Exhibition

Space In Between, Unit 26 Regent Studios, 8 Andrews Road, London
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Event has ended
This event ended on Saturday 1st of June 2013
Admission
Free
Location

Space In Between, Unit 26 Regent Studios, 8 Andrews Road, London

Nearest Tube/Rail Stations
Cambridge Heath 0.24 miles

Space In Between is delighted to present Binary Translations – a show of new work by James Irwin and his second solo exhibition with the gallery.

Irwin’s recent work includes a series of images based on the idea of decoding the RGB colour spectrum. Informed by an ongoing investigation into the space between physical and digital realities, the artist has created a body of work that seeks to examine the language and mechanisms, which enable us to translate the world around us into digital forms and contexts.

Having written a computer programme to decode digital colour – deconstructing it as a means to understanding its mechanism – Irwin created a series of coded prints. One digitally generated image – number 216777216 – was then typed in to an internet search engine, as an experiment, only to discover that French artist France Languerand had already achieved a startlingly similar outcome. Given that the each of the images are determined by an algorithm, designed to represent the entire colour spectrum, the chance of two being identical was 1 in 16,777,216. Irwin contacted Languerand and invited her to contribute her version of the works to the show and together these form the basis of, and the inspiration for, Binary Translations.

Whilst the artists’ reasons for the same investigation were different – made in different places, and separated by several years – they represent the possibility for a digitally connected state, offering a metaphor for ideas shared within an intangible and digital ‘space’. A topology of sorts, this coincidence ignores measurements of distance and angle, fitting given that both artists arrived at the same point of enquiry from two entirely different perspectives, achieving the same result.
The prints will be shown alongside a sculpture by Irwin, which will scan and translate the pixelated colours of the digital images into light, projected into a translucent cone. The cone and its accompanying mirror image exist as a kind of topological translation between physical and other imagined realities.

Irwin is interested in the possibility of a kind of programmed sense of objectivity, which brings into focus questions surrounding the idea of authorship. Given Languerand’s accidental involvement Binary Translations quietly draws its audience to the sense of the inevitable, an abstracted digital togetherness of sorts.

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James Irwin graduated with an MA in Computational Studio Arts from Goldsmith’s in 2010. He was awarded the 2012 Bursary Award by the Royal British Society of Sculptors and has participated in a number of group and solo exhibitions, including Hopeless Communication at Space In Between in 2011.

Tags: Art

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