Speaker
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Babar Suleman
Look out for signage at the site which will direct you to the best place to view this digital artwork.
You will need to download the free Adobe Aero app on your smartphone or tablet to access the AR experience.
https://helpx.adobe.com/uk/aero/get-started.html
Please keep your audio on through the AR experience as well as your transportation to That Other Place (a link to which is embedded for you to discover within the AR experience).
A short video of the path to this artwork, showing the type of path you will need to use.
Accessible parking and toilets.
An augmented reality artwork viewable by phone or tablet.
The masculine and phallic physical structure of the lighthouse is combined digitally with the typically female and mythical figure of the siren through augmented reality and moving image.
Sirens, in myth, brought sailors to their doom by luring them into shipwrecks at their islands while lighthouses are beacons acting as navigational aid bringing maritime pilots to safety. Both are an invitation, providing direction. It is interesting to note that a ‘siren’, as a famously female figure, is seen as ‘negative’ while the phallic lighthouse as ‘positive’. Requital. subverts and cuts across these clean lines for a work that is more paradoxical than these polarities.
An ode to unrequited love, Requital. finds a metaphor in the Isle of Portland’s history as a quarry site, for when love is taken but not given, not reciprocated, much like how Portland stone has been taken by man for ages to build elsewhere.
A short video of the path to this artwork, showing the type of path you will need to use.