The exhibition about nature and technology will arrive in a

The exhibition about nature and technology will arrive in a museum in Peru

The exhibition, scheduled from this Friday until next December 18 in temporary rooms one and three, shows different landscapes and environments created by computers, complemented by an alarming overexploitation of nature as a result of human intervention.

Through the use of video mapping technique in six audiovisual installations, visitors to the art gallery will assess how the irradiation takes the form of geometric figures, spaces, shadows and volumes through computer programming and interaction with devices.

The exhibition, curated by Juliette Bibasse, pays tribute to the importance of the environment, an essential motif in the work of Lemercier, considered a pioneer in the artistic exploitation of this platform and co-founder of the AntiVJ collective in 2018, a visual trademark that focuses on projected Light and its influence on perception.

Using digital tools, the selection visualizes the grandiosity of the diversity of natural landscapes that have not yet been encroached upon by men and women and are based on real locations, heritage legends, personal experiences and imaginary geographies.

For example, the series entitled Fuji reveals the splendor of volcanoes and includes a large-scale, hand-drawn view of Mount Fuji, Japan’s highest peak at 3,776 meters, which was formed by an eruption about 100 years ago.

The piece creates an abstract version of the story of the bamboo cutter, a narrative of the Asian country, and converges with Possible Landscapes, composed of graphics, large images and continuous lines, and Desirable Futures, a space for meditation and contemplation.

ro/dgh