< t e x t s

Donna Schumacher


excerpts from media review on the San Francisco show
by Donna Schumacher from Sculpture Magazine, April, 1998:

Andrea Sunder-Plassman and Sigi Torinus San Francisco

Browsing Beauty, by artists Andrea Sunder-Plassman and Sigi Torinus, has the aura of cyberspace, a Web site expanded to the third dimension which engulfs the viewer in a barrage and complexity of images. A trio of gigantic balloons floats in the space of Gallery 16, each balloon receiving projections from multiple directions, thus creating a kaleidoscopic environment of fragmented and overlapping images. A slight wind or a touch of the finger animates the giant spheres into a soft slow motion, causing them to gently bob through the blue-tinted air. The sheer size of the ethereal spheres crowds the viewer into the interstitial space, insisting on close and personal contact. Crisscrossed by the light from the projectors, the translucent balloons exhibit images from both sides, simultaneously condensing the three-dimensional space of the gallery back into the two-dimensional computer screen from which the images seem to come. The word "browsing," in the title Browsing Beauty, refers to the Internet and indeed, the Web site [...] is the conceptual "engine" of the installation. In the installation, a woman's face, a bit sad and distant, stretches across the surface of a sphere. Blueprint images of diagrams and calculations flash across the back wall as if from an experiment providing the scientific, "truth" of beauty. Quotations in many languages flash past to the mechanical rhythm of the slide projectors. A barely audible sound piece whispers bits and pieces from mathematical theories of art, music, and science in an authoritative male voice, as if the regnant dictums of the culture were being whispered to our subconscious. One projected image stands alone, both in that it is a video projection (not a slide projection), and that it is not layered or interrupted by the other. In it, images of gently floating jellyfish suspended in the blue of the sea provide a formal equivalence to the spheres within the room. The beauty of the jellyfish seems to confirm the sanctity of science in its inalienable right to unveil "the" truth about beauty. Suddenly the jellyfish appear to be a cliché in the setting where the viewer longs for an investigation into the complexity of "beauty" that is not here.

(...) The use of the spheres permitted a sculptural translation of a site on the Web into a physical reality, which is spatially dynamic in a way which is impossible in cyber "space." As such, the installation is a remarkable example of the sculptural potential of time-based media in installation. The idea of presenting a dialogue between cyberspace in three-dimensional space is intriguing by itself and the concept of beauty is particularly well suited to this vehicle. Browsing Beauty is rich with potential and the viewer can only hope that with subsequent installations and Web site additions it will expand to fill the space it aspires to.