Marks Make Meaning at the University of Brighton
School of Art Grand Parade Gallery
12th to 29th March 2018
School of Art Grand Parade Gallery
12th to 29th March 2018
A networked collaborative drawing performance installation by Paul Sermon and Jeremy Radvan, for the multidisciplinary drawing exhibition Marks Make Meaning at the University of Brighton, School of Art Grand Parade Gallery 12th to 29th March 2018.
(tele)consequences is collaborative global drawing performance that can be joined from any location in the world by simply using a networked computer or smartphone and Skype app. The drawing performance for the Marks Make Meaning exhibition will involve a large wall mounted scroll of paper, two metres wide by one and a half metres high, upon which we will project the live incoming Skype video call of your real-time drawing. The gallery guests, students and staff in Brighton drew on the paper screen, adding their marks and contributions upon our (Kiera and Anna) projected drawing, ranging from pencils, charcoal and paints to collage, objects and human figures. The camera sent this live combined image back to us via Skype as well as record the collaborative drawing, which was be projected on the screen and presented in the gallery between scheduled performances.
(tele)consequences is collaborative global drawing performance that can be joined from any location in the world by simply using a networked computer or smartphone and Skype app. The drawing performance for the Marks Make Meaning exhibition will involve a large wall mounted scroll of paper, two metres wide by one and a half metres high, upon which we will project the live incoming Skype video call of your real-time drawing. The gallery guests, students and staff in Brighton drew on the paper screen, adding their marks and contributions upon our (Kiera and Anna) projected drawing, ranging from pencils, charcoal and paints to collage, objects and human figures. The camera sent this live combined image back to us via Skype as well as record the collaborative drawing, which was be projected on the screen and presented in the gallery between scheduled performances.