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MIRROR

Photo: Benjamin Benschneider
© Benjamin Benschneider

MIRROR

2013

Doug Aitken

American, born 1968

Artist Doug Aitken: "With MIRROR I was interested in the idea of creating a living museum, a downtown building that could change in real time.  It‘s like an urban earthwork. Seattle is a very complex and fascinating city on many levels and MIRROR was an attempt to reflect the simultaneity of the culture and landscape you find there.

I looked at the structure of minimalist music, and that became the framework I used to create this. I looked at reductive music like La Monte Young, or Terry Riley, or Steve Reich—pieces that are continuously reduced down to modal structures and repetitious patterns—I realized that's the way I needed to design this work. To create an invisible system that could relate to and mirror what's happening around it, like a living composition.

The piece is going to exist in such a way that I don't think anyone will be able to see the entire work. And that's what I'm after. I like that challenge. I became interested in the legacy of people creating earthworks—people like Michael Heizer, Robert Smithson, James Turrell—their pieces are very much about the place that the viewer does not live. They're about the journey to reach that remote place to encounter that sculpture or invention. With MIRROR, I was more interested in the idea of using the landscape right around here.

The work will move through different layers of sensitivity: from the speed of people walking by the street outside to the reflection or brightness of the sunlight shining on the building. This mapping of the landscape and the surroundings feeds into the building, which sequences it live. The museum’s surface can sense all these changing conditions around it, thus creating images and abstraction. The building can speed up or slow down, it can change chroma with the temperature, or the speed of the wind might edit a live sequence of images a certain way. Mirror will never repeat itself; it will simply change continuously in the present moment."


Custom software editor displaying responsive video on a site-specfic architectural media facade. Environmentally triggered continuous video recombination, color, no sound
Screen: 3072 x 1620 pixels
Gift of Bagley Wright
2013.2
Provenance: Commission
Photo: Benjamin Benschneider
location
Not currently on view

Media

Image Coming Soon

Resources

Published ReferencesErickson, Steve. "Doug Aitken is Redefining How We Experience Art." Smithsonian Magazine, December 2013, accessed online: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/doug-aitken-is-redefining-how-we-experience-art-180947643/#ixzz2rMSFyyd9

C.B. "Seattle to unveil Doug Aitken's digital Land Art," in The Art Newspaper International Edition, Vol. XXII, no. 244, March 2013, page 1

Seattle Magazine - Spring Arts Preview: Seattle Sees Itself on the Big Screen

The Art Newspaper - Seattle to unveil Doug Aitken's digital Land Art

Dexigner - MIRROR: Art Installation by Doug Aitken at Seattle Art Museum

ART info.com - Doug Aitken Creating Interactive Land Art Video for Seattle Art ...

Artobserved.com - Doug Aitken Prepares Digital Land Art Installation for Seattle Art ...

VisitSeattle.org - Seattle: Seattle Art Museum Unveils MIRROR

Complex.com - The Seattle Art Museum Will Show Permanent Facade Installation ...

Tacoma News Tribune - Mirror Unveiling

The Collector Tribune - MIRROR: Art Installation by Doug Aitken at Seattle Art Museum

Architecture News - Mirror Art Installation

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