HAPPINESS, FREE, FOR EVERYONE

Happiness, Free, for Everyone, 2014. Installation includes Cloud (17'x10') and Breathe on It, Hardware cloth, cotton-polyester fiber filling, LED lights, plywood, acrylic paint, flexible piping, metal funnel, PIR sensors, arduino microcontroller, and video projection.

Happiness, Free, for Everyone explores issues of control, artifice, and intersections of science fiction and science fact. Christopher Turner’s biography of Wilhelm Reich, Adventures in the Orgasmatron, provides source material for this ongoing multipart installation and video project. The title owes its name to the concluding line in the Strugatsky brother’s sci-fi novel Roadside Picnic. The collision of ideas originating from these two texts provides the conceptual basis for my interpretation of what the cloud once was—something to be controlled (by the human, Reich, specifically)—and what it is now—a collecting device for human data (to be watched by outside forces or the alien within us).

 

Right Window

Cloud, Documentation of installation at Recitation Gallery, University of Delaware, 2014.
Hardware cloth, cotton-polyester fiber filling, LED lights, and video projection.

Breathe on It, Documentation of installation at Recitation Gallery, University of Delaware, 2014.
Responsive healing boxes: plywood, acrylic paint, flexible piping, metal funnel, PIR sensors, arduino microcontroller, and LED lights.
When a viewer breathes on the first box, all the devices light up and vibrate.