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Invisible Istanbul: Captured Images
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© For Hrant Dink, in Memorium. Placed in the Istanbul Biennial exhibit "Untitled (Death by Gun)" and set against Ryue Nishizawa's exhibition architecture for the Biennial. ; Tamiko Thiel, 2011
Tamiko Thiel
Invisible Istanbul: Captured Images
,
2011
–
ongoing
Co-workers & Funding
Tamiko Thiel, 2011
http://tamikothiel.com/AR/ii/images.html
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Information
Documents
Description
Keywords
Technology & Material
Exhibitions & Events
Bibliography
Documents
"Captured (for Hrant)"
image/jpeg
480 × 800
Invisible Istanbul: "Captured (for #RSF_RWB)"
video/mp4
640 × 480
00:21
Invisible Istanbul: "Captured (cannon balls)"
image/jpeg
480 × 800
Invisible Istanbul: "Captured (cannon balls)"
image/jpeg
1024 × 768
Invisible Istanbul: "Captured (cannons)"
image/jpeg
480 × 800
Invisible Istanbul: "Captured (cannons)"
image/jpeg
480 × 800
Invisible Istanbul: Captured (for Abdul Hamid II)
image/jpeg
1024 × 641
Description
This augmented reality work series is located in and around the buildings of the Istanbul Biennial. Inspired by Pedrosa and Hoffmann's curatorial statement referencing the works and methodology of Felix Gonzalez-Torres, these artworks overlay simple everyday objects and forms onto real spaces to "explore the relationship between art and politics" in the new medium of Augmented Reality (AR), which by its very nature is "both formally innovative and politically outspoken."
The AR artworks are geolocated via GPS into the exhibits of the 12th Istanbul Biennial to "push the themes decidedly further" and relate them to contemporary political and social issues. To cite Pedrosa and Hoffmann, "In response to those today who devalue the exhibition as the primary format of artistic and curatorial expression," the AR artworks "advocate for renewed attention to the importance of the exhibition itself."
The difference is that with AR technology, participation is the decision of the artist, not the curator.
Keywords
subjects
Art and Science
cartography
geography
Arts and Visual Culture
museums
Power and Politics
geopolitics
institutions
Technology & Material
Exhibitions & Events
ISEA 2011 [International Symposium on Electronic Art]
2011
Bibliography
Thiel, Tamiko
.
»Critical Interventions into Canonical Spaces: Augmented Reality at the 2011 Venice and Istanbul Biennials.«
In
Augmented Reality Art: From an Emerging Technology to a Novel Creative Medium
, edited by Vladimir Geroimenko, 31-60. Cham: Springer, 2014.
Thiel, Tamiko
.
»Interview, Statement, Artwork.«
Leonardo Electronic Almanac
19, no. 2 (2013): 210-219.
Rackham, Melinda
.
»divisible Instanbul.«
real time
, no. 106 (December 2011/January 2012): 22-23.