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ANGELA BULLOCH.


SCHIPPER & KROME

Got a case of chromophobia? Angela Bulloch's ingenious pixel boxes might not be what the doctor ordered. The artist, who is based in Berlin and London, has given the pixel--the indivisible INDIVISIBLE. That which cannot be separated.
     2. It is important to ascertain when a consideration or a contract, is or is not indivisible. When a consideration is entire and indivisible, and it is against law, the contract is void in toto. 11 Verm. 592; 2 W.
 picture element whose only information value is color--an entirely new plastic form. Basically, Bulloch has transformed the little color squares that make up a televisual image into large, individual sculptural units. Each one is a fifty-centimeter (nineteen-and-a-half-inch) cube and consists of a screen framed in a wooden box containing an RGB (Red Green Blue) The computer's native color space, which is the color system for capturing and displaying images. RGB was derived from our own perception of color because human eyes are sensitive to red, green and blue (see trichromaticity).  additive light system: three strip lights in red, green, and blue that are capable of producing an astonishing a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
 16 million colors. The modular pixel-box system, which has been developed and copyrighted by Bulloch along with the German artist Holger Friese, can be programmed with any digitized image, from preset animations to solid colors. Whatever appears on a screen can be shown on the pixel boxes, yet their size prevents the spectator from discerning anything beyond color, which app ears to have devoured and metabolized all other information present in the source image.

In one recent incarnation of the system, "Standard Universal: 256," 2000, Bulloch presented a specific instrumentalization of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed.

See also: Color
; the 256 shades of Noun 1. shades of - something that reminds you of someone or something; "aren't there shades of 1948 here?"
reminder - an experience that causes you to remember something
 the Macintosh screen moved like breath across a single pixel box, one shade exhaling ex·hale  
v. ex·haled, ex·hal·ing, ex·hales

v.intr.
1.
a. To breathe out.

b. To emit air or vapor.

2. To be given off or emitted.

v.tr.
 the next. For this show, Bulloch has taken her project to the next logical step, capturing color as narrative. She chose a key scene from Michelangelo Antonioni's 1966 film Blow Up: the photographer stepping out from behind a tree to take pictures of a couple in the park. (Only later, when developing the prints, does he discover that he has photographed the traces of a crime.) The appropriated scene, which might be recognizable at a vast distance, appears on seventeen pixel boxes arranged in five columns, all blinking silenty at the spectator.

Although Blow Up may seem an all too obvious choice to blow up, Bulloch's gesture is not that simple. While it's true that the scene is enlarged through the scale of the pixel boxes, there is also a reduction at work in her transformation of the source image. To get the color for each box, Bulloch decreased the resolution of the scene on the computer screen, from seventy-two to one pixel per inch, which allowed her to capture the photographer's movement instead of any of its details. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, she did not zoom into the film but flattened it out, reducing detail and taking away information. Unlike film, the pixel--whatever its size--hides no fragments in its surface; when we try to get closer, it simply pushes us away, revealing more of the same color. By choosing to pixelize the photographer, instead of his photographs, Bulloch puts him and his tools in the past and shows that the dynamics of the trace have simply disappeared.

Having tackled Antonioni's chef d'oeuvre, Bulloch's next step is to integrate real-time information. The pixel boxes will be installed at the OK Centrum centrum /cen·trum/ (sen´trum) pl. cen´tra   [L.]
1. a center.

2. the body of a vertebra.


cen·trum
n. pl. cen·trums or cen·tra
1.
 fur Gegenwartskunst in Linz and change color according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the movements of local pedestrians. Such an interactive project is typical for Bulloch, an early proponent of relational aesthetics Relational aesthetics is a theory of aesthetics in which artworks are judged based upon the inter-human relations which they represent, produce, or prompt[1]. Background . The modular pixel-box system may be a technical feat, but it also presents a challenge to the definition of artistic endeavor: Why simply produce works when you can invent entirely new media? The implications of Bulloch's project are almost as numerous as the colors on her palette.
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Title Annotation:art exhibition
Author:Allen, Jennifer
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2001
Words:567
Previous Article:GUNTER UMBERG.(art exhibition)(Brief Article)
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