Classical Archaeology News

Aug 22 2012
Art Installation Planned for Hadrian’s Wall

A group of American artists is using 450 balloons and thousands of light emitting diodes to turn the 2,000-year-old Hadrian’s Wall into the world’s longest work of art.
New York digital arts collective YesYesNo has been invited by organizers of Britain’s Olympic-themed summer arts festival to transform the wall, built by Roman invaders to guard the northern frontier of their empire.
“Connecting Light” will suspend hundreds of white weather balloons above the 73-mile (117- kilometer) wall, which snakes across hill and dale in northern England just south of the Scottish border.
The balloons will be fitted with lights and networked so they can communicate with one another. Viewers will be able to submit short messages which will be transformed into pulses of colored light that pass along the wall in patterns reminiscent of Morse Code.
Group member Zachary Lieberman, who is overseeing final work on the project at Newcastle University in northeast England, said Tuesday he hoped to create “the inverse of a border … to imagine the border as a means of connection” rather than separation.
He said balloons were chosen for their ability to evoke a sense of wonder and magic.
The work will be staged the nights of Aug. 31 and Sept. 1. Visitors will be able to see stretches of the wall from spots along the route, while people around the world can watch on the Internet.

Here is a video of YesYesNo testing the balloons in New York. Project website here.

Art Installation Planned for Hadrian’s Wall

A group of American artists is using 450 balloons and thousands of light emitting diodes to turn the 2,000-year-old Hadrian’s Wall into the world’s longest work of art.

New York digital arts collective YesYesNo has been invited by organizers of Britain’s Olympic-themed summer arts festival to transform the wall, built by Roman invaders to guard the northern frontier of their empire.

“Connecting Light” will suspend hundreds of white weather balloons above the 73-mile (117- kilometer) wall, which snakes across hill and dale in northern England just south of the Scottish border.

The balloons will be fitted with lights and networked so they can communicate with one another. Viewers will be able to submit short messages which will be transformed into pulses of colored light that pass along the wall in patterns reminiscent of Morse Code.

Group member Zachary Lieberman, who is overseeing final work on the project at Newcastle University in northeast England, said Tuesday he hoped to create “the inverse of a border … to imagine the border as a means of connection” rather than separation.

He said balloons were chosen for their ability to evoke a sense of wonder and magic.

The work will be staged the nights of Aug. 31 and Sept. 1. Visitors will be able to see stretches of the wall from spots along the route, while people around the world can watch on the Internet.

Here is a video of YesYesNo testing the balloons in New York. Project website here.

76 notes

  1. helloimstrange reblogged this from archaeology
  2. getrovyphy reblogged this from archaeology
  3. sandiacualala reblogged this from archaeology
  4. raynehargreaves reblogged this from archaeology
  5. bethers1711 reblogged this from archaeology
  6. jzp reblogged this from archaeology
  7. thesmallandmeek reblogged this from archaeology
  8. baveshmoorthy reblogged this from archaeology
  9. aldovaleroso reblogged this from archaeology
  10. salpihasnofriends reblogged this from archaeology
  11. sleepershark reblogged this from archaeology
  12. kianahsaro reblogged this from archaeology
  13. bricshouse reblogged this from archaeology
  14. imawhatever reblogged this from archaeology
  15. pallas-athena reblogged this from archaeology
  16. sapphirewitch40 reblogged this from archaeology
  17. schizophrenicme reblogged this from miri-nae
  18. runningtheriskofbeingfree reblogged this from flightyforeshadowing
  19. flightyforeshadowing reblogged this from archaeology
  20. vinedragonheartstring reblogged this from archaeology
  21. hopelessromantic369 reblogged this from archaeology
  22. mirandaskye reblogged this from evastrange
  23. evastrange reblogged this from archaeology and added:
    Phew! For a moment there, I thought this was going to be permanent, Eiffel Tower style… D:
  24. snowthunder reblogged this from archaeology
  25. rebelliousrogue reblogged this from archaeology
Page 1 of 1