PC Twist Still 2

Twist of the Sea

2 Nov 2019 – 24 Nov 2019

Commissioned by Fremantle Biennale, Undercurrents19, Twist of the Sea occupies 4 galleries in the Moore’s Contemporary Art Building. A single projection , a Three channel video and an installation responds to the power of the Tradewinds , the sensation of drifting, the phenomena of the doldrums at the nexus of the northern and southern hemispheres , underwater currents and algal bloom. 

The Fremantle Biennale is a unique art event hosting the best in site-responsive art. Situated in new and found sites within Fremantle (Western Australia), The Biennale presents invited Australian and international artists who respond to and work with the history, landscape and communities that make-up the rich tapestry of Fremantle. 

Site situational, all filming was done on location in Fremantle . The Biennale opened with 'Waterlicht‘ by Dutch artist,  Daan Roosegaarde an immersive work that looks at rising tides emitting a blue light above heads of the public and across  Esplanade Park, Fremantle.

wall2_s-1

Gallery 1

Poetry wall text I too have bubbled up, floated the measureless float, and been wash'd on your shores, I too am but a trail of drift and debris, I too leave little wrecks upon you, you fish- shaped island. As I Ebb'd with the Ocean of Life. Walt Whitman

Gallery 2 Still of Twist of the Sea, 2019 . Single channel video with sound Dur 6 mins wall projection 3 x 4.2 metres.

in 4k Twist of the Sea' is a 5 minute video projection about the circular winds and monsoonal patterns as two protagonists twist and turn, drifting on the surface of the indian ocean with the water currents made visible through the use of red and blue tracer dyes and 'stains' the  Ocean. The monsoons that govern the Indian ocean are unpredictable and change with every season, and the winds and currents of Volta Do Mar (twist of the sea) have a predictable pattern and follow the same direction every day of the year, every season.  This single video installation takes  the locus of the Fremantle Harbour, on the rim of the Indian Ocean to conflate  unpredictable wind and currents patterns with that of vulnerability and drifting in a maelstrom of doubt.

See full Video 'Twist of the Sea' here 5.12 min
https://vimeo.com/530107420?fl=ip&fe=ec

Gallery 3 installation Cool Breeze , suspended inflatable floatation tubes and textiles.

Imagining the currents above the viewer aimed to utilise the space as a body or void , referencing the flotation devices drifting across the ocean.

10

Gallery 4, Doldrums, 2019 three channel video

The trade winds of both hemispheres meet at what is termed the Doldrums and I reference the medieval ocean maps that featured in the top corners the wind cherubs  blowing onto the oceans. 'Tempo Rubato Bloom' is an expression of underwater mayhem with colour and sound presented as glitches alluding to the unpredictability of slow and quiet seas.

see video here https://vimeo.com/515172819?fl=ip&fe=ec

Review
https://www.seesawmag.com.au/news/a-dreamy-exploration-of-emotion-and-the-ocean/


Artworks in Exhibition

Still 'Doldrums' 2019
Still from 3 channel 4k video duration 5 mins
installation image
Installaion
Doldrums still
200cm (H)
Still from 3 channel 4k video duration 5 mins -2 min duration
Installation Still Twist of the Sea 2019
400cm (W) x 240cm (H)
Still from single channel 4k video - 2.4 x 4 metres projection
Installation View
mixed
Installation View
mixed
Installation View- 3 channel Video 'Doldrums'
mixed
20190527-DJI_0148