Wood,
steel, motor, electronic sound circuits, strain gauges,
speakers.
2005
16'H x 16'W x 5'D (wooden torus)
16' L, anchored on wall 10' up (shaft) Exhibition Space:
"Big Deal"
Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.
San Francisco, California.
The
wooden torus is slowly rolled by a 16' long steel arm that
is attached to and powered by a motor anchored 10' up the
wall. As the motor turns at .4 rpm's, it gradually builds
up torque at the points where the axle's spokes meet the
wooden torus. When the spokes torque to their limit the
twist is translated to the torus and it takes off with a
lurch, rolling quickly across the floor. The piece travels
in a 180 degree arc, switching directions when a limit switch
is triggered. Sound: The wood creaks at all times. Strain
gauges are hooked up to the radial wooden elements. These
read the level of deformation of the wood and translate
it into a voltage amount that is sent to a circuit in the
hub (see "detail" slide). The circuit uses this
information to generate electronic sounds that I've designed.
The sounds vary depending on the state of tension or compression
of the wood pieces that are hooked into the strain gauges.
We essentially “hear” the electronic equivalent
of the tension and compression experienced by the wood.
Because the outer circumference of the structure is covered
in graphite, a smudge is left on the floor that traces the
arc of the sculpture’s movement.