SPECTRA 2018: The Art and Consequence of Collaboration

This research publication is the culmination of work undertaken during the Australian Antarctic Division’s 2017-18 Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship at Mawson Station in East Antarctica. It extends earlier research into time-lapse visualisation begun during the ARC funded Derwent Project, which c...

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Main Author: Walch, M
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: SASA Gallery 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.utas.edu.au/39919/
https://eprints.utas.edu.au/39919/2/135871%20-%20Artwork.pdf
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spelling ftunivtasmania:oai:eprints.utas.edu.au:39919 2023-05-15T13:41:50+02:00 SPECTRA 2018: The Art and Consequence of Collaboration Walch, M 2017 application/pdf https://eprints.utas.edu.au/39919/ https://eprints.utas.edu.au/39919/2/135871%20-%20Artwork.pdf en eng SASA Gallery https://eprints.utas.edu.au/39919/2/135871%20-%20Artwork.pdf Walch, M orcid:0000-0002-7612-9973 2017 , SPECTRA 2018: The Art and Consequence of Collaboration. SASA Gallery. Antarctica Mawson Station Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship Creative Works NonPeerReviewed 2017 ftunivtasmania 2022-02-28T23:16:34Z This research publication is the culmination of work undertaken during the Australian Antarctic Division’s 2017-18 Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship at Mawson Station in East Antarctica. It extends earlier research into time-lapse visualisation begun during the ARC funded Derwent Project, which created new aesthetic models for representing multilayered landscapes over time, that convey layered information with clarity and impact. This project developed new methods of recording and visualising time-lapse imagery, both by adapting prior methods to the extreme Antarctic environment, and by refining temporal and spatial sample rates to improve image quality and image flow. Two semi-permanent cameras were installed in custom blizzard proof housings. Each camera captured an image every 150 seconds during the period 8th December 2017 to 13th February 2018. One second interval weather data was provided by the Bureau of Meteorology at Mawson. Custom software was designed to organise, collate, manipulate and output the time-lapse imagery with incorporated wind-speed and temperature data, as video. This visualisation represents an entire Antarctic summer at Mawson Station. It shows the rhythms of daily station life under the constant daylight of the austral summer from early December 2017 until early February 2018. The work represents a highly innovative method for visualising the relationships between real-time environmental data and its expression through the photographic representation of local phenomena undergoing change. The time-lapse aspect of the research has so far led to the development of two major works. The first of these works has been exhibited in South Australia and New South Wales at major University galleries as part of the SPECTRA 2018 tour. This new approach to data visualisation represents a major advance in the aesthetic development of the research. Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica East Antarctica University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints Antarctic Austral East Antarctica Mawson Station ENVELOPE(62.874,62.874,-67.603,-67.603)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints
op_collection_id ftunivtasmania
language English
topic Antarctica
Mawson Station
Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship
spellingShingle Antarctica
Mawson Station
Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship
Walch, M
SPECTRA 2018: The Art and Consequence of Collaboration
topic_facet Antarctica
Mawson Station
Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship
description This research publication is the culmination of work undertaken during the Australian Antarctic Division’s 2017-18 Australian Antarctic Arts Fellowship at Mawson Station in East Antarctica. It extends earlier research into time-lapse visualisation begun during the ARC funded Derwent Project, which created new aesthetic models for representing multilayered landscapes over time, that convey layered information with clarity and impact. This project developed new methods of recording and visualising time-lapse imagery, both by adapting prior methods to the extreme Antarctic environment, and by refining temporal and spatial sample rates to improve image quality and image flow. Two semi-permanent cameras were installed in custom blizzard proof housings. Each camera captured an image every 150 seconds during the period 8th December 2017 to 13th February 2018. One second interval weather data was provided by the Bureau of Meteorology at Mawson. Custom software was designed to organise, collate, manipulate and output the time-lapse imagery with incorporated wind-speed and temperature data, as video. This visualisation represents an entire Antarctic summer at Mawson Station. It shows the rhythms of daily station life under the constant daylight of the austral summer from early December 2017 until early February 2018. The work represents a highly innovative method for visualising the relationships between real-time environmental data and its expression through the photographic representation of local phenomena undergoing change. The time-lapse aspect of the research has so far led to the development of two major works. The first of these works has been exhibited in South Australia and New South Wales at major University galleries as part of the SPECTRA 2018 tour. This new approach to data visualisation represents a major advance in the aesthetic development of the research.
format Text
author Walch, M
author_facet Walch, M
author_sort Walch, M
title SPECTRA 2018: The Art and Consequence of Collaboration
title_short SPECTRA 2018: The Art and Consequence of Collaboration
title_full SPECTRA 2018: The Art and Consequence of Collaboration
title_fullStr SPECTRA 2018: The Art and Consequence of Collaboration
title_full_unstemmed SPECTRA 2018: The Art and Consequence of Collaboration
title_sort spectra 2018: the art and consequence of collaboration
publisher SASA Gallery
publishDate 2017
url https://eprints.utas.edu.au/39919/
https://eprints.utas.edu.au/39919/2/135871%20-%20Artwork.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(62.874,62.874,-67.603,-67.603)
geographic Antarctic
Austral
East Antarctica
Mawson Station
geographic_facet Antarctic
Austral
East Antarctica
Mawson Station
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
op_relation https://eprints.utas.edu.au/39919/2/135871%20-%20Artwork.pdf
Walch, M orcid:0000-0002-7612-9973 2017 , SPECTRA 2018: The Art and Consequence of Collaboration. SASA Gallery.
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