About 30 years ago in Los Angeles, pedestrians walking past the same old window of the Broadway Department Store noticed that instead of the same reflection they gaze at everyday, was another’s. A stranger that was nowhere near them was looking right back with the same confused look on their face. Not long after, they realized that they were on two different sides of the country- the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York City and the Broadway Department Store in Century City in LA. These life-sized images of people could speak back and interact with strangers as if they were there right next to them. In the course of 3 consecutive evenings while this installation lasted, boys started picking up girls, new friendships were blooming and individuals that have not seen their loved ones in many years now had the chance to set up a time and meet each other on the street. This installation piece created by new media artists Kit Galloway and Sherrie Rabinowitz called ‘Hole in Space’ was the first telematic installation working with NASA.
I think artists should continue with installations like this one. It is a great way to learn about other cultures and see what is happening at that exact same time in a place on the other side of the world. If I was walking home from school and I passed by Dundas Square and there were life sized images of people from a small village in Spain, I would most definitely stop and look. The art of this illusion can make a large world feel so small.
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