Pradakshina
Interactive-sculptural Installation
Pradakshina, the title comes from a Sanskrit word for circumambulation and based on the ritual encircling of a temple exterior before entry.
The installation comprises a series of copper awnings that extend from a wheel structure to a series of speakers inserted into the walls.
When viewers encircle around the wheel through the copper tunnelling, their movement (detected by a sensory device) activates the wheel’s arm to rotate. In effect sound cycles sequentially around the gallery space.
The audio track enlists a series of non verbal sounds such as laughing, crying, breathing, rubbing, sneezing, whispering...etc. and activated in reaction to the viewers movement. Any effort to move closer towards the sound source emanating from the walls halts and the only way to hear the sounds in continuity is to perpetually move around the wheel
The participants' interaction with the installation transforms the entire architectural space into an object in a symbiotic and immersive interconnection with the environment.
-
Solo Exhibitions
Willis Gallery, Detroit, USA, 1991
Common Ground Gallery, Windsor, Canada, 1991
Components
wood
copper plumbing
light bulbs
electrical wires
motion sensory detectors
speaker sound system
audio track
100 tiny light bulbs & 7 large ones
Dimensions :
wheel : 244 cm diameter x 20.5 cm
copper plumbing : 5 cm diameter x 100 m
24 speakers inserted into the wall at ear level