Vertigo terrae

1994

installation, holosculpture, hologram, land art, holophotogram, aluminum, Light, plaster, stone, Music, scraps, sand, wood, polyester resine, broach, laser, fog, earth and plexi glass

Collection(s):

Collection du Musée du Bas-St-Laurent, Rivière du loup

Exposition(s):

UQÀM, Montréal

Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec

Musée du Bas-St-Laurent, Rivière du loup

UNESCO, galerie.com,

     

Vision of the vertigo of the earth.

 
  • March 5th, 1995. The Clarion Ledger. Jackson. Mississippi. USA
    Holography can be integrated with sculpture, lighting effects and sound, as Georges Dyens had in Vertigo Terrae. Dyens's three minutes performance combines the sound of what could be an electric storm with changing view of the landscape. It is as if the viewer is seeing Creation itself, witnessing the end of time, looking at the inside of the earth or in outer space
  • December 14th, 1996. Voir. Quebec City
    Vertigo Terrae at the Musée du Québec is a short performance, a high voltage staging where no technical means were spared to impress the audience. This overwhelming visual and acoustic universe attempts to place the spectator at the heart of his own relationship with the environment.