Augmented Photography (2010)

2010
Interactive installation
Digital prints, frames, servomotors, sensors, electronics
Variable dimensions



Augmented Photography when it is spoken about interactive or augmented photography then immediately one has in mind the representation of photos in digital format (on computer or phone screen, projection, etc) that are manipulated through software or any other code. Yes, the interactive pictures can react on our touch, voice, weather, or whatever. But those interactive photos are still just pixels.

Our artwork – Augmented Photography – is not about pixels. It is about re-thinking printed photography. Current artwork is more than a framed picture – it has its behavior and it is able to react on observers.

We are adding liveliness to a doll on the picture through eye movements. If none is looking at the picture the doll’s eyes are closed. Only time-to-time, she is waking up and asking for attention. When the photograph is approached, the doll on the picture opens her eyes and starts to blink to a viewer or just stare on him/her for a while. Hence, the artwork has different behaviors that could be explored by observing the picture for a while.

Appears in the book called Reframing Photography. Theory and Practice by Rebekah Modrak and Bill Anthes (published by Routledge).

Exhibited:
Kiblix Festival, Kibla Gallery, Maribor, Slovenia (18th-28th Nov’10)
UAMO 2010 Munchen, Germany (21th-24th Oct’10)
White Night Skopje 2010 Skopje, Macedonia(25th Sept’10)
Ars Electronica2010 Campus exhibition, Linz, Austria (2nd-9th Sep’10)