Rhoda Ting & Mikkel Bojesen
Quantum Field, 2019
print with museum glass and framed in oak
Edition of 3 plus 2 AP
Further images
About Quantum Field, 2019 Quantum Field is a temporary performative site specific work at Lake Crosbie in Murray-Sunset National Park, Australia. This significant land art piece plays on perspective, mass...
About Quantum Field, 2019
Quantum Field is a temporary performative site specific work at Lake Crosbie in Murray-Sunset National Park, Australia. This significant land art piece plays on perspective, mass and collapse of scale in which basic units of human navigation are challenged — a posthuman mode of being is explored over 3 days in dialogue with the environment. The sculpture is created by salt crystals from the lake, and the lake is in turn revealed to itself. Measuring 11 m long and 3 m wide, the sculpture changes from a circle to a line
when viewed from different perspectives, and its characteristics alter when exposed to heat, rain, and wind throughout the seasons. In creating a land sculpture that will continue to interact and evolve over time beyond human control, we open up to the unknown, entangling ourselves with nature.
Quantum Field is a temporary performative site specific work at Lake Crosbie in Murray-Sunset National Park, Australia. This significant land art piece plays on perspective, mass and collapse of scale in which basic units of human navigation are challenged — a posthuman mode of being is explored over 3 days in dialogue with the environment. The sculpture is created by salt crystals from the lake, and the lake is in turn revealed to itself. Measuring 11 m long and 3 m wide, the sculpture changes from a circle to a line
when viewed from different perspectives, and its characteristics alter when exposed to heat, rain, and wind throughout the seasons. In creating a land sculpture that will continue to interact and evolve over time beyond human control, we open up to the unknown, entangling ourselves with nature.
