Pavel Buchler
Sean Cubitt
Susan Hiller
Pauline van Mourik Broekman
Jeffrey Sconce
Scanner
An exhibition of electronic media artworks examining the association of new media with supernatural phenomena.
An exhibition of electronic media artworks examining the association of new media with supernatural phenomena.
The exhibition will include Susan Hiller's influential installation Belshazzar's
Feast which relates in part to reports of the appearance of foreign beings seen
on television screens after station close-down; Thomson & Craighead's Obituary
which explores the electronic ether as a space of overlap between technology and
the spiritual and E-Poltergeist which is an intervention in a web browser which
starts to misbehave, giving the feeling of a ghost in the machine. Susan
Collins's Spectrascope references parapsychological research and attempts to
find this ghost in the machine by means of a pixel by pixel live internet link
up to a haunted house; Scanner's sound piece refers to the Electronic Voice
Phenomenon of spectral voices in recordings of empty locations and presents a
sound piece created from field recordings from spaces with ghostly associations.
S Mark Gubb investigates backwards messages in records and plots connections
with contemporaneous events. Lindsay Seers's 'then there were three' is based
on the possible traumatic, psychological effect the invention of television had
on the dummy that John Logie Baird used in his first TV transmission and Patrick
Ward presents filmic moments in which TV screens are overtaken by static
signalling a communicating other.
Haunted Media Symposium: On the Disappearance of Ghosts
Saturday 20 March 11am - 5pm
£20.00 | £15.00 (concessions) | £10.00 (groups)
This event will attune itself to artists' inheritance of the mediumistic legacy,
with contributions from artists and theorists. The weblogs of psychic
enthusiasts have recently voiced anxieties about the ghostbusting properties of
mobile phones. The perception that they may interrupt and disperse phantom
wavelengths, suggests that the tele-empathy which has enabled electronic media
to become a favoured site of haunting is not automatic. Media may afterall prove
to be the location where the phantasmic chose to dictate its own obituary.
Participants include: Pavel Buchler, Sean Cubitt, Susan Hiller, Pauline van
Mourik Broekman, Jeffrey Sconce.
Please contact the gallery to book places.
Gallery Opening Times: Tuesday - Friday 11.00am - 6.00pm, Saturday 11am -
5.30pm.
Site Gallery, 1 Brown Street, Sheffield S1 2BS, UK
tel +44 (0)114 281 2077 fax +44 (0)114 281 2078
Site Gallery is a centre for the exhibition and production of lens-based &
electronic media; offering free exhibitions of contemporary art, alongside
open-access darkroom and digital facilities, educational events and short
courses.