Divided We Speak
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Divided We Speak
The “Divided We Speak” PHSCologram tryptich is a unique collaborative study in sculpture, photography, sound and poetry, based on an audience interactive media symphony in six movements, by Miroslaw Rogola. The work was commissioned and shown by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago in the Fall of 1997.
Divided We Speak has been designed to mimic life in the information age. The viewer activates or encounters seemingly random shards of information (sound, computer, and video images) and through experimentation, movement, and mental engagement, creates a unique experience. Another essential consideration for the artist is that each viewers experience of the artwork is different. Thus while in the public space of the museum, each viewer creates a private space.
This exhibition, was mounted to coincide with the annual meeting of the Inter-Society for Electronic Arts (ISEA) in Chicago during the third week of September, explores the edge of technology in a form known as electronic art – artwork realized through computers, video, recorded sound, and other electronic media. Miroslaw Rogala, backed by a team of media innovators and other artists – all major figures in their various fields – has created an interactive multimedia laboratory titled Divided We Speak. This laboratory features the newest in electronic and virtual reality innovations that will be utilized and displayed for the first time in a museum setting. The artist and his team will fine-tune, change, process, and add to the exhibition as it progresses.
When confronted with cutting-edge technologies, both artists and viewers often react with an overriding fascination with the technology itself: how it works, what it can do. Since 1975, however, when he created his first interactive artwork as an art student in Poland, Rogala has aggressively experimented with new technologies and tools to realize his vision. As such, he is well aware of the general fascination with technologies, and a major theme of his work, is that while technologies do bring people together, they can simultaneously separate or divide. The Internet, for example, allows for development of a global community that can communicate virtually instantaneously, yet it also threatens traditional social interaction: most Internet users sit alone, staring into a glowing screen.
Divided We Speak
developers
Alan Cruz, Miroslaw Rogala, Stephan Meyer, Ellen Sandor, Janine Fron
start date: 01/01/1997
end date: 11/01/1997
This artist is interested in people, and in moral and social issues. For him, technology is merely a tool to explore these issues. In the artists words: “Can or should a moral or social metaphor be constructed on the fact that far more energy is released by coming together than coming apart? We are confronted with a transitory landscape, where new destructions are continuously stacked. Geographies of minds are transcended – among these rocks we look for ourselves.” And in a haunting phrase that is