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the third work in
the 'cardiograph' series.
installation view:

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snow.
The
Digital Hub Warehouse - Nov /Dec 2003
With
'snow' Murnaghan investigates the memory of comfort through aging technology
or via our "third parent" - television, focusing on a dysfunctional
TV set as both catalyst and source material.
Black
and White TV static and coat hanger aerials are disposable objects, images
of our suburban late twentieth century childhood. At
the end of a darkened walk, there is an entrance through a wall constructed
from wire hangers which act as antenna. This
wall is connected to a worn, dysfunctional television which tries, but
never succeeds in locking on to a constant signal, finding no stability
in its existence. The resulting sound and monochrome imagery is affected
by the proximity or closeness of the observer who helps to pull the signal
to earth. A circuit was constructed to allow the computer to see static
which digital technology normally forces it to disregard as waste, this
is then slowed down and back projected onto the walls of an immersive
construct of fabric and tensioned steel wire. The space itself appears
cognisant of human presence through a constantly evolving aesthetic, imbued
with random flashes of imagery and sound that have been filtered through
human presence.
To view Digital Hub
video click here.
To view TV3 footage
click here 
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