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Prism, an installation by Keiichi Matsuda

The Art Dossier on September 5, 2012 with 0 Comments

From London Design Festival:

Prism presents an alternative view of London, exposing unseen data flows in the capital through a sculptural, immersive interface suspended in the V&A’s uppermost cupola. The installation is an investigation into the virtual life of the city, and our own often ambiguous relationship with the data that controls our lives.

First time visitors to the London Design Festival are often blown away by the scale and variousness of the city they’ve come to. How do you even begin to represent such complexity?

London-based designer, digital artist and film-maker Keiichi Matsuda‘s Prism presents an ingenious window on that complexity, using data to depict the ever changing nature of the capital. His formidable digital installation at the V&A – a giant, sculptural lantern – is made up from a series of screens through which fast moving data streams are visualised, coaxed into unfolding shapes and patterns of light and colour.

From transport data to economic statistics, Matsuda’s Prism feeds on the digital outputs of the city and transforms them into an astonishing living patchwork. As Matsuda says, “The installation is an investigation into the virtual life of the city, and our own often ambiguous relationship with the data that controls our lives.”

This is a free event, but tickets are required. Timed tours will depart from Gallery 140 (Ceramics, level 6) at regular intervals. Tour lasts approximately 40 minutes. Please collect your ticket from Gallery 140, 20 minutes before your time slot.

14 September – 23 September
Opening times: From Daily 10:45 – 16:30 please go to veuveclicquotprism.com for more information and to book tickets.