Copyright 2011 by Grimanesa Amorós

  

"ROOTLESS ALGAS" at HVCCA 2008

- (Multimedia Installation)

"ROOTLESS ALGAS" at HVCCA 2008
The video room dimension is 34' L x 30' W x 10' H, each piece of algas is 48" high by 36" wide

HVCCA: Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art
LONG-TERM INSTALLATION Opening September 13th - 14th, 2008

Music by: Hilmar Örn Hilmarson
Video edited by: Grimanesa Amorós and Cooper Miller
Lighting by: Grimanesa Amorós and Steve Dubay


The Sea Mare - Tableaux Vivant Nouveau
Performance by Palina Jonsdottir

Blog Newsletter

HVCCA Gallery Talk wtih artists Grimanesa Amoros and Richard Dupont, Sunday January 18th, 2009 at 4:00pm

HVCCA Rootless Algas installation Peekskill, NY 2008

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ARTIST STATEMENT (English / Espanol)

In this work I am exploring my experience on Flatey, an island in Breidafjördur Bay off the coast of Iceland. I had intended to observe and make sketches of the area's abundant birds, such as Arctic Terns, Red-throated Divers and Black Guillemots, but I learned upon my arrival that two days earlier the birds had migrated to a warmer climate. When my husband, my daughter Shammiel and I arrived, we greatly increased the population of the remote island. Under these circumstances, I found that I was able only to make direct observations with what there was around me. A key part of this trip for all of us was trying to overcome our feelings of isolation and foreignness by exploring the island’s natural habitat.

The rocks on the shores of Flatey were covered with thick and textured accumulations of a type of algae that I had never seen before. The colors and the immensity of these piles were overwhelming. They were aesthetically beautiful, yet I couldn’t explore the shores nor go swimming without stepping in and around the vegetation. This limitation enhanced my internal sensation of being confined; yet, like the algae, I cannot be connected to any one place. Algae have holdfasts that serve as temporary anchors but are not necessary for attaining nutrients. It is common for algae to hold on to each other like refugees, to facilitate ocean travel. My fascination with the algae increased as I also identified with their lack of roots.

For this installation, Rootless Algas, large multi-colored algae have been made by casting translucent abaca sheets into molds that are then hung from ceiling to floor. The work intends to express certain feelings of isolation and attempts to convey characteristics of the actual experience, rather than explorations or descriptions. I have removed the plants from their original context and reinvented them to highlight the dynamic between nature and human beings. The configurations of the area require people to experience their surroundings from multiple viewpoints. That spatial virtuality is augmented with a video projection and soundtrack by Icelandic composer Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson. In addition, viewers will have to find and create their own space and in doing so they will recreate on a small scale the limitless scope of the natural world.