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Pacifying the South China Sea Scroll Navigator
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Source: Jeffrey Shaw
Jeffrey Shaw
Pacifying the South China Sea Scroll Navigator
,
2013
–
ongoing
Co-workers & Funding
Software: Mo Luk
Hardware: Huib Nelissen
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Pacifying the South China Sea Scroll Navigator
image/jpeg
1280 × 853
Pacifying the South China Sea Scroll Navigator
image/jpeg
1280 × 960
Pacifying the South China Sea Scroll Navigator
image/jpeg
1280 × 960
Description
The handscroll Pacifying the South China Sea chronicles the suppression of piracy by the forces of the Jiaqing Emperor (r. 1796–1820). The scroll illustrates the events of the period in twenty different scenes, each abundant with detail depicting the ‘annihilation and appeasement’ (jiaofu) of the pirates by government forces.
The Scroll Navigator is an installation at the Maritime Museum in Hong Kong that offers an interactive system for examining the scroll and revealing this narrative sequence. A reduced-scale photograph of the entire scroll is presented in a 5-metre-long light box, backlit with a fine raster of LEDs. Each LED is independently controlled so that any section of the photograph can be illuminated. Above this, a motorised, ultra-high-definition, 42-inch LCD monitor is mounted on a track that allows it to move freely above the entire length of the photograph. Any given section of the scroll that appears on the monitor is simultaneously illuminated in exactly that section of the light box. The visitor uses an iPad to control the movement of the LCD screen from one narrative zone to the next. Within each section the viewer can pan and zoom in to minute details of the painting—a capability afforded by the ultra-high-resolution scan of the original scroll that was made for this project.
© Jeffrey Shaw
Keywords
aesthetics
contextual
generative
immaterial
installation-based
interactive
multi-user
navigable
virtual
visual
genres
conceptual art
art interventions
database art
installations
interactive installations
subjects
Arts and Visual Culture
art history
paintings
virtuality
visual culture
History and Memory
ancestors
collective memory
cultural heritage
historical sites
history
Nature and Environment
oceans
Power and Politics
governance
warfare
Society and Culture
territories
Technology and Innovation
digitization
military technology
technology
displays
electronic displays
hardware
mobile devices
interfaces
interactive media
touch user interfaces
Technology & Material
Exhibitions & Events
Bibliography