RGBW
with Camilo Sandoval
Installation
DLP Projector, Motor, Mirror

RGBW (Excerpt) at INTERFERENCE / Tunis

RGBW at INTERFERENCE, Tunis / Photo by Jennifer Braun

RGBW at TADAEX, Tehran / Photo by TADAEX

RGBW at Stuttgarter Filmwinter / Photo by Florian Liesenfeld

RGBW at COLLUMINA, Cologne / Photo by Frankie Macaulay




"RGBW" challenges the film's conventional notions and uses the color imaging capabilities of standard home office projectors to create an immersive room installation. Basic components of film - speed, color, light and darkness - are choreographed and stage the space. The artists deconstruct the process of projection itself and plead for the superiority of technical devices to the human eye. A rotating mirror in front of the lens of the projector uses the spatial light modulator, the digital light processing system (DLP*), which creates the illusion of color and transforms the white projection into an oscillating 360 degree panoramic kaleidoscope.

Through this innovative and experimental approach to film, the artists invite the viewer to experience the medium in a new and exciting way. "RGBW" offers a fresh perspective on the capabilities of film and the potential of technology to create immersive and engaging experiences.



*DLP (Digital Light Processing) projectors create color by using a technology called "time-multiplexed color by numbers." This technology involves shining different primary colors (red, green, and blue) on the projector's DLP chip in rapid succession, which the chip then reflects onto the screen. By shining the primary colors on the chip in different combinations and intensities, the projector is able to create a wide range of different colors.


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