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Tavares Strachan
Where
Do We Go From Here (The Orthostatic Tolerance), 2008
Trailer, computers, coal, tar, robotic rover, cameras,
sound system, data transmitter
Currently on
view at The Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh, PA through Jan 11, 2009



For
this work Strachan has created an interior, diorama-like space resembling
the charred and coal-covered landscape of a dead star that can be viewed
only remotely from an observation station located outside the museum.
He worked with scientists at Carnegie Mellon and Yale Universities to
create a rover that inhabits the space and transmits information about
itself and its surroundings to the live-feed data command center outside,
as well as receives instructions from the center. The rover, named Robbie
after Robert L. Lawrence, the first African-American astronaut killed
during training, is considered by the artist to be an an autonomous being
navigating this lonely landscape.
The
command center houses controls for the rover—an 8-channel receptor,
satellites, computers, monitors, and antennae—and, in addition to
receiving data from Robbie, also sends instructions every five to seven
minutes through automatic feedback.
This
is the first exhibition in a long-term, multi-phased project that the
artist has begun, "The Orthostatic Tolerance." The next phase
is for Strachan to complete actual cosmonaut training at the Yuri Gagarin
training facility in Star City, Russia (7–14 September, 2008).
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