Through Bright Colors and Vivid Imagery, LG's Videowall Brings Heaven's Gate to Life
by AVNetwork Staff ( AV Network )
The Pérez Art Museum Mami (PAMM) keeps up with the digital era with Marco Brambilla’s "video monument to Hollywood."
Art is always changing, evolving alongside society and culture to reflect the interests, issues and technologies of the time. LG Business Solutions is helping art evolve and keep up with the digital era at the Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM). There, guest can find a digital art exhibition wherein they can experience Marco Brambilla’s Heaven’s Gate, which he describes as a “video monument to Hollywood’s veneration of glamour while retelling the history of the world in seven distinct phases.”
An LG Videowall Brings Color and Clarity to Life
viewing experience can change dramatically depending on the specific digital display used for presentation.”
As the creator of Blackdove, Billings was perfectly positioned to help Brambilla choose and procure the ideal digital display solution to present Heaven’s Gate. The video art piece is vertically oriented at a roughly 5:1 ratio, giving viewers a literal top-to-bottom view of Hollywood’s stylistic evolution. Comprising seven of LG’s high-end 55-inch Full HD digital displays (model SVM5H) that feature a nearly invisible 0.44mm bezel, the unique video wall canvas appears as a single cohesive screen, allowing viewers to become enrapt in the artwork with no glare, image separation or techno clutter.
“Having used LG display products for previous installations, we knew this exhibition would perform flawlessly with consistent color and clarity,” Billings added. “Blackdove is designed to enable the delivery of digital art to any display, but LG’s unique webOS platform allows us to create especially elegant installations. It’s essentially a computer running inside the display that can be loaded with any number of proprietary apps or content, eliminating the need for separate content devices and wiring.”
Digital Art Comes to Life
Marco Brambilla is one of the world’s foremost digital artists, and he noted that the technology partners he chose to work with were critical to the success of the finished exhibition.
“After a year in the making, I was thrilled to see Heaven’s Gate at Pérez Art Museum Miami,” Brambilla said. “The totemic display could only be made possible with LG’s ultra thin bezel monitors sourced and powered by Blackdove. The installation looks amazing, and I’m very happy to have worked with Marc and the Blackdove team.”
The title “Heaven’s Gate” refers to Michael Cimino’s 1980 film whose excessive production costs bankrupted United Artists and effectively brought to an end the era of director as auteur, paving the way for the studio domination of the medium, which has continued to the present-day.
Employing spectacle to describe the hollowness of spectacle, Heaven’s Gate enacts Marshall McLuhan’s famous phrase, ‘the medium is the message.’ Through this absorbing work, Brambilla highlights the sensory overload of today’s compendium of popular culture to engulf the viewer’s senses with a hyper-saturation of imagery that is almost impossible to sustain.
“Marco’s work is as apt to be presented at the Sundance Film Festival as it is in a major international art museum or the walls of public spaces,” said PAMM director Franklin Sirmans.
“He has consistently probed the world of cinema through video art with versatility, careful to mark the distinctions of both. While his work has always pushed the boundaries of new technology to visually engage with the screen, his recent work in virtual reality will literally create ‘new ways of seeing.”
The Future of Videowalls in Digital Art
“The history of art is deeply intertwined with technological progress, and LG is proud to deliver next generation tools that enable new modes for creative expression,” said Dan Smith, vice president, business development, LG Business Solutions USA. “Marco Brambilla’s work is a sign of what’s to come, and services such as Blackdove are breaking the mold with innovative ways to obtain and display artwork using LG technologies.”
For museums and artists, this natural evolution toward digital media presentation may spark interest in a new, younger generation of art-enthusiasts who have only experienced a world dominated by screens. As Blackdove expands to support art installations in more museums, galleries, public spaces, and private homes, Billings is relying on LG to push the envelope of technology and offer incredible displays that enable simple content control and industry-leading visual performance.