Pulsing Path – ambiguous vision
Madrid Abierto, 2006
Lampposts are controlled so that their light is dimmed in a cyclic order; the light slowly changes from light to darkness, from darkness to light.
Controlling the street-lamps along a street or lane means the light takes on a pulsing effect. The light is dimmed in a slow sequence, slowly disappearing and reappearing in an ongoing cycle. The oscillating light of the lampposts in Pulsing Path - ambiguous vision activates a park lane and gives it a behaviour separating it from ‘normal’ lanes. Its expression is transformed and becomes displaced, thus raising questions about states of normality, and the uncertainty surrounding human existence.
Controlling the street-lamps along a street or lane means the light takes on a pulsing effect. The light is dimmed in a slow sequence, slowly disappearing and reappearing in an ongoing cycle. The oscillating light of the lampposts in Pulsing Path - ambiguous vision activates a park lane and gives it a behaviour separating it from ‘normal’ lanes. Its expression is transformed and becomes displaced, thus raising questions about states of normality, and the uncertainty surrounding human existence.
Material: Existing lampposts, light controller and dimmer
Location: The pedestrian area Paseo del Prado, between Plaza de Cánovas del Castillo and Fuente del Apollo in central Madrid.
Location: The pedestrian area Paseo del Prado, between Plaza de Cánovas del Castillo and Fuente del Apollo in central Madrid.