[spectre] PDArts Press Release
Thomas Bloom
thomas_bloom at hotmail.com
Tue Mar 25 10:47:04 CET 2003
Free-fall
Exhibition - 13th April to 12th June '03
Performances - 12th April
Peterborough Digital Arts www.pdarts.org.uk <http://www.pdarts.org.uk> a
new lottery funded centre for digital arts in the eastern region of England
opens with Free-fall
Free-fall takes its title from the projection by Pernille Spence, in which
we see a person in the sky free falling. Spence investigates notions of
flying, falling and the human desire to escape gravitational pull. Similarly
digital technologies have seemed to offer an escape from physical
boundaries, whilst at the same time predicting a fall to earth. Empty
promises of a networked real-time society have brought a culture apparently
without boundaries. Yet boundaries remain in place for many people.
The exhibition, curated by Mike Stubbs, shows work by a range of artists
including Richard Brown, Heath Bunting, Gina Czarnecki, Bill Drummond,
Ronald Fraser-Munroe, Zoe Irvine, Bob Levene, Michael Pinsky, Simon Poulter,
Rtmark, Ahbin Shim, Pernille Spence, Thompson & Craighead, Simon Yuill, Dane
Watkins, Ben Woodeson- with contributions from Hull Time Based Arts and New
Media Scotland.
Opening night performances by: Bill Drummond, Roney Fraser Munro, Dreams of
Tall Buildings, Bob Levine.
While many of us are addicted to consuming the latest technology, artists
are pushing at what these technologies can be, subverting them and what can
be done with them. Free-fall explores some of the issues, technologies and
themes artists have been wrestling with since the 1990's.
The show includes Bill Drummond's first media work, The Silent Protest, a
protest against war: 'the one in your family, the one at work or the one in
a far-flung land'. Zoe Irvine's' sound installation MMM uses material from
her recording and collection trip to the Pas de Calais, France, the ferry
and Eurotunnel terminal and site of the former camp at Sangatte for asylum
seekers.
As part of Free-fall Peterborough Digital Arts has commissioned Simon
Poulter to work amongst shoppers in Peterborough's central Queensgate
shopping centre (the largest in Europe when it was opened in the early 80's)
making a physical and virtual miniature shopping centre. The sculpture,
titled Rome Shopping Centre, made from card and mini LCD screens, will take
sharp but humorous look at the way we live and shop in 2003. Simon Poulter
will be working in Queensgate on the 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, and 15th,
16th, 17th of April 2003.
Peterborough Digital Arts and Free-fall have been Lottery Funded by Arts
Council England.
For more information please contact Maggie Warren, Arts Project Officer
maggie.warren at peterborough.gov.uk <mailto:maggie.warren at peterborough.gov.uk>
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