Wenyon & Gamble
Articles

Joanne Silver
Telescopes, the final frontier

Home

Exhibitions
  
Boston Athenaeum
  NY Hall of Science
  
Fruitmarket
  
MIT
  
Art Tower Mito

Articles:
  
Baker
  
Benjamin
  
Ellmann
  
Hagen
  
Lillington
  
Niedzwiecka
  
McQuaid
  Pollitt
  
Raymo
  Silver
  
van Stein
  
Wenyon

Essays:
  
Asai
  
Balken
  
Briers
  
Bryson
  
Friese
  
Moriyama
  
Nakagawa
  
Platt
  
Popper
  
Titterington
  
Wenyon & Gamble
  
Zec

Online...

Article originally appeared in
The Boston Herald, Friday, March 31, 2000, page S8
©2000 Joanne Silver and the Boston Herald





Download an Adobe Acrobat, printable version of Joanne Silver's article:

Susan Gamble
Michael Wenyon
site © 2006 Wenyon & Gamble
and authors


mail(AT)wengam.com
Modified: 2 January 2006

reproduction of

Inner Space: Susan Gamble and Michael Wenyon capture
'The Dish Lensed' at the Haystack Observatory (original reproduction black & white)

When Susan Gamble and Michael Wenyon embarked on a mission to photograph the enormous radio telescope at MIT's Haystack Observatory, they were peering into places where even this formidable apparatus had never looked. Instead of capturing 360-degree views of galactic wonders, they made 16-foot-wide panoramas of the observatory's control office, its geodesic dome, its library and its roller-coaster network of radar-tracking equipment.

Mysteries of space and time lurk within these earthbound places. Swirls of books, of metal girders, of computer hardware hold secrets usually associated with more dark and distant reaches. "Observing the Observers: An Exhibition by MIT Artists-in-Residence Susan Gamble and Michael Wenyon'' - at the MIT Museum's Compton Gallery through May 6 - reveals these spectacular visions of a place where the human and cosmic worlds intersect.

On a typical day, the Haystack radio telescope sets its sights on the universe. Probing far beyond its Westford home with invisible radio emissions, the instrument has shed light on phenomena as remote as space debris and as close as the motions of the earth's tectonic plates. The radome - so called because the radio telescope is housed in a geodesic dome - was used to map the moon's surface in preparation for the Apollo landing, and to test Einstein's theory of general relativity. After such lofty pursuits, Wenyon and Gamble's telescopic self-portraits could have seemed modest indeed.

They have created stunning images, however - panoramas that combine precision with exquisite beauty. In so doing, they echo the more classically "scientific'' data in the observatory's files and suggest that the disciplines of art and science share more than meets the eye.

Historical precedents loom large in the minds of astronomers and the team of Wenyon and Gamble. During past projects, the artists have investigated Isaac Newton's lacy drawings of light, sketched to document his study of optics. They have employed the light magic of holography while working at the Royal Government Observatory in England. At a Scottish observatory, they found visual equivalents for 19th century research into the electromagnetic spectrum.

The three-year Haystack residency gave Wenyon and Gamble the chance to build - in true scientific manner - upon their earlier efforts and upon the work of those who preceded them. In "Radio Waves from Space,'' the pair fashioned a rainbow of holographic images of data stored in the observatory's myriad files. Glowing like canisters set into the gallery wall, the 13 holograms depict such information as "Venus 12/24, stacked output, 19Aug70.'' The content of the tapes remains elusive, but Wenyon and Gamble harness the poetry of the quest: Venus on Christmas Eve, gleaming green.

For most of their other Haystack art, the team has borrowed mapping techniques as old as photography, and applied them to the mapping device instead. Composite images formed by the sweep of a camera fastened to the rotating telescope recall pioneering 19th century views of the American West and 20th century depictions of the lunar surface. In all three cases, the tiled-together panoramas hint at a vastness beyond measure and a human desire to fathom the infinite.

"The Haystack Radome Mapped with Its Own Telescope'' translates this search into the faceted geometry of the dome's triangular panels, interspersed with triangular windows onto the outside world. Other works, such as "The Dark Side of the Dome'' and "Dome Explored in Lunar Form,'' treat the observatory as if it were a celestial body, spinning from darkness to light, or spliced together from multiple viewpoints. In keeping with the spirit that has driven astronomers since ancient times, Wenyon and Gamble's crystalline photographic prints celebrate the exhilaration of looking as much as the splendor of the objects under scrutiny.

***

On April 12, [2000] from noon to 1 p.m., Susan Gamble and Michael Wenyon will discuss the work that has emerged from their Haystack residency at the MIT Museum's Compton Gallery, 77 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge. Admission to the gallery is free.

Article originally appeared in The Boston Herald, Friday, March 31, 2000, page S8
©2000 Joanne Silver and the Boston Herald, reproduced with author's permission


external link to MIT

Haystack Artists-in-Residence Show their Work

by Lynn Heinemann,
MIT Office of the Arts
(MIT Tech Talk 2/16/2000)

Beneath the Radio Telescope is one of the pieces on exhibit in Compton Gallery by Susan Gamble and Michael Wenyon, artists in residence at Haystack Observatory. © Wenyon & Gamble 2000

For the past three years, artists Susan Gamble and Michael Wenyon have been in residence at MIT's Haystack Observatory, using digital cameras, mapping techniques and holography to investigate the visual environment of the Observatory...and even the astronomers themselves. The resulting images reflect the human and cosmic aspects of the scientists' world, and are the subject of a new exhibition at the MIT Museum's Compton Gallery, Observing the Observers..., opening Friday, Feb. 18, 2000.

The centerpiece of the exhibit is a 16-foot panorama taken by a camera attached to the 120-foot dish of the Observatory's radio telescope. "You had to climb up two cat walks to get there," Mr. Wenyon recalled. "It was pretty scary."

They clipped the camera to the top of a railing, and left it there to photograph the architecture of the great geodesic dome as technicians moved the structure to various positions. "[The telescope] was like a very expensive tripod," said Mr. Wenyon.

The resulting panorama, flattened onto paper and taking up an entire wall of the Compton exhibition, reveals the repeating pattern and geometric nature of the telescopes' own engineering. It's also an example of what art historian Debra Bricker-Balken calls Wenyon & Gamble's "analytic, conceptual take on the imagery of science, which reveals both its elegance and connections with art."

In a foreword to the exhibition's color catalogue, MIT Associate Provost Alan Brody praised the generosity and enthusiasm of the Haystack staff. "The astronomers saw it as an opportunity to experience their work in a new light," Dr. Brody wrote. "The residency offered those possibilities all scientists embrace: enlarged understanding of one's self and one's world, a new creative vocabulary, colleagues who actively share in the pursuit of knowledge and truth."

Mr. Wenyon compared the duo's work as artists with the work being done in Haystack's community of scientists, noting that "although we have very different aims and objectives, we're all involved in making images."

"People don't usually look at technology aesthetically," added Ms. Gamble. "Images of technology are not the first thing that anyone thinks of putting on their wall. Here you have art that addresses technology in a way that perhaps other artists have addressed more traditional artistic concerns."

The artists have worked in two previous observatories, The Royal Greenwich Observatory UK, 1986-88, and the Royal Observatory Edinburgh, 1993-94. Their work has been shown at the Whitney Museum, New York (1991), The Art Tower, Mito, Japan (1992), the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, and most recently at the Boston Athenaeum, 1998. They were awarded a UNESCO prize for the aesthetic development of new technology in 1993.


WGBH feature

The February [2000] segment of WGBH-TV's "Greater Boston Arts" features a look at Wenyon & Gamble's work in conjunction with the MIT exhibit. "MIT's Haystack Observatory provides the setting for a pair of artists with stars in their eyes," notes a promotion for the piece. The show airs on Wednesday, Feb. 23 [2000] at 8:30 pm on 'GBH/2; Thursday, Feb. 24 [2000] at 12:30am on 'GBH/2; Sunday, Feb. 27 [2000] at 11:30am on 'GBH/2 and 11pm on 'GBH/44.

Observing the Observers...
An exhibition by MIT Artists-in-Residents (Haystack Observatory),
Susan Gamble and Michael Wenyon at MIT Museum's Compton Gallery 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA
February 19 - June 16, 2000

"Observing" home | Catalog | Essay | Press

Quicktime VR Panorama of the gallery

Home | Exhibitions | Articles Silver | Essays | Online...