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Performers:
Gustine Fudickar, Abriel Gardner, Jobel Medina, Ryan O’Byrne, and Cecilia Slongo -
Project consultation and 3D animation:
Sara Drake -
Hair and makeup:
Ellen Uzarowicz -
Color grading:
John Henry Theisen -
Production support:
Metastage, Los Angeles -
Funding:
Canada Council for the Arts and University of California, Riverside
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2021–22
Who Raised It Up So Many Times?
Barbara & Art Culver Center of the Arts at UCR ARTS
Riverside, USA
Exhibition