The Visitor: Living by Numbers

Luc Courchesne

The Visitor: Living by Numbers ,
Co-workers & Funding
Documents
  • The Visitor, living by numbers, Panoscope 360 -- 1st Edition
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    309 × 673
  • video/webm
    640 × 480
  • The Visitor, Living by Numbers, Panoscope 360 -2nd Edition
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    504 × 378
Description
Inspired by Pier-Paolo Passolini's 1969 film Theorema and by a dream Courchesne's daughter had when she was 10 years old. In the installation, visitors are planted somewhere in the Japanese countryside. From there they will try to make a life for themselves by saying any number between one and twelve. Exploring the territory, happening upon and entering a shelter, meeting and dealing with the inhabitants and gaining status within the group will define a visitor's experience. Leaving the place and the inhabitants to themselves (as in Passolini's film) or being forced to escape after an earthquake (as in his daughter's dream) will further characterize the visitor's experience.

To interact with this work visitors enter the dome and adjust the height until they feel visually comfortable. When the action stops, visitors may speak any number between one and twelve to indicate the direction they want to go or to show interest in people and what they have to say.

The experience starts in daytime, in the middle of rice fields just north of Ogaki-City in central Japan (Gifu Prefecture). In the inner garden of a low building, visitors will happen upon a woman preparing tea. This first encounter may lead to an invitation to diner where a mixed group of people (6) prepare and share a Japanese style stew (nabet). The diner is endless but conversations with dining partners may bring a visitor to spare moments in the intimacy of one's room where he or she is offered the host's mind and thoughts on different topics growing increasingly personal. In the process, a visitor builds a position in the group that either will have him invited to take more place among the group, or gradually ignored and abandoned.

Meanwhile, night has come and the risk of an unforgiving event in this earthquake prone area is more tangible. If such a thing was to happen, destroying the shelter and forcing everyone out, visitors would, depending on their status, be left behind or invited to join in the chaotic and confuse quest for a new place where every aspect of this group's life will resume in the same way as if nothing had happened.

(Luc Couchesne)
Keywords
  • genres
    • installations
      • virtual reality (VR)
  • technology
    • displays
    • interfaces
Technology & Material
Hardware
Equipment provided by the artist

1 Panoscope360º (3.7 m version) with support structure
1 Video projectors (JVC SXGA (native) with hemispherical lens)
1 Computers (Power Macintosh G4, 867 mhz or better)
1 Microphone with USB connector
1 Four channel sound system
All cables and connectors

Equipment provided by the host organisation:

1 220 volts to 110 volts transformer (when required)
1 Pedestal 50 cm x 50 cm x 100 cm (high)
1 SXGA computer monitor
Installation Requirements / Space
The space should be dark, well ventilated and isolated for sound. Minimum floor space for one unit : 3 m x 3 m (3.5 m minimum vertical clearance). The installation is free standing.
Installation Requirements / Space
The space should be dark, well ventilated and isolated for sound. Minimum floor space for one unit : 6 m x 6 m (3.5 m minimum vertical clearance). The installation is free standing.
Software
QuickTime movies using the TrueMotion 2X codec, 27 GB of disc space.

authoring/delivery software was developed in voice recognition uses the standard PlainTalk resources from the Apple operating system MacOS 9.2.