Hosfelt Gallery Artists (15)
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PAST EXHIBITION
Jim Campbell: Home Movies
March 17, 2007—April 28, 2007
Press Release
M.I.T.-educated Jim Campbell is known for his extremely low-resolution
moving images accomplished utilizing L.E.D. technologies. For the past
seven years, Campbell has presented pixilated representations created
with so few L.E.D.s (more than a thousand times fewer than the number
of pixels on your computer screen) that a viewer should not be able to
comprehend what he is seeing. And yet, because of the brain’s ability
to interpret abstract data and “fill in” the gaps in the information
needed to create a complete idea, the moving image can be discerned.
Campbell’s is a unique and humanistic approach to information theory.
He explores the distinction between the analogue world and its digital
representation as a metaphor for the human ability for poetic
understanding or “knowledge” as opposed to the mathematics of “data.”
The source material for the works in this show comes from anonymous,
vintage, 6 mm home movies and the artist’s recent video footage around
New York City. Campbell abstracts the data into an extremely low
resolution form, manipulating our voyeuristic tendencies by revealing
information and at the same time obscuring it. The ‘pixilated’
imagery, composed of as little as 7 L.E.D.s, is turned away from the
viewer, toward the wall. There is no longer a ‘real’ image, only the
reflection of one. Yet from a distance, and by virtue of its motion,
the imagery coalesces and becomes recognizable.
Jim Campbell was born in Chicago in 1956 and lives in San Francisco.
He received degrees in electronic engineering and mathematics from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His work has been exhibited
extensively internationally and is in the collections of MoMA, The
Whitney Museum of American Art, The Metropolitan Museum, the San
Francisco Museum of Modern Art and many others.
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