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Australia’s Sacred Sites Get Recreated for an Immersive Musical Performance

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The Outback goes virtual in composer Kate Moore and artist Ruben van Leer’s collaboration, ‘Sacred Environment.’

The first time artist Ruben van Leer worked with a LIDAR scanner, he captured CERN’s large hadron collider in 3D for hisspace-opera film, Symmetry , which tells the story of the character Lucas merging with the collider. For his latest project, Sacred Environment, a collaboration with composer Kate Moore for The Holland Festival in Amsterdam, van Leer used a LIDAR scanner to 3D scan sacred sites in Moore’s native Australia. The performance featured an orchestra playing Moore’s music, while a VR performer, Esther Mugambi, explored 3D generative point-clouds of the sacred sites, which were projected on a screen for the audience to follow live. Like the Tribeca Film Festival’s VR Arcade installations and the Met Cloisters’ fantastic voyage into tiny Gothic sculptures, Sacred Environment attempts to transport audiences into different times and spaces.

To make the VR portion of Sacred Environment, Moore invited van Leer to Australia, where they took a three-hour drive north from Sydney, along the Great North Road into the Yengo mountain area, a place of great spiritual significance to indigenous Australians. There, van Leer connected with two elders from the local community, Uncle John and Uncle Phil, who took him under their wings, showing him a diverse range of aboriginal sites with sacred meaning. Among them, the Baiame cave, a range of eucalyptus trees, stone plates with carvings and stories, and borders between men’s and women’s land.

VR performer Esther Mugambi during a performance of Sacred Environment.

At first, the elders were hesitant to let van Leer digitally scan the sites. But, after assuring them that the project’s intentions were pure, the elders gave him permission, provided the virtual recreations would remain invisible or abstract to the eye.

To capture the sacred sites in 3D, van Leer enlisted Sydney-based visual effects creator Andrew Bosch, who did LIDAR scanning for films such as Mad Max: Fury Road and Life of Pi. Bosch brought his FARO LIDAR scanner and 4×4 track, which he and van Leer used to capture 14 different scans of the sacred sites, allowing the bush to come virtually alive during the performance.

Ruben van Leer and a LIDAR scanner in the Australian bush.
Ruben van Leer, Kate Moore, Uncle John Shipp, and Uncle Phil Sheppard in Baime Cave.

Moore’s musical concept features various intertwining rhythms inspired by the different lifeforms heard when one is silent in the bush environment. In particular, she was inspired by creatures from the green valleys, like frogs and birds, as well the area’s leaves and lakes, and how all these things interact.

“Kate was open to creating an immersive experience,” van Leer notes. “So, I thought about the concert hall becoming a giant ‘VR black box’ where 2,000 people would be together with the orchestra and choir, and that somehow the walls would disappear and we look into this other dream world.”

Sacred Environment being performed at The Holland Festival.

Inside this dream world, the audience could identify with the main character: a blindfolded woman who knows not if she belongs in the bush. This main character is represented by three women on stage: a soprano singer, a didgeridoo player, and the VR performer.

“I didn’t want to glorify the VR medium or use it as a gimmick per se, but more so question the medium,” says van Leer. “Do we really need virtual worlds if we have this planet and its bushes, that can by default alter our senses if we’re open to it?”

Sacred Environment being performed at The Holland Festival.

Click here to see more of Ruben van Leer’s work, and here to listen to Kate Moore’s music.

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Cutting-edge projections by teamLab at Asian Art Museum of San Francisco

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The pandemic-delayed expansion features an interactive exhibition by the Japanese contemporary art collective that was designed to disorient

The Asian Art Museum of San Francisco opened its pandemic-delayed $38m expansion by the architect Kulapat Yantrasast at 23 July with Continuity, a new immersive exhibition by the Japanese art collective teamLab. During an early walkthrough The Art Newspaper took of the addition, the installation’s visuals were being tweaked on a laptop by Adam Booth, the collective’s art director of computer graphics. Around the gallery, projections of flowers and butterflies were falling and flying. When told the experience was all a bit disorienting, Booth said with a soft smile, “That’s the idea.”

The museum’s director Jay Xu saw teamLab’s work during a visit to Japan about seven years ago, and thought it would be an ideal way to launch the museum building’s new addition. The Asian Art Museum became the first American institution to acquire a work by teamLab, according to Robert Mintz, the museum’s deputy director for art and programs, and it now owns two, Cold Life and Life Survives by the Power of Life. The solo show stitches together about ten different works, with projections on the gallery walls and floors. Some components are interactive, such as digital flowers growing around your feet.

This all fits into Yantrasast’s mission for the expansion, which he sees as “a dynamic balance of the rejuvenation of the historic Public Library building with the programs and activities of the core collection, as well as the addition of contemporary art and technological experiences in the museum,” he says. The addition adds a total of 15,000 sq ft of space across two levels. The main gallery, the Akiko Yamazaki and Jerry Yang Pavilion, is one large column-free 8,500 sq ft space meant to offer maximum flexibility for exhibitions and programming. On top of that is the East West Bank Art Terrace, a rooftop sculpture garden currently featuring Ai Weiwei’s Fountain of Light.

Audiences are clearly hungry for enhanced art experiences, and the museum is in competition with more commercial art shows in the city. Part of a national craze, The Immersive Van Gogh Exhibit San Francisco at the event space SVN West has been open since 18 March, with tickets priced at $39.99 to $49.99, and has been extended through 19 September “by popular demand”.

Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel: The Exhibition opens in September at Saint Mary’s Cathedral, promising up-close looks of the Vatican masterpiece through photographic enlargements, with tickets starting at $21 for adults. And Monet by the Water kicks off its tour in San Francisco in December at a currently “secret” venue.

But Mintz believes that the teamLab show offers more value, with admission just $5 over the regular $10-$15 entry to the museum. His calculations might be right: at the beginning of the week, the museum had already sold more than 17,000 tickets for the special exhibition, with the first eight days completely booked.

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