This essay examines an immersive audiovisual installation created by Paris-based Japanese composer and visual artist Ryoji Ikeda, who conjures micro/macro datascapes and their embodied experience, opening a new realm at the intersection of art and data, or data art. Ikeda interfaces his sound compositions with light, visuals, numerical data, and data visualization, bringing audible/inaudible and visible/invisible data into viewers’ fields of perception. Focusing on his exhibition the transfinite at the Park Avenue Armory in New York City in 2011, I examine Ikeda’s approach to temporal articulation in forging the viewer’s spatiotemporal immersion into the datascapes in his signature large-scale screen-centric installation work. Ikeda’s data composition—which evolved from his music composition—articulates a multi-substance of data from the infinitesimal to the infinite according to sonic media’s micro-temporality, formulating a new sensibility of our world enmeshed in unfathomable data at the threshold of the viewer’s perception. Given that Ikeda’s body of art is integral to his music, I trace the expansion of the arc of his work from music to visual art, discussing his composition of glitch microsound and his early sound-light installation spectra II (2002). Finally, I highlight that Ikeda’s screen-centric installations, stemming from his audiovisual performances and his association with the Japanese experimental collective Dumb Type’s intermedia production, have shaped a new kind of installation art with a distinct temporal dimension, immersing viewers into the constantly instantiated presence of datascapes rather than into the images on the screen as the direct representation of reality.
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December 2024
Research Article|
December 01 2024
Immersion into the Datascape: Ryoji Ikeda’s Data Composition in Screen-Centric Audiovisual Installation and Its Embodied Experience
Joo Yun Lee
Joo Yun Lee
Joo Yun Lee is an art historian, curator, and educator working at the intersection of art and computational media, and an assistant professor in the department of history of art, design, and visual culture at Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA). Her research examines emerging cultural, political, and ecological issues within datafied society, focusing on East Asian contemporary art and media practices that intersect with global art and visual culture.
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Afterimage (2024) 51 (4): 65–87.
Citation
Joo Yun Lee; Immersion into the Datascape: Ryoji Ikeda’s Data Composition in Screen-Centric Audiovisual Installation and Its Embodied Experience. Afterimage 1 December 2024; 51 (4): 65–87. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/aft.2024.51.4.65
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