Shimmer⤣ SERIES
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Catalogue /
Immersive Installations /

Shimmer

2013
A shifting colour palette which is dependent on the viewer's movements.

This is part of a larger artwork. See the full artwork series:

The Shimmer artworks play on Harris' skill in manipulating colours and light, but in a departure from many of his pieces, Shimmer is created without any sensors or electronics; instead, it is simply the viewing angle of the observer that controls the spectacular magical appearance of the work. Harris has selected opposing warm and cool coloured dichroic glass for the pieces, through which directly viewed and reflected light create an alluring shimmering aesthetic in an infinitely variable shifting colour palette.

The Collection

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⤣ SERIES

Images

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Information

Year:

2013

Edition:

Edition of 1 + 1 Artist Proof per colour combination

Materials:

Glass, lightbox, stainless steel

Details:

Dimensions in MM:

650 (Ø) x 105 (D) mm

Dimensions in INCHES:

25.6 (Ø) x 4.1 (D) inches

Dimensions in INCHES:

25.6 (Ø) x 4.1 (D) inches

Context

"There’s a part of me that’s always wrestling with the idea that I should focus on a singular aspect of my work. So, should I work with the video pieces or should I work with the design objects? I think a long time ago I just gave up trying to decide and embraced the two. That’s why a lot of the pieces actually have this incredible overlap between a digital light framework and a mechanical framework, where no details are left undefined. Perhaps artworks such as Chess Block, Shimmer, Digital Shimmer and Baby Shimmer are very much about this relationship with light that I see in the digital pieces and the screen-based pieces. To me, light and colour are so important. Throughout my schooling, through high school and beyond, I’ve always been involved in theatre design, stage sets and lighting design. It meant as a 14 year old I had this experience that influences my art now. I remember when I was doing theatre, there was always the thing about actors who have to stay in character because they never know when they are going to be photographed. They need to look absolutely perfect and I kind of use that for my work: the idea that even if you’re watching one of the flowers in Bloomed doing something purely whimsical, like waving hello to you, if you were to take a still of it, it would always be in character. The stills of any of the artworks never look like they are doing anything out of place. It’s not until you see them in life and you see them in motion and actually living that you really comprehend their full story." - Dominic Harris

Extract from interview with Dominic Harris by Simon Quintero.

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