Alex Posada – ORIGIN https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en ORIGIN - ARS ELECTRONICA 2011 Mon, 27 Jun 2022 14:49:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.6 THE PARTICLE https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en/2011/07/26/the-particle/ https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en/2011/07/26/the-particle/#comments Tue, 26 Jul 2011 07:37:05 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/?p=1265 In the beginning of life on Earth, there was a long interplay of chaos and (brief instances of) order, of stability and disintegration. Fascinated by the origination and break-down of forms and order, Alex Posada (ES) developed The Particle, his massive sculpture positively brimming with energy. Its central elements are rings studded with multicolored LED lights. They rapidly rotate and produce sounds as they do. In and as a result of this movement, there emerge forms that are as beautiful as they are transient.

Posada’s work is controlled wirelessly by computer in three operating modes: in one, the artist can specify what The Particle produces; or an installation visitor can have input via touchpad; or control can be turned over to sensors that react to people moving about nearby or changes in brightness.

Alex Posada – The Particle in our blog

The Particle, developed by MID with the support of hangar.org and Strobe festival. The project was made possible by the support of the Spanish Embassy.

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Alex Posada – The Particle https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en/2011/06/08/alex-posada-the-particle/ https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en/2011/06/08/alex-posada-the-particle/#comments Wed, 08 Jun 2011 13:07:52 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/?p=589 As a matter of fact, Planet Earth was long a ball made up of various materials and surrounded by all kinds of gasses and other unsorted delicacies. Then, one fine day, happenstance or some god or other motive force determined that it was high time to make something useful out of this sphere, and thus began the process that took this elemental chaos and created what we know today. This was truly an arduous procedure. New elements were constantly appearing, only to sink back into oblivion because they just didn’t have what it takes to make a go of it in this world. Others were stronger, formed interconnections, split up and went their separate ways. And so on and so forth.

The Particle @ The City

credit: Alex Posada, The Particle

A Spaniard named Alex Posada was fascinated and inspired by this development. He studied communications technology and has used some of the knowledge he acquired as an undergrad to construct a modern electronic sculpture: The Particle. What especially appeals to him is the interplay of chaos and apparent order, of genesis and decomposition. He attempts to physically depict the reciprocal interactions among these forces and does so in quite a powerful way.

The sculpture weighs about 150 kg and consists of several rings studded with variously colored LEDs. When these rings start to spin, they are a dynamic sight to behold. The Particle is controlled wirelessly by computer in its various operating modes. In one, the artist can precisely orchestrate the sound & light elements—he defines the parameters according to which his sculpture flashes and swirls. Another option is to let The Particle be influenced by external sensors that react to all sorts of phenomena in its immediate proximity like sounds or changes in brightness, and then transform this information into input to which the sculpture can react. A third possibility is to use a touchscreen to let installation visitors actively intervene in the process and intentionally determine how the rotating rings do their things.

The Particle, developed by MID with the support of hangar.org and Strobe festival

This is a truly fascinating contrivance—its striking physical form no less than its impressive capabilities. But watch out: don’t let any of your particles get caught up in these orbits. They’re as elemental and wild as the chaos of our origins!

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