Queens Hall Digital
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James Hutchinson was born in 1968 in London. He graduated in Painting from Chelsea College of Art and Design (1990) and in Fine Art Printmaking from the Royal College of Art (1998). He is a Senior Lecturer in Fine Art at the University of Sunderland.
The Cave presents three separate, but intrinsically-linked landscapes of an impossible, apocalyptically sublime world. Here, the illusion of control is placed upon the viewer as they navigate around these digital panoramas
This commission takes the form of an empty glasshouse, rendered in 360 for browser viewing, built as a playful exploration of tools and coping mechanisms used to understand illness.
'Traces' by Kit Haigh features photographs of trace fossils found in split sandstone roof tiles at Green Croft, on Hadrian's Wall. They are the marks made by invertebrates as they foraged in the sand around 300 million years ago - over 30 million years before dinosaurs existed.
Querencia was made as a feminine parody on bull fighting. By replacing the matador with a ribbon dancer and the bull with a cat, Smith questions the spectacle of this controversial tradition, substituting bravado for subtler actions.
[a machine that] feels like truth is a small work investigating the use of Virtual Reality to examine human issues, particularly centering around virtual reality as an 'Empathy Machine'. The work performs a poor 'simulation' of virtual reality on a web browser where the mouse is used to juxtapose and explore various media items concerning the use of VR, including news articles, videos, legal documents and critical essays - with the aim of promoting a critical discussion around the suitability of Virtual Reality as a medium for addressing deeply-entrenched structual issues.
More Gnarly Illusions is a multi-channel video documenting the mistranslated lyrics of the traditional North East folk song When the Boat Comes In. Working with local musician Alex Campbell, Dickson uses dictation software to transcribe Geordie singing into received pronunciation, the standard accent as spoken in the south of England. The video depicts three iterations of the performer singing progressively incomprehensible lyrics. More Gnarly Illusions highlights idiosyncrasies of the Geordie dialect, its position within British culture and the worry of being misunderstood.
TIMEPIECE is a speculative water clock experiment. Different stoneware vessels are tested, trialled and trained as measurement of time. Echoing the shape of a clock face or the moon, it offers another way of keeping track from this moment to the next.
Digital Geology. Jayson Haebich is a London based artist and researcher who is interested in the intersection of art, technology and science. He investigates how substances, materials and processes move between different layers of the physical, digital and ontological world.
I make immersive, disorientating, otherworldly installations and costumes; mythic representations of my world view. Inhabited by a creature that is neither human nor alien, real or imaginary, these glowing environments and tactile costumes bend the fragile boundaries of our perceived reality.In my work I want to make familiar things unfamiliar, to remove the normal life experiences, from familiar associations, to turn it over and to displace it. I would like to give everyday experiences a new meaning, to change the way we perceive the things around us.
Let us think for a moment about a photograph. No longer the result of a series of chemical reactions in a darkened room but an interpretation of binary data turning on and off an amount of small coloured lights. Today a photograph is only a photograph because the decoding algorithm running on a computer says it is - it could just as easily be a sound, video or 3D model if decoded that way.
playlists for survival is all about sounds/musics that keep us going thru dark times our favourite sounds include wind turbines, heart-beats, curlews, waterfalls and waves, 'nkosi sikelele afrika' sung during anti-apartheid supermarket boycotts, our first punk gig, sainkho namchylak (leo records is our favourite music label of all time), carla bleys anarchic big band jazz escalator over the hill on broken radio as teen, john peel radio shows, mahler allowing us to grieve, electro-acoustic composer pete stollery sampling a pile of coat-hangers for us in performance, omit (electronics outta aotearoa), one of the most focused gigs was kaia kater singing against slavery, perhaps the most transcendental? oysterband or rokia traore
Ed Merlin Murray is an artist, illustrator, and animator based in Northumberland. His work is primarily rooted in drawing, often using analog media, but in recent years he has moved into animation, and is proficient in both digital and traditional methods.
, Queen's Hall Digital, art, digital