Smoke On the Window Sill

Wednesday, April 13, 2005

....Sandglass.....

The day was Saturday, two days before I was flying out of Phoenix. It was a day we had meticulously set aside, to drive by the famous Apache Scenic Trail around Phoenix. I had read some of the most amazing stories about the trail and was all excited at the prospect of getting a first hand experience on the beauty and might behind this gorgeous slice of road trip – known to take you straight into the heart of the desert, through looming mountains, beautifully eroded canyons and breathtaking lakes!

But as luck would have it, the weather turned nasty that morning and soon, it started raining. The trail was supposed to be quite steep and winding, so it was dangerous to go there in bad weather. Plus, I hate to hurry things up while on a road trip, so we didn't want to take any chance to just drive by the points of interest, without actually stopping and letting the beauty sink in – only because it was raining. So, plan A was quickly shifted to plan B – road trip for tomorrow, something else for today.

What else, was an interesting question indeed! We spend a couple of hours (yeah, hours!!) trying to figure out what we could do and finally decided on checking out Scottsdale, better known as the city of the rich and the famous. A suggested the whole day at one of the many famous golf and spa resorts at Scottsdale - which was indeed the golf mecca of the southwest. My scheming mind, ofcourse had other plans ;-) There was no way I was going to let him spend the whole day playing golf and the evening getting massaged! So, I subtly reminded him that other than being a golf mecca, Scottsdale was also, the art oasis of the Valley of the Sun. Well, subtle gave room to persistent :) and soon enough we were driving down towards the Scottsdale downtown museum of contemporary art.....

Three exhibitions struck my attention the moment we stepped in. The first was called Strangely Familiar: an international exhibition, highlighting the role of design in everyday living, that incidently also happened to be one of the top 40 exhibitions worldwide at that time. The second, was Street Credibility, work of the photographer Diane Arbus – and her attempt to blend in casual street photography with professional studio portraiture over the course of her lifetime, and last but not the least, was Sandglass – an exhibition of the desert vistas by Russian artists Svetlana and Igor Kopystiansky.

Although the engineer in me, was more interested in checking out the design work first, there was something vaguely intriguing about the word Sandglass which led my steps unknowingly, into the least famous of the all the three exhibitions! We had absolutely no idea what we were getting into, when we mechanically followed the narrow alley, down into the room saying - Sandglass.....

What I saw when I entered the room, was something so ordinary that my first reaction was quite a bit of surprise! On the wall in front of me, was a huge video installation. Two screens, around 30 feet total, in length, were placed side by side. Each of them was projecting still, black and white snapshots, of identical desert landscapes – just a curved, worn-out road, extending from the left bottom of the screen to the right top, a few peaked mountains visible at the back and a group of flat mountains with striations visible on the left. There was absolutely no difference in the two screens at all.....



...Sandglass - 1 and 2.... www.smoca.orgPosted by Hello

I turned my attention away from the screen towards the room, which was completely dark except for two silhouettes at a distance – one person sitting besides the bench at the far end of the room, staring onto the screen and a second, standing on the side, looking a little disinterested. The second person I think, had entered just moments before us, and was visibly disappointed in what he saw. So by the time we moved closer to the bench, he had already left the room. One thing that I’ve learnt in whatever little appreciation I have for art, is to be patient with it and let it talk to you, rather than making hurried judgements way too soon - so, I decided to stick around a little while longer.......

So, there we were - just three people in the huge room - me, A and the third observer. I settled down on the lone bench, in front of the screen and my eyes slowly adjusted themselves to the darkness around me. I gave a second, more determined look onto the two screens in front of me and the two things that I noticed this time around were painstakingly beautiful. For one, the two snapshots were not quite identical and two, they were not quite stationary!!!

As I bore my eyes deeper onto the screen, I noticed that the image on the left was moving very slowly to the right and the one on the right was moving very slowly to the left! The motion was so slow that it was barely perceptible…The frames were casually showing different angles of the same landscape, and at the same time slowly trying to move towards each other, converging, I think, to a single snapshot. What was amazing about the entire projection, was how it explored the subtle nuances of the so chosen landscape – almost every iota of the meandering uphill road in the front, each and every grain of sand on the side of the road and every single striation etched on the mountains in view – was thrown naked in front of my eyes.....so ordinary, yet so exquisite!

The whole image had a kinda feel-good effect on me, some sort of a weird contentment, at letting the time slip by, so very slowly in front of my eyes – while watching one of nature’s precious hidden treasures. I can almost swear that I didn’t notice the 40 minutes or so, we spend, just watching the screen go by - before A reminded me that we had yet to see the rest of the exhibitions…

I wanted to continue the rest of the story - on how intellectually stimulating the design exhibition was or how fascinating some of Diane’s work were – but you know what, compared to Sandglass, I think, all that fell way behind.
The simplicity, in the depth of Sandglass, was indeed unmistakable and uncomparable....

5 Comments:

Blogger Rajavel said...

phonenix, Scottsdale !! ahhhh ! lovely place ! EE .. you made me J ! Did you see FLWrights home too ?

I had chance to visit NGV Melbourne ! graciously accompanied by my friends ! There was a similar exhibit there : but this was normal spreed video ! Of jostling crowd ! I couldnt figure out if it was live, or if it was just a long recording as there was no "explanation" ! It was interesting, as the you get more and more involved with it, one starts identigying with those strangers, the gestures, the expressions, the conversations (not audible), ... once in a while when some one directly stares into the camera (quite unintentionally and unaware) its a funny feeling ... its as if some one got you staring at them !

One other exhibit was some thing called The Grotesque or something like that ! A cool collection of art works with the grotesque as the theme ! To put it simply .. it was grotesque !

2:26 AM, April 13, 2005  
Blogger buckwaasur said...

hey enig...thnx for the heads-up...nice ideas on things to do next time i am in phoenix (although golf and spa sounds like guy heaven)...:-)

10:26 AM, April 13, 2005  
Blogger El enigma said...

hey cheti :) yes, I did see Taliesin West too....it's no. 2 or 3 on my list of things to blog about ;) so, u did have an interesting time in Australia....with all that amazing sight seeing and these art galleries!! And I have a feeling I've heard about the 'grotesque' exhibition from someone else too...can't place who, when 'n' where tho ;)

hi buck....ya, I think we should mutually consult each other before travelling to Phoenix...u tell me what guys wud love to do there 'n' I'll make sure A goes nowhere near all that ;) and I'll tell u where to take crys and u make sure u better take her there!! :p:p:p

and hey SSM, thanx a ton :)......u know what? with that kumbh mela factor between us, I'm positive now, I wud wanna take a road trip with u sometime to the southwest....what say? :)

enig!

3:32 PM, April 13, 2005  
Blogger NS said...

Wow Enig!
Lovely blog as usual... your words bring the experience right in front of my eyes... Great stuff!

Thanks for sharing this with us..:)

1:07 AM, April 14, 2005  
Blogger El enigma said...

sure, SSM...that makes it a deal now :)

thanx, Nithya....I'm glad u liked it! :)

ok, toscin....the rest of the comment is dedicated to ya :p lemme try to explain it the engineering way :)

1) so, there are two screens projecting two images on the wall
2)let's say at time t=0, both of them represent the same chunk of land
3) starting then, the camera on the left screen tries to sweep out the land on the left of what is already projected
4) camera on the right starts moving towards right of what it's already projecting
5) Both the cameras move at a barely perceptible rate
6) Somewhere in the middle of the video show, images line up as a single very wide panormic view of the entire landscape (both screens showing different images now)
7) From this moment on, the camera on the left screen starts panning towards the right of the current landscape...and the one on the right screen starts moving towards the left
8) So, to a viewer it seems that the two snapshots have slowly started converging onto each other
9) Towards the end of an hour, both images finally converge to identical screenshots placed side by side!!

phew!!! that was an algorithmic version of my entire blog ;) Guess, I was too busy with the emotional aspect of the blog, to be more lucid in the technical aspect! :) hope this hepled!

cheers,
enig

2:01 AM, April 14, 2005  

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