Ilinx

Performative Environment by Chris Salter + TeZ + Valerie Lamontagne

"Ilinx" plays with the power of disorientation through light and sound via sensory substitution. By temporarily disrupting the viewer’s perception, "Ilinx" opens up spaces for new experiences that extend past the body’s senses into new realms of experience.

Appearing for its German premiere at CTM 2015, the work takes shape as a performative environment, provoking an intense bodily experience. In the environment, a group of five visitors at a time wear specially designed garments. These garments are outfitted with various sensing and actuating devices that enable visitors to interface with the performance space. During the event, a ritualistic progression, which lasts approximately twenty minutes, the natural continuum between sound and vibration, vision and feeling, becomes increasingly blurred, extending and stretching the body’s boundaries beyond the realm of everyday experience.

The project is inspired by work in the area of what is called sensory substitution – the replacement of one sensory input (vision, hearing, touch, taste, or smell) by another, while preserving some of the key functions of the original sense. The term "ilinx" (Greek for whirlpool) comes from the French sociologist Roger Caillois and describes play that creates a temporary but profound disruption of perception as is common in experiences of vertigo, dizziness, or disorienting changes of speed, direction, or the body’s sense in space. "An attempt to momentarily destroy the stability of perception and inflict a kind of voluptuous panic upon an otherwise lucid mind."

Chris Salter

Chris Salter (CA/QC) is Director of the Hexagram Concordia Centre for Research and Creation in Media Art and Technology and Associate Professor, Computation Arts in the Department of Design and Computation Art at Concordia University, Montreal. His interests revolve around the development and production of real time, computationally augmented, responsive performance environments fusing space, sound, image, architectural material, and sensor-based technologies.

TeZ

Mauricio Martinucci, aka TeZ (IT/NL) is an Italian interdisciplinary artist and independent researcher based in Amsterdam. He has collaborated with Adi Newton, Scanner, Kim Cascone, Saverio Evangelista, Taylor Deupree, and Sonia Cillari, among others. Martinucci uses technology to explore the dynamic interplay between sound, light, and space. Most of his generative compositions employ spatialized sound in a live performance or installation context. Recently, his research has focused on developing specific architectural structures and revolutionary sound and light propagation methods to maximize the immersive effect of multisensory perception.

Valérie Lamontagne

Valérie Lamontagne (CA/QC) is an artist-designer and PhD scholar researching "Performative Wearables: Bodies, Fashion, Technologies and Laboratory Cultures" at Concordia University where she teaches in the Department of Design & Computation Arts. She has curated and collaborated on design and media arts exhibitions and events such as: "The Future of Fashion is Now" at Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, Netherlands (2014); "TechnoSensual" at MuseumsQuartier, Vienna, Austria (2012); and "Clothing Without Cloth" at V2_ Institute for the Unstable Media, Rotterdam, Netherlands (2011) among others. Her artworks and designs have been featured internationally in festivals, galleries, museums, magazines and publications.

 

 


Credits: Chris Salter + TeZ: Direction / Valerie Lamontagne: Wearables Direction and Design / Isabelle Campeau: Wearable Development / Marie-Eve Lecavalier Lemieux: Wearable Development / Ian Hattwick: Technology Direction/Hardware-Software / Omar Falleh: Lighting Collaboration / Panagiotis Tomaras: Production Assistance / Marcello Giordano: Hardware-Software/Haptics Research / Ivan Franco: Hardware-Software/Technical Direction Berlin / Deborah Egloff: Haptics Research / Morgan Rauscher: Robotics development/Production Assistance / Ian Arawjo: Sketching Software

Ilinx is funded by a Canada Council for the Arts GRAND NCE Media Artist and Scientist Collaboration grant. The presentation of Ilinx at CTM 2015 is supported by the Mondriaan Funds, the Embassy of Canada, and the Quebec Government Office in Berlin.

Facts

Runs: Thursday 29.1. - Sunday 1.2.15 | HAU3

Hours: 12h - 22h (groups of up to 4 people admitted every half hour)

Tickets Required. Gold Pass holders will be contacted for reservations.

Thu 29.1. → buy 

Fri 30.1. → buy 

Sat 31.1. → buy

Sun 1.2. → buy