#
Date
Title
Source
Description
Tags
W4664
25.05.2011
Field Experiment Osnabrück - MomenTech
WWW
Field Experiment Osnabrück an unrealized project by MomenTech http://momentech.blogspot.com Field Experiment Osnabrück is a proposed large-scale work in the public sphere based on MomenTech’s Field Experiment installation, an interactive, site-spec ...

Field Experiment Osnabrück an unrealized project by MomenTech http://momentech.blogspot.com Field Experiment Osnabrück is a proposed large-scale work in the public sphere based on MomenTech’s Field Experiment installation, an interactive, site-specific audiovisual project that explores meditation, self-hypnosis, the media and our cosmic origins by asking viewers to imagine a field after having stared into live television static for a period of 10 seconds.

Field Experiment Osnabrück re-situates the original room-sized installation design of Field Experiment, projecting live television static on a large screen behind a window in a historic building in Osnabrück.

Mounted on the street level outside the building are the following instructions for viewers:

INSTRUCTIONS TO PARTICIPATE IN THE FIELD EXPERIMENT OSNABRÜCK:

  1. Stare directly into the static on the screen.
  2. In your head, count slowly the numbers backwards from 10 to 1 (at the rate of approximately one number per second)
  3. When you get to the number "1," close your eyes.
  4. Imagine a field.

The amount of time the participant stays in this position, with eyes closed in front of the television, is up to the participant.

COSMIC MICROWAVE BACKGROUND RADIATION (CMBR)

"A small percentage of the static that you see on an analog television, when it's tuned to an empty channel, is from the Big Bang," notes artist Rick Doble, who uses analog television static in his work, in an NPR interview with Guy Raz.

"It's really the echo of the Big Bang. It's called cosmic microwave background radiation or CMBR. And this is being picked up by the television signal."

The Cosmic Microwave Background temperature fluctuations from the 7-year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe data seen over the full sky. The colors represent the tiny temperature fluctuations, as in a weather map. (image: NASA/WMAP Science Team).

Raz: So, this echo from billion of years ago... Doble: Right... Raz: ...is still echoing... Doble: ...like 13 billion years ago. Raz: ...is communicating to us through terrestrial television.

OSNABRÜCK & THE BIG BANG

Some scholars believe that Osnabrück is the location of Germany's oldest gymnasium, or school, being the purported site of a gymnasium built in 804 by Charlemagne. This fact makes Osnabrück a perfect location to study the cosmic signals that were first formed at the birth of the universe.

According to Wikipedia, "the charter [of the school] with the date is disputed by historians, some of whom believe it could be a forgery." The fact that its status is up for debate only adds to the overarching dialogue presented by Field Experiment Osnabrück, as the age of the universe itself is disputed. The majority view is 13.7 billion years, but some scientists are questioning that number.

According to a recent article in The Economist, "Roger Penrose, of Oxford University, believes that the Big Bang in which the visible universe began was not actually the beginning of everything. It was merely the latest example of a series of such bangs that renew reality when it is getting tired out."

MEDIATION & MEDITATION

In a world where digital television is the norm, the ability to access live static is getting more and more difficult. It can also be argued that in a world increasingly inundated with information, it is increasingly harder to find moments of quiet reflection.

Information/media overload, meditation, hypnosis, and the cosmos are all themes explored in Field Experiment Osnabrück, which recalls Nam June Paik's 1974 sculpture/installation "TV-Buddha," in which an antique statue of Buddha "watches" itself on a closed-circuit television.

But the Buddha is also being "watched" by the video camera. As Hartmut Neven, a computer scientist and vision expert at Google, said, "Machines will definitely be able to observe us and understand us better. Where that leads is uncertain."

Nam June Paik. TV Buddha, 1974 closed circuit video installation (video camera, monitor) with bronze sculpture In Field Experiment, Paik's mediated gaze shifts from the other (Buddha/no ego) to the self (ego) and back again (Nirvana), as viewers are invited to participate in the experiment, simply by standing in front a television displaying pieces of information, some of which have taken 13.7 billion years to travel from the beginning of time (i.e., the Big Bang) to Earth at the present time.

Viewers, then, become vessels that channel the Universe's earliest signals of activity through their mental ability to, quite prosaically, "imagine a field" through the use of self-hypnosis.

It is relatively easy to meditate in a quiet environment. But one's true ability to meditate is demonstrated by meditating in the most chaotic of environments -- to "imagine a field" through the static.

Wikipedia defines meditation as "any of a family of techniques that involve the self-induction of a mode of consciousness in order to realize some benefit." For the deepest meditation, one has to not only focus on one object, but to make the awareness itself be that object. This way the focus of consciousness is turned back to the self. In this sense, Field Experiment might simply be used as a meditation technique.

However, a successful installation of Field Experiment also offers a way to (re)connect with the origins of the cosmos in the form of the cosmic microwave background radiation that is readily accessible through an analog television that is tuning in a "non-channel."

--

NOTES

Producers of The Field Experiment Osnabrück are encouraged to gather the following data, but it is not required for a successful installation:

  1. the age/gender of each participant
  2. the length of time each participant stays in front of the television with their eyes closed
  3. the size of the television
  4. the decibels (db) of the audio of the level (i.e., the volume level of the static)
  5. any post-experiment participant comments

This data can be displayed to the public in conjunction with the installation of The Field Experiment Osnabrück, and can also be sent directly to MomenTech for analysis.

For more information, email MomenTech: m01123581321345589144@gmail.com

Field Experiment Osnabrück an unrealized project by MomenTech http://momentech.blogspot.com Field Experiment Osnabrück is a proposed large-scale work in the public sphere based on MomenTech’s Field Experiment installation, an interactive, site-spec ...

Field Experiment Osnabrück an unrealized project by MomenTech http://momentech.blogspot.com Field Experiment Osnabrück is a proposed large-scale work in the public sphere based on MomenTech’s Field Experiment installation, an interactive, site-specific audiovisual project that explores meditation, self-hypnosis, the media and our cosmic origins by asking viewers to imagine a field after having stared into live television static for a period of 10 seconds.

Field Experiment Osnabrück re-situates the original room-sized installation design of Field Experiment, projecting live television static on a large screen behind a window in a historic building in Osnabrück.

Mounted on the street level outside the building are the following instructions for viewers:

INSTRUCTIONS TO PARTICIPATE IN THE FIELD EXPERIMENT OSNABRÜCK:

  1. Stare directly into the static on the screen.
  2. In your head, count slowly the numbers backwards from 10 to 1 (at the rate of approximately one number per second)
  3. When you get to the number "1," close your eyes.
  4. Imagine a field.

The amount of time the participant stays in this position, with eyes closed in front of the television, is up to the participant.

COSMIC MICROWAVE BACKGROUND RADIATION (CMBR)

"A small percentage of the static that you see on an analog television, when it's tuned to an empty channel, is from the Big Bang," notes artist Rick Doble, who uses analog television static in his work, in an NPR interview with Guy Raz.

"It's really the echo of the Big Bang. It's called cosmic microwave background radiation or CMBR. And this is being picked up by the television signal."

The Cosmic Microwave Background temperature fluctuations from the 7-year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe data seen over the full sky. The colors represent the tiny temperature fluctuations, as in a weather map. (image: NASA/WMAP Science Team).

Raz: So, this echo from billion of years ago... Doble: Right... Raz: ...is still echoing... Doble: ...like 13 billion years ago. Raz: ...is communicating to us through terrestrial television.

OSNABRÜCK & THE BIG BANG

Some scholars believe that Osnabrück is the location of Germany's oldest gymnasium, or school, being the purported site of a gymnasium built in 804 by Charlemagne. This fact makes Osnabrück a perfect location to study the cosmic signals that were first formed at the birth of the universe.

According to Wikipedia, "the charter [of the school] with the date is disputed by historians, some of whom believe it could be a forgery." The fact that its status is up for debate only adds to the overarching dialogue presented by Field Experiment Osnabrück, as the age of the universe itself is disputed. The majority view is 13.7 billion years, but some scientists are questioning that number.

According to a recent article in The Economist, "Roger Penrose, of Oxford University, believes that the Big Bang in which the visible universe began was not actually the beginning of everything. It was merely the latest example of a series of such bangs that renew reality when it is getting tired out."

MEDIATION & MEDITATION

In a world where digital television is the norm, the ability to access live static is getting more and more difficult. It can also be argued that in a world increasingly inundated with information, it is increasingly harder to find moments of quiet reflection.

Information/media overload, meditation, hypnosis, and the cosmos are all themes explored in Field Experiment Osnabrück, which recalls Nam June Paik's 1974 sculpture/installation "TV-Buddha," in which an antique statue of Buddha "watches" itself on a closed-circuit television.

But the Buddha is also being "watched" by the video camera. As Hartmut Neven, a computer scientist and vision expert at Google, said, "Machines will definitely be able to observe us and understand us better. Where that leads is uncertain."

Nam June Paik. TV Buddha, 1974 closed circuit video installation (video camera, monitor) with bronze sculpture In Field Experiment, Paik's mediated gaze shifts from the other (Buddha/no ego) to the self (ego) and back again (Nirvana), as viewers are invited to participate in the experiment, simply by standing in front a television displaying pieces of information, some of which have taken 13.7 billion years to travel from the beginning of time (i.e., the Big Bang) to Earth at the present time.

Viewers, then, become vessels that channel the Universe's earliest signals of activity through their mental ability to, quite prosaically, "imagine a field" through the use of self-hypnosis.

It is relatively easy to meditate in a quiet environment. But one's true ability to meditate is demonstrated by meditating in the most chaotic of environments -- to "imagine a field" through the static.

Wikipedia defines meditation as "any of a family of techniques that involve the self-induction of a mode of consciousness in order to realize some benefit." For the deepest meditation, one has to not only focus on one object, but to make the awareness itself be that object. This way the focus of consciousness is turned back to the self. In this sense, Field Experiment might simply be used as a meditation technique.

However, a successful installation of Field Experiment also offers a way to (re)connect with the origins of the cosmos in the form of the cosmic microwave background radiation that is readily accessible through an analog television that is tuning in a "non-channel."

--

NOTES

Producers of The Field Experiment Osnabrück are encouraged to gather the following data, but it is not required for a successful installation:

  1. the age/gender of each participant
  2. the length of time each participant stays in front of the television with their eyes closed
  3. the size of the television
  4. the decibels (db) of the audio of the level (i.e., the volume level of the static)
  5. any post-experiment participant comments

This data can be displayed to the public in conjunction with the installation of The Field Experiment Osnabrück, and can also be sent directly to MomenTech for analysis.

For more information, email MomenTech: m01123581321345589144@gmail.com