Analema Group
KIMA Colour Van Gogh, 2020
Unique print for the Art in Flux Archive Collection
40 x 50cm
Analema Group set about exploring the harmony of colours used in some of our greatest masterpieces in the National Gallery’s collection.
This exploration has resulted in ‘Kima: Colour’ an immersive, online experience that use binaural sound and spatial 360 video to allow you to feel, hear and sense paintings; inviting you to rediscover colour at the National Gallery and consider the artistic practices of some of the painters in the collection. KIMA: Colour Van Gogh has been inspired by Vincent Van Gogh’s ‘A Wheatfield, with Cypresses’ (1889).
This exploration has resulted in ‘Kima: Colour’ an immersive, online experience that use binaural sound and spatial 360 video to allow you to feel, hear and sense paintings; inviting you to rediscover colour at the National Gallery and consider the artistic practices of some of the painters in the collection. KIMA: Colour Van Gogh has been inspired by Vincent Van Gogh’s ‘A Wheatfield, with Cypresses’ (1889).
About the artists:
Analema Group
https://analemagroup.com/ | @analemagroup
Analema Group is a London based Arts collective, founded by its artistic director Evgenia Emets in 2010. The members of the collective are artists Alain Renaud, Oliver Gingrich and David Negrao. Evgenia Emets is an artist, who creates installation and participatory performance work on the intersection of visual language, sound and poetry. Dr. Alain Renaud specialises in sound installations and sound design. Dr. Oliver Gingrich is an artist and researcher, working in the realm of visual technologies and media art. David Negrao is an artist, visual developer and creative coder. We create experiences on the intersection between art and technology.
We create experiences on the intersection between art and technology. Our mission is to reflect on the nature of perception, exploring the relationships between sound, colour, light, movement and form. Our participatory art fills the gap between performers and audiences, enabling them to question their senses and the boundaries of perception. |