Client: Rebeca Méndez Studio
Location: Los Angeles, CA, United States
Completion date: 2013
Artwork budget: $30,000
Project Team
Artist
Rebeca Mendez
Other
Drew Schnurr
Drew Schnurr
Other
Adam Eeuwens
Overview
Single-channel video projected at architectural scale, color, sound, 17:46 minutes. CircumSolar 3 is a contemplation on migratory sea birds captured during their breeding season at Látrabjarg, the western most point of Iceland, and the largest bird cliff in all Europe—14 km long and up to 440 m high—hosting up to 40% of the world population of some species. Ornithologists estimate that more than 5 billion birds annually journey across the hemisphere. Even greater than the complex weather systems, bird migration is the one unifying natural phenomenon in the world.
Goals
As an immigrant myself, I am interested on issues of migration, of both animals and humans, and just like birds, we—scientists, farm workers, presidents, artists—journey back and forth dozens of times in the course of our life, establishing migratory patterns. Current immigration crises around the world, and specifically along the Mexico / U.S. border, where hundreds of migrating children, women and men have lost their lives, questions the geopolitics of territorial boundaries.
Process
“The Sound conception for CircumSolar, Migration 3 focuses on the visceral internal experience, its multiplicity, and modulation of focus. Layers of the visual component are drawn out sonically in sequence by gradually isolating varied regions of frequency from the original audio recording. Subtle musical layers are woven into the underlying texture.” —Drew Schnurr.
Additional Information
Formally, the video image is experienced vertically, defamiliarizing the seascape, so that the boundary dividing sea and sky becomes unstable and blurred. The spatial shift, together with a low video frame rate furthers this abstraction so we may understand the migratory impetus as code; a genetic code for evolutionary preservation. With this work, I reflect on how we as human species no longer have an understanding of our place within the greater scheme of life.