Hourglass

The translation of data from time to time and movement generates a three-dimensional installation that examines the collective experience of our time spent traveling.

hourglass.jpg
 

Similarly to the hourglass, which is considered one of the main artifacts that has allowed us to keep track of time for a number of centuries, this installation is shaped by past, present and future time.

The unifying element in the intervention is represented in the expression of the line as the single element that defines both space and data information through the piece. Unlike most other methods of measuring time, the hourglass concretely represents the present as being between the past and the future, and this has made it an enduring symbol of time itself.

Exhibited at the Atrium Space at the Center for Sciences and Biomedical Engineering, Ira Allen Building at Wentworth Institute of Technology, Boston. December, 2014.

Collaboration with Jeffrey Bathalon, Michael Crockett, Chad Keyworth, Eli Mead, Matthew Mulligan, Andrew La Fosse, Kyle Pryhuber, Michael Greco, Margaret Schmaling, Christina Strid, Francesco Stumpo, Ivan Trayanov.

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