CCCA Canadian Art Database

Engram 7, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78913

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made:

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Work by Reva Stone

Shift

Shift

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78856

Description: Shift
Shift was a collaborative project that involved Tom Stroud, choreographer and artistic director of the Winnipeg Contemporary Dancers; the Winnipeg Art Gallery; Glenn Buhr, composer in residence of the Winnipeg Symphony; Margaret Sweatman, writer; and Hugh Connacher, lighting designer and was shown at the Winnipeg Art Gallery in November 1995. Through the use of sound, light, video projections and three constructed spaces, an experience was created that emulated the movement of visitors/bodies through a gallery. The opportunity to work in combination with actual bodies provided an opportunity to reaffirm the materiality and the somatic experience of our bodies through lived experience.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1965

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Reality Control, installation view

Reality Control, installation view

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78785

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1984

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Reality Control 3

Reality Control 3

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78788

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1984

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Reality Control 4

Reality Control 4

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78789

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1984

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Reality Control 2

Reality Control 2

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78787

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1984

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Reality Control 1

Reality Control 1

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78786

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1984

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Birthday

Birthday

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78797

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Visit

Visit

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78809

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Recital

Recital

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78807

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Family

Family

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78803

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Towels

Towels

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78808

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Dinner

Dinner

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78800

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Cottage

Cottage

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78799

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Gathering

Gathering

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78804

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Children

Children

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78798

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Walk

Walk

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78810

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Mother

Mother

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78806

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Innocence

Innocence

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78805

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1985

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

a lot like you  [Window Display]

a lot like you [Window Display]

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78812

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1986

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

a lot like you [Window Display, detail]

a lot like you [Window Display, detail]

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78813

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1986

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

a lot like you [Window Display, detail]

a lot like you [Window Display, detail]

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78814

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1986

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Window Blind, [a lot like you Series]

Window Blind, [a lot like you Series]

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78815

Description: Calgary Mentoring.

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1986

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Chair, [a lot like you Series]

Chair, [a lot like you Series]

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78811

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1986

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Document

Constructed Images: Document

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78820

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Represent

Constructed Images: Represent

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78826

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Reproduce

Constructed Images: Reproduce

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78828

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Model

Constructed Images: Model

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78824

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Document, detail

Constructed Images: Document, detail

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78822

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: installation view

Constructed Images: installation view

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78816

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Model, detail

Constructed Images: Model, detail

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78825

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Copy

Constructed Images: Copy

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78818

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Document, detail

Constructed Images: Document, detail

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78821

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Copy, detail

Constructed Images: Copy, detail

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78819

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Duplicate

Constructed Images: Duplicate

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78823

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Stage

Constructed Images: Stage

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78829

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: installation view

Constructed Images: installation view

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78817

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Constructed Images: Represent, detail

Constructed Images: Represent, detail

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78827

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1987

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78841

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78832

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78838

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78831

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78843

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78836

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78840

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78830

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78835

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78833

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78839

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78842

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Generation, video still

Generation, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78837

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1988

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Realm of Illusion Trailer

Realm of Illusion Trailer

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78791

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1990

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Realm of Illusion Trailer

Realm of Illusion Trailer

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78790

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1990

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Legacy, installation view

Legacy, installation view

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78779

Description: Legacy

Excerpts from 1990 artist statement:
“I am fascinated by the ways in which art making is able to simulate a reality that can be manipulated to explore underlying cultural assumptions. I have been particularly interested in investigating how cultural codes are mediated through electronic technology and manifest themselves in our attitudes and behaviour. Have we become a culture whose information and ideas are given forms solely by electronic images? Have we created a new form of representation that irreversibly impacts upon our definitions of reality and identity?

Since a home is the primary location in which this information impacts upon us, I constructed the installation as a home setting and altered the physical objects normally associated with this environment. In this space, images and sounds repeat and overlap creating a visual and electronic bombardment that mirrors the insidious bombardment of our current technological value system."


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1990-1992

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Legacy, Wall 3 (War Map)

Legacy, Wall 3 (War Map)

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78783

Description: Legacy

Excerpts from 1990 artist statement:
“I am fascinated by the ways in which art making is able to simulate a reality that can be manipulated to explore underlying cultural assumptions. I have been particularly interested in investigating how cultural codes are mediated through electronic technology and manifest themselves in our attitudes and behaviour. Have we become a culture whose information and ideas are given forms solely by electronic images? Have we created a new form of representation that irreversibly impacts upon our definitions of reality and identity?

Since a home is the primary location in which this information impacts upon us, I constructed the installation as a home setting and altered the physical objects normally associated with this environment. In this space, images and sounds repeat and overlap creating a visual and electronic bombardment that mirrors the insidious bombardment of our current technological value system."


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1990-1992

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Legacy, video still

Legacy, video still

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78780

Description: Legacy

Excerpts from 1990 artist statement:
“I am fascinated by the ways in which art making is able to simulate a reality that can be manipulated to explore underlying cultural assumptions. I have been particularly interested in investigating how cultural codes are mediated through electronic technology and manifest themselves in our attitudes and behaviour. Have we become a culture whose information and ideas are given forms solely by electronic images? Have we created a new form of representation that irreversibly impacts upon our definitions of reality and identity?

Since a home is the primary location in which this information impacts upon us, I constructed the installation as a home setting and altered the physical objects normally associated with this environment. In this space, images and sounds repeat and overlap creating a visual and electronic bombardment that mirrors the insidious bombardment of our current technological value system."


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1990-1992

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Legacy, Wall 4 (TV)

Legacy, Wall 4 (TV)

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78784

Description: Legacy

Excerpts from 1990 artist statement:
“I am fascinated by the ways in which art making is able to simulate a reality that can be manipulated to explore underlying cultural assumptions. I have been particularly interested in investigating how cultural codes are mediated through electronic technology and manifest themselves in our attitudes and behaviour. Have we become a culture whose information and ideas are given forms solely by electronic images? Have we created a new form of representation that irreversibly impacts upon our definitions of reality and identity?

Since a home is the primary location in which this information impacts upon us, I constructed the installation as a home setting and altered the physical objects normally associated with this environment. In this space, images and sounds repeat and overlap creating a visual and electronic bombardment that mirrors the insidious bombardment of our current technological value system."


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1990-1992

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Legacy, Wall 1 (Head)

Legacy, Wall 1 (Head)

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78781

Description: Legacy

Excerpts from 1990 artist statement:
“I am fascinated by the ways in which art making is able to simulate a reality that can be manipulated to explore underlying cultural assumptions. I have been particularly interested in investigating how cultural codes are mediated through electronic technology and manifest themselves in our attitudes and behaviour. Have we become a culture whose information and ideas are given forms solely by electronic images? Have we created a new form of representation that irreversibly impacts upon our definitions of reality and identity?

Since a home is the primary location in which this information impacts upon us, I constructed the installation as a home setting and altered the physical objects normally associated with this environment. In this space, images and sounds repeat and overlap creating a visual and electronic bombardment that mirrors the insidious bombardment of our current technological value system."


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1990-1992

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Legacy, floor detail

Legacy, floor detail

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78777

Description: Legacy

Excerpts from 1990 artist statement:
“I am fascinated by the ways in which art making is able to simulate a reality that can be manipulated to explore underlying cultural assumptions. I have been particularly interested in investigating how cultural codes are mediated through electronic technology and manifest themselves in our attitudes and behaviour. Have we become a culture whose information and ideas are given forms solely by electronic images? Have we created a new form of representation that irreversibly impacts upon our definitions of reality and identity?

Since a home is the primary location in which this information impacts upon us, I constructed the installation as a home setting and altered the physical objects normally associated with this environment. In this space, images and sounds repeat and overlap creating a visual and electronic bombardment that mirrors the insidious bombardment of our current technological value system."


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1990-1992

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Legacy, Bed

Legacy, Bed

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78776

Description: Legacy

Excerpts from 1990 artist statement:
“I am fascinated by the ways in which art making is able to simulate a reality that can be manipulated to explore underlying cultural assumptions. I have been particularly interested in investigating how cultural codes are mediated through electronic technology and manifest themselves in our attitudes and behaviour. Have we become a culture whose information and ideas are given forms solely by electronic images? Have we created a new form of representation that irreversibly impacts upon our definitions of reality and identity?

Since a home is the primary location in which this information impacts upon us, I constructed the installation as a home setting and altered the physical objects normally associated with this environment. In this space, images and sounds repeat and overlap creating a visual and electronic bombardment that mirrors the insidious bombardment of our current technological value system."


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1990-1992

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Legacy, installation view

Legacy, installation view

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78778

Description: Legacy

Excerpts from 1990 artist statement:
“I am fascinated by the ways in which art making is able to simulate a reality that can be manipulated to explore underlying cultural assumptions. I have been particularly interested in investigating how cultural codes are mediated through electronic technology and manifest themselves in our attitudes and behaviour. Have we become a culture whose information and ideas are given forms solely by electronic images? Have we created a new form of representation that irreversibly impacts upon our definitions of reality and identity?

Since a home is the primary location in which this information impacts upon us, I constructed the installation as a home setting and altered the physical objects normally associated with this environment. In this space, images and sounds repeat and overlap creating a visual and electronic bombardment that mirrors the insidious bombardment of our current technological value system."


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1990-1992

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Legacy, Wall 2 (Family Portrait)

Legacy, Wall 2 (Family Portrait)

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78782

Description: Legacy

Excerpts from 1990 artist statement:
“I am fascinated by the ways in which art making is able to simulate a reality that can be manipulated to explore underlying cultural assumptions. I have been particularly interested in investigating how cultural codes are mediated through electronic technology and manifest themselves in our attitudes and behaviour. Have we become a culture whose information and ideas are given forms solely by electronic images? Have we created a new form of representation that irreversibly impacts upon our definitions of reality and identity?

Since a home is the primary location in which this information impacts upon us, I constructed the installation as a home setting and altered the physical objects normally associated with this environment. In this space, images and sounds repeat and overlap creating a visual and electronic bombardment that mirrors the insidious bombardment of our current technological value system."


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1990-1992

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Threshold

Threshold

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78844

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1992

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Threshold, detail

Threshold, detail

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78845

Description:

Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1992

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

no one…in conversation

no one…in conversation

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78938

Description: no one.. ..in conversation
Collaboration between Reva Stone and Richard Dyck

Excerpts from statement: 1994
They corresponded through found objects to create the graphic, audio, and programming elements of No One... ...in Conversation.....This correspondence lasted abut eight months. Reva sent Rick the first object, a beautiful 1957 family photograph, and got the "conversation" going. From the photo he approached and created his first Amiga element. Then he sent Reva an object, a 1957 penny (he never sent her what he created, neither did she ever send him what she created). Using the penny, she approached and created her first Mac element. What she created she kept private from him and vice versa. This privacy assured them independence. The exchange of objects itself provided a vital spine for the project: they weren't random objects, but "words" to their conversation. To try to decipher what they were talking about with these objects, Rick kept a list, attempting with it something like dream analysis.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1994

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

no one…in conversation

no one…in conversation

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78932

Description: no one.. ..in conversation
Collaboration between Reva Stone and Richard Dyck

Excerpts from statement: 1994
They corresponded through found objects to create the graphic, audio, and programming elements of No One... ...in Conversation.....This correspondence lasted abut eight months. Reva sent Rick the first object, a beautiful 1957 family photograph, and got the "conversation" going. From the photo he approached and created his first Amiga element. Then he sent Reva an object, a 1957 penny (he never sent her what he created, neither did she ever send him what she created). Using the penny, she approached and created her first Mac element. What she created she kept private from him and vice versa. This privacy assured them independence. The exchange of objects itself provided a vital spine for the project: they weren't random objects, but "words" to their conversation. To try to decipher what they were talking about with these objects, Rick kept a list, attempting with it something like dream analysis.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1994

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

no one…in conversation

no one…in conversation

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78935

Description: no one.. ..in conversation
Collaboration between Reva Stone and Richard Dyck

Excerpts from statement: 1994
They corresponded through found objects to create the graphic, audio, and programming elements of No One... ...in Conversation.....This correspondence lasted abut eight months. Reva sent Rick the first object, a beautiful 1957 family photograph, and got the "conversation" going. From the photo he approached and created his first Amiga element. Then he sent Reva an object, a 1957 penny (he never sent her what he created, neither did she ever send him what she created). Using the penny, she approached and created her first Mac element. What she created she kept private from him and vice versa. This privacy assured them independence. The exchange of objects itself provided a vital spine for the project: they weren't random objects, but "words" to their conversation. To try to decipher what they were talking about with these objects, Rick kept a list, attempting with it something like dream analysis.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1994

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

no one…in conversation

no one…in conversation

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78936

Description: no one.. ..in conversation
Collaboration between Reva Stone and Richard Dyck

Excerpts from statement: 1994
They corresponded through found objects to create the graphic, audio, and programming elements of No One... ...in Conversation.....This correspondence lasted abut eight months. Reva sent Rick the first object, a beautiful 1957 family photograph, and got the "conversation" going. From the photo he approached and created his first Amiga element. Then he sent Reva an object, a 1957 penny (he never sent her what he created, neither did she ever send him what she created). Using the penny, she approached and created her first Mac element. What she created she kept private from him and vice versa. This privacy assured them independence. The exchange of objects itself provided a vital spine for the project: they weren't random objects, but "words" to their conversation. To try to decipher what they were talking about with these objects, Rick kept a list, attempting with it something like dream analysis.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1994

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

no one…in conversation

no one…in conversation

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78937

Description: no one.. ..in conversation
Collaboration between Reva Stone and Richard Dyck

Excerpts from statement: 1994
They corresponded through found objects to create the graphic, audio, and programming elements of No One... ...in Conversation.....This correspondence lasted abut eight months. Reva sent Rick the first object, a beautiful 1957 family photograph, and got the "conversation" going. From the photo he approached and created his first Amiga element. Then he sent Reva an object, a 1957 penny (he never sent her what he created, neither did she ever send him what she created). Using the penny, she approached and created her first Mac element. What she created she kept private from him and vice versa. This privacy assured them independence. The exchange of objects itself provided a vital spine for the project: they weren't random objects, but "words" to their conversation. To try to decipher what they were talking about with these objects, Rick kept a list, attempting with it something like dream analysis.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1994

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

no one…in conversation

no one…in conversation

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78933

Description: no one.. ..in conversation
Collaboration between Reva Stone and Richard Dyck

Excerpts from statement: 1994
They corresponded through found objects to create the graphic, audio, and programming elements of No One... ...in Conversation.....This correspondence lasted abut eight months. Reva sent Rick the first object, a beautiful 1957 family photograph, and got the "conversation" going. From the photo he approached and created his first Amiga element. Then he sent Reva an object, a 1957 penny (he never sent her what he created, neither did she ever send him what she created). Using the penny, she approached and created her first Mac element. What she created she kept private from him and vice versa. This privacy assured them independence. The exchange of objects itself provided a vital spine for the project: they weren't random objects, but "words" to their conversation. To try to decipher what they were talking about with these objects, Rick kept a list, attempting with it something like dream analysis.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1994

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Shift

Shift

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78860

Description: Shift
Shift was a collaborative project that involved Tom Stroud, choreographer and artistic director of the Winnipeg Contemporary Dancers; the Winnipeg Art Gallery; Glenn Buhr, composer in residence of the Winnipeg Symphony; Margaret Sweatman, writer; and Hugh Connacher, lighting designer and was shown at the Winnipeg Art Gallery in November 1995. Through the use of sound, light, video projections and three constructed spaces, an experience was created that emulated the movement of visitors/bodies through a gallery. The opportunity to work in combination with actual bodies provided an opportunity to reaffirm the materiality and the somatic experience of our bodies through lived experience.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Shift

Shift

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78859

Description: Shift
Shift was a collaborative project that involved Tom Stroud, choreographer and artistic director of the Winnipeg Contemporary Dancers; the Winnipeg Art Gallery; Glenn Buhr, composer in residence of the Winnipeg Symphony; Margaret Sweatman, writer; and Hugh Connacher, lighting designer and was shown at the Winnipeg Art Gallery in November 1995. Through the use of sound, light, video projections and three constructed spaces, an experience was created that emulated the movement of visitors/bodies through a gallery. The opportunity to work in combination with actual bodies provided an opportunity to reaffirm the materiality and the somatic experience of our bodies through lived experience.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Shift

Shift

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78861

Description: Shift
Shift was a collaborative project that involved Tom Stroud, choreographer and artistic director of the Winnipeg Contemporary Dancers; the Winnipeg Art Gallery; Glenn Buhr, composer in residence of the Winnipeg Symphony; Margaret Sweatman, writer; and Hugh Connacher, lighting designer and was shown at the Winnipeg Art Gallery in November 1995. Through the use of sound, light, video projections and three constructed spaces, an experience was created that emulated the movement of visitors/bodies through a gallery. The opportunity to work in combination with actual bodies provided an opportunity to reaffirm the materiality and the somatic experience of our bodies through lived experience.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Shift

Shift

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78858

Description: Shift
Shift was a collaborative project that involved Tom Stroud, choreographer and artistic director of the Winnipeg Contemporary Dancers; the Winnipeg Art Gallery; Glenn Buhr, composer in residence of the Winnipeg Symphony; Margaret Sweatman, writer; and Hugh Connacher, lighting designer and was shown at the Winnipeg Art Gallery in November 1995. Through the use of sound, light, video projections and three constructed spaces, an experience was created that emulated the movement of visitors/bodies through a gallery. The opportunity to work in combination with actual bodies provided an opportunity to reaffirm the materiality and the somatic experience of our bodies through lived experience.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Shift

Shift

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78857

Description: Shift
Shift was a collaborative project that involved Tom Stroud, choreographer and artistic director of the Winnipeg Contemporary Dancers; the Winnipeg Art Gallery; Glenn Buhr, composer in residence of the Winnipeg Symphony; Margaret Sweatman, writer; and Hugh Connacher, lighting designer and was shown at the Winnipeg Art Gallery in November 1995. Through the use of sound, light, video projections and three constructed spaces, an experience was created that emulated the movement of visitors/bodies through a gallery. The opportunity to work in combination with actual bodies provided an opportunity to reaffirm the materiality and the somatic experience of our bodies through lived experience.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Shift

Shift

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78855

Description: Shift
Shift was a collaborative project that involved Tom Stroud, choreographer and artistic director of the Winnipeg Contemporary Dancers; the Winnipeg Art Gallery; Glenn Buhr, composer in residence of the Winnipeg Symphony; Margaret Sweatman, writer; and Hugh Connacher, lighting designer and was shown at the Winnipeg Art Gallery in November 1995. Through the use of sound, light, video projections and three constructed spaces, an experience was created that emulated the movement of visitors/bodies through a gallery. The opportunity to work in combination with actual bodies provided an opportunity to reaffirm the materiality and the somatic experience of our bodies through lived experience.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Interstitial Spaces

Interstitial Spaces

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78846

Description: Interstitial Spaces
In this work, my intent was to evoke our unacknowledged complicity in the shifts in the stability of our own increasingly technologized bodies. For each exhibition venue, I responded to the specific sites by altering the space of the gallery and the components of the installation.

In the installation at the Dunlop Gallery in Regina, Saskatchewan, the common window wall between the adjoining library and the gallery acted as a metaphoric membrane that sat between the gallery/body and the external world. Through the window of the gallery, intimate enlargements of body/skin slowly dissolved from one image to another. These images were projected onto two layers of theatrical scrim progressing back to the far wall of the gallery. Some images implied or evoked fusion between the body and a computer, others skin/animal pelts. Still others read as internal body parts. A video camera pointed out into the space of the library was triggered by anyone approaching the window. Their image was picked up by the camera and merged into the body projections. Entering the space of the gallery triggered an audiotape.

Embedded into the projected image on the back wall was the following text:

Already have I once been a boy and a girl,
and a bush and a bird,
and a silent fish in the sea.


Empedocles (circa 440 BCE)


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995-96

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Interstitial Spaces

Interstitial Spaces

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78854

Description: Interstitial Spaces
In this work, my intent was to evoke our unacknowledged complicity in the shifts in the stability of our own increasingly technologized bodies. For each exhibition venue, I responded to the specific sites by altering the space of the gallery and the components of the installation.

In the installation at the Dunlop Gallery in Regina, Saskatchewan, the common window wall between the adjoining library and the gallery acted as a metaphoric membrane that sat between the gallery/body and the external world. Through the window of the gallery, intimate enlargements of body/skin slowly dissolved from one image to another. These images were projected onto two layers of theatrical scrim progressing back to the far wall of the gallery. Some images implied or evoked fusion between the body and a computer, others skin/animal pelts. Still others read as internal body parts. A video camera pointed out into the space of the library was triggered by anyone approaching the window. Their image was picked up by the camera and merged into the body projections. Entering the space of the gallery triggered an audiotape.

Embedded into the projected image on the back wall was the following text:

Already have I once been a boy and a girl,
and a bush and a bird,
and a silent fish in the sea.


Empedocles (circa 440 BCE)


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995-96

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Interstitial Spaces

Interstitial Spaces

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78850

Description: Interstitial Spaces
In this work, my intent was to evoke our unacknowledged complicity in the shifts in the stability of our own increasingly technologized bodies. For each exhibition venue, I responded to the specific sites by altering the space of the gallery and the components of the installation.

In the installation at the Dunlop Gallery in Regina, Saskatchewan, the common window wall between the adjoining library and the gallery acted as a metaphoric membrane that sat between the gallery/body and the external world. Through the window of the gallery, intimate enlargements of body/skin slowly dissolved from one image to another. These images were projected onto two layers of theatrical scrim progressing back to the far wall of the gallery. Some images implied or evoked fusion between the body and a computer, others skin/animal pelts. Still others read as internal body parts. A video camera pointed out into the space of the library was triggered by anyone approaching the window. Their image was picked up by the camera and merged into the body projections. Entering the space of the gallery triggered an audiotape.

Embedded into the projected image on the back wall was the following text:

Already have I once been a boy and a girl,
and a bush and a bird,
and a silent fish in the sea.


Empedocles (circa 440 BCE)


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995-96

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Interstitial Spaces

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78848

Description: Interstitial Spaces
In this work, my intent was to evoke our unacknowledged complicity in the shifts in the stability of our own increasingly technologized bodies. For each exhibition venue, I responded to the specific sites by altering the space of the gallery and the components of the installation.

In the installation at the Dunlop Gallery in Regina, Saskatchewan, the common window wall between the adjoining library and the gallery acted as a metaphoric membrane that sat between the gallery/body and the external world. Through the window of the gallery, intimate enlargements of body/skin slowly dissolved from one image to another. These images were projected onto two layers of theatrical scrim progressing back to the far wall of the gallery. Some images implied or evoked fusion between the body and a computer, others skin/animal pelts. Still others read as internal body parts. A video camera pointed out into the space of the library was triggered by anyone approaching the window. Their image was picked up by the camera and merged into the body projections. Entering the space of the gallery triggered an audiotape.

Embedded into the projected image on the back wall was the following text:

     Already have I once been a boy and a girl,
     and a bush and a bird,
     and a silent fish in the sea.


     Empedocles (circa 440 BCE)


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995-96

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Interstitial Spaces

Interstitial Spaces

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78852

Description: Interstitial Spaces
In this work, my intent was to evoke our unacknowledged complicity in the shifts in the stability of our own increasingly technologized bodies. For each exhibition venue, I responded to the specific sites by altering the space of the gallery and the components of the installation.

In the installation at the Dunlop Gallery in Regina, Saskatchewan, the common window wall between the adjoining library and the gallery acted as a metaphoric membrane that sat between the gallery/body and the external world. Through the window of the gallery, intimate enlargements of body/skin slowly dissolved from one image to another. These images were projected onto two layers of theatrical scrim progressing back to the far wall of the gallery. Some images implied or evoked fusion between the body and a computer, others skin/animal pelts. Still others read as internal body parts. A video camera pointed out into the space of the library was triggered by anyone approaching the window. Their image was picked up by the camera and merged into the body projections. Entering the space of the gallery triggered an audiotape.

Embedded into the projected image on the back wall was the following text:

Already have I once been a boy and a girl,
and a bush and a bird,
and a silent fish in the sea.


Empedocles (circa 440 BCE)


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995-96

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Interstitial Spaces

Interstitial Spaces

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78853

Description: Interstitial Spaces
In this work, my intent was to evoke our unacknowledged complicity in the shifts in the stability of our own increasingly technologized bodies. For each exhibition venue, I responded to the specific sites by altering the space of the gallery and the components of the installation.

In the installation at the Dunlop Gallery in Regina, Saskatchewan, the common window wall between the adjoining library and the gallery acted as a metaphoric membrane that sat between the gallery/body and the external world. Through the window of the gallery, intimate enlargements of body/skin slowly dissolved from one image to another. These images were projected onto two layers of theatrical scrim progressing back to the far wall of the gallery. Some images implied or evoked fusion between the body and a computer, others skin/animal pelts. Still others read as internal body parts. A video camera pointed out into the space of the library was triggered by anyone approaching the window. Their image was picked up by the camera and merged into the body projections. Entering the space of the gallery triggered an audiotape.

Embedded into the projected image on the back wall was the following text:

Already have I once been a boy and a girl,
and a bush and a bird,
and a silent fish in the sea.


Empedocles (circa 440 BCE)


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995-96

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Interstitial Spaces

Interstitial Spaces

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78849

Description: Interstitial Spaces
In this work, my intent was to evoke our unacknowledged complicity in the shifts in the stability of our own increasingly technologized bodies. For each exhibition venue, I responded to the specific sites by altering the space of the gallery and the components of the installation.

In the installation at the Dunlop Gallery in Regina, Saskatchewan, the common window wall between the adjoining library and the gallery acted as a metaphoric membrane that sat between the gallery/body and the external world. Through the window of the gallery, intimate enlargements of body/skin slowly dissolved from one image to another. These images were projected onto two layers of theatrical scrim progressing back to the far wall of the gallery. Some images implied or evoked fusion between the body and a computer, others skin/animal pelts. Still others read as internal body parts. A video camera pointed out into the space of the library was triggered by anyone approaching the window. Their image was picked up by the camera and merged into the body projections. Entering the space of the gallery triggered an audiotape.

Embedded into the projected image on the back wall was the following text:

Already have I once been a boy and a girl,
and a bush and a bird,
and a silent fish in the sea.


Empedocles (circa 440 BCE)


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1995-96

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

skin notwithstanding, camera

skin notwithstanding, camera

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78931

Description: In collaboration with Richard Dyck


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1997

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

skin notwithstanding, computers

skin notwithstanding, computers

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78927

Description: In collaboration with Richard Dyck


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1997

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

skin notwithstanding, light on

skin notwithstanding, light on

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78928

Description: In collaboration with Richard Dyck


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1997

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

skin notwithstanding, basin

skin notwithstanding, basin

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78930

Description: In collaboration with Richard Dyck


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1997

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

skin notwithstanding, computers

skin notwithstanding, computers

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78926

Description: In collaboration with Richard Dyck


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1997

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

verdicalBody

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78921

Description: veridicalBody
In veridicalBody (1998), I continue to investigate the medical changes are altering our conceptions of life and death. The underlying promise of medical technologies is immortality. Yet we live within vulnerable bodies - bodies that deal daily with trauma, disease, decay and death. What is a factual or truthful body given medical and other technological interventions? Has there every really been a factual body? Hasn't the response to our own bodies always been socially contructed?

On a side wall, a clinical stainless steel device hangs above a stainless steel shelf. When the viewer places a hand on the shelf, an intimate enlargement of their moving hand is projected into the bottom left corner of the panoramic image. First projected in real time, the image is then captured and projected several more times. Each time the image is projected it deteriorates and fades until it disappears. The projected images of viewers' hands are simultaneously recorded onto videotape. This videotape of hands emerging and fading is projected by a third video projector into the right hand corner of the panorama to create a history of the experience of the installation/body.

A slowly moving panorama, responsive to the movement of the viewer in the exhibition space, is projected to fill the far wall of the gallery space. As the viewer moves left, the image moves to the left and continue to move until the viewer changes location. Moving to the right moves the image to right; moving forward gradually zooms the image into pixilated close up; moving backward zooms the image out. The viewer's actions are controlling a continuous landscape of aging, post-surgical bodies.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

verdicalBody

verdicalBody

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78922

Description: veridicalBody
In veridicalBody (1998), I continue to investigate the medical changes are altering our conceptions of life and death. The underlying promise of medical technologies is immortality. Yet we live within vulnerable bodies - bodies that deal daily with trauma, disease, decay and death. What is a factual or truthful body given medical and other technological interventions? Has there every really been a factual body? Hasn't the response to our own bodies always been socially contructed?

On a side wall, a clinical stainless steel device hangs above a stainless steel shelf. When the viewer places a hand on the shelf, an intimate enlargement of their moving hand is projected into the bottom left corner of the panoramic image. First projected in real time, the image is then captured and projected several more times. Each time the image is projected it deteriorates and fades until it disappears. The projected images of viewers' hands are simultaneously recorded onto videotape. This videotape of hands emerging and fading is projected by a third video projector into the right hand corner of the panorama to create a history of the experience of the installation/body.

A slowly moving panorama, responsive to the movement of the viewer in the exhibition space, is projected to fill the far wall of the gallery space. As the viewer moves left, the image moves to the left and continue to move until the viewer changes location. Moving to the right moves the image to right; moving forward gradually zooms the image into pixilated close up; moving backward zooms the image out. The viewer's actions are controlling a continuous landscape of aging, post-surgical bodies.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

verdicalBody

verdicalBody

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78925

Description: veridicalBody
In veridicalBody (1998), I continue to investigate the medical changes are altering our conceptions of life and death. The underlying promise of medical technologies is immortality. Yet we live within vulnerable bodies - bodies that deal daily with trauma, disease, decay and death. What is a factual or truthful body given medical and other technological interventions? Has there every really been a factual body? Hasn't the response to our own bodies always been socially contructed?

On a side wall, a clinical stainless steel device hangs above a stainless steel shelf. When the viewer places a hand on the shelf, an intimate enlargement of their moving hand is projected into the bottom left corner of the panoramic image. First projected in real time, the image is then captured and projected several more times. Each time the image is projected it deteriorates and fades until it disappears. The projected images of viewers' hands are simultaneously recorded onto videotape. This videotape of hands emerging and fading is projected by a third video projector into the right hand corner of the panorama to create a history of the experience of the installation/body.

A slowly moving panorama, responsive to the movement of the viewer in the exhibition space, is projected to fill the far wall of the gallery space. As the viewer moves left, the image moves to the left and continue to move until the viewer changes location. Moving to the right moves the image to right; moving forward gradually zooms the image into pixilated close up; moving backward zooms the image out. The viewer's actions are controlling a continuous landscape of aging, post-surgical bodies.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

The Multiple and Mutable Subject

The Multiple and Mutable Subject

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78867

Description: The Multiple and Mutable Subject
Symposium 1999, curated by Vera Lemecha and Reva Stone
Anthology published by St. Norbert Arts Centre, co-edited by Reva Stone and Vera Lemecha, 2001.
ISBN 1-896699-15-4
http://www.snacc.mb.ca


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

sentientBody

sentientBody

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78862

Description: sentientBody
In sentientBody, my intent is to explore the shifts in the stability of our own increasingly technologized bodies by pointing to the body as a transformative site constantly in the process of becoming.

On one wall of the gallery, a large video projection contains imagery in which the motion of waves dragging over sand or over our bodies becomes indistinguishable to suggest bodily mutability over time.

In the middle of the gallery, a stainless steel container is filled with slowly circulating water. When the viewer walks toward the container, an image of their moving body is projected downward into the water. First projected in real time, the image is then captured and projected several more times. Each time the image is projected it deteriorates and fades until it disappears. The water also decays over time.

Emerging from the stainless steel container is the sound of a pump and motor calibrated to pump the water at the same rate as we breathe. The 'breathing' water moving through the stainless steel container suggests internal liquids moving through the body, the fluids from which we’ve developed, as well as a technological life support system.

Credits
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

sentientBody

sentientBody

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78863

Description: sentientBody
In sentientBody, my intent is to explore the shifts in the stability of our own increasingly technologized bodies by pointing to the body as a transformative site constantly in the process of becoming.

On one wall of the gallery, a large video projection contains imagery in which the motion of waves dragging over sand or over our bodies becomes indistinguishable to suggest bodily mutability over time.

In the middle of the gallery, a stainless steel container is filled with slowly circulating water. When the viewer walks toward the container, an image of their moving body is projected downward into the water. First projected in real time, the image is then captured and projected several more times. Each time the image is projected it deteriorates and fades until it disappears. The water also decays over time.

Emerging from the stainless steel container is the sound of a pump and motor calibrated to pump the water at the same rate as we breathe. The 'breathing' water moving through the stainless steel container suggests internal liquids moving through the body, the fluids from which we’ve developed, as well as a technological life support system.

Credits
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

sentientBody

sentientBody

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78864

Description: sentientBody
In sentientBody, my intent is to explore the shifts in the stability of our own increasingly technologized bodies by pointing to the body as a transformative site constantly in the process of becoming.

On one wall of the gallery, a large video projection contains imagery in which the motion of waves dragging over sand or over our bodies becomes indistinguishable to suggest bodily mutability over time.

In the middle of the gallery, a stainless steel container is filled with slowly circulating water. When the viewer walks toward the container, an image of their moving body is projected downward into the water. First projected in real time, the image is then captured and projected several more times. Each time the image is projected it deteriorates and fades until it disappears. The water also decays over time.

Emerging from the stainless steel container is the sound of a pump and motor calibrated to pump the water at the same rate as we breathe. The 'breathing' water moving through the stainless steel container suggests internal liquids moving through the body, the fluids from which we’ve developed, as well as a technological life support system.

Credits
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

sentientBody

sentientBody

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78865

Description: sentientBody
In sentientBody, my intent is to explore the shifts in the stability of our own increasingly technologized bodies by pointing to the body as a transformative site constantly in the process of becoming.

On one wall of the gallery, a large video projection contains imagery in which the motion of waves dragging over sand or over our bodies becomes indistinguishable to suggest bodily mutability over time.

In the middle of the gallery, a stainless steel container is filled with slowly circulating water. When the viewer walks toward the container, an image of their moving body is projected downward into the water. First projected in real time, the image is then captured and projected several more times. Each time the image is projected it deteriorates and fades until it disappears. The water also decays over time.

Emerging from the stainless steel container is the sound of a pump and motor calibrated to pump the water at the same rate as we breathe. The 'breathing' water moving through the stainless steel container suggests internal liquids moving through the body, the fluids from which we’ve developed, as well as a technological life support system.

Credits
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

The Multiple and Mutable Subject

The Multiple and Mutable Subject

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78866

Description: The Multiple and Mutable Subject
Symposium 1999, curated by Vera Lemecha and Reva Stone
Anthology published by St. Norbert Arts Centre, co-edited by Reva Stone and Vera Lemecha, 2001.
ISBN 1-896699-15-4
http://www.snacc.mb.ca


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

verdicalBody

verdicalBody

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78924

Description: veridicalBody
In veridicalBody (1998), I continue to investigate the medical changes are altering our conceptions of life and death. The underlying promise of medical technologies is immortality. Yet we live within vulnerable bodies - bodies that deal daily with trauma, disease, decay and death. What is a factual or truthful body given medical and other technological interventions? Has there every really been a factual body? Hasn't the response to our own bodies always been socially contructed?

On a side wall, a clinical stainless steel device hangs above a stainless steel shelf. When the viewer places a hand on the shelf, an intimate enlargement of their moving hand is projected into the bottom left corner of the panoramic image. First projected in real time, the image is then captured and projected several more times. Each time the image is projected it deteriorates and fades until it disappears. The projected images of viewers' hands are simultaneously recorded onto videotape. This videotape of hands emerging and fading is projected by a third video projector into the right hand corner of the panorama to create a history of the experience of the installation/body.

A slowly moving panorama, responsive to the movement of the viewer in the exhibition space, is projected to fill the far wall of the gallery space. As the viewer moves left, the image moves to the left and continue to move until the viewer changes location. Moving to the right moves the image to right; moving forward gradually zooms the image into pixilated close up; moving backward zooms the image out. The viewer's actions are controlling a continuous landscape of aging, post-surgical bodies.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

verdicalBody

verdicalBody

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78923

Description: veridicalBody
In veridicalBody (1998), I continue to investigate the medical changes are altering our conceptions of life and death. The underlying promise of medical technologies is immortality. Yet we live within vulnerable bodies - bodies that deal daily with trauma, disease, decay and death. What is a factual or truthful body given medical and other technological interventions? Has there every really been a factual body? Hasn't the response to our own bodies always been socially contructed?

On a side wall, a clinical stainless steel device hangs above a stainless steel shelf. When the viewer places a hand on the shelf, an intimate enlargement of their moving hand is projected into the bottom left corner of the panoramic image. First projected in real time, the image is then captured and projected several more times. Each time the image is projected it deteriorates and fades until it disappears. The projected images of viewers' hands are simultaneously recorded onto videotape. This videotape of hands emerging and fading is projected by a third video projector into the right hand corner of the panorama to create a history of the experience of the installation/body.

A slowly moving panorama, responsive to the movement of the viewer in the exhibition space, is projected to fill the far wall of the gallery space. As the viewer moves left, the image moves to the left and continue to move until the viewer changes location. Moving to the right moves the image to right; moving forward gradually zooms the image into pixilated close up; moving backward zooms the image out. The viewer's actions are controlling a continuous landscape of aging, post-surgical bodies.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 1998

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carnevale 3.0

Carnevale 3.0

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78868

Description: Carnevale 3.0
Carnevale 3.0 consists of a life-sized, double aluminum cutout surrogate of the artist as a young girl that moves through the gallery space on a robotic platform. Sandwiched between two identical cutouts are a small video camera and a small video projector. As visitors enter the gallery space, the figure interacts with them by turning and moving toward them. At random intervals, their image and movement is video captured. These images are combined and overlaid with previously stored images and projected outward from its metal body through the small video projector. Carnevale 3.0 carries images from each of its venues to the next, building a database of lived experience in which the captured video images become memories of the original event. As a mediator of experience this robotic entity has the ability to manifest human behavior by generating responsive movements, processing information, and accessing long term or short term memory. Recollection, physicality and sentience become mutable entities.

Credits
Dave Sandeman - Programmer, machinist
Chad Harris - Machinist
Victor Goertzen - Technologist
Richard-Max Tremblay (Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2000-2002

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carnevale 3.0

Carnevale 3.0

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78873

Description: Carnevale 3.0
Carnevale 3.0 consists of a life-sized, double aluminum cutout surrogate of the artist as a young girl that moves through the gallery space on a robotic platform. Sandwiched between two identical cutouts are a small video camera and a small video projector. As visitors enter the gallery space, the figure interacts with them by turning and moving toward them. At random intervals, their image and movement is video captured. These images are combined and overlaid with previously stored images and projected outward from its metal body through the small video projector. Carnevale 3.0 carries images from each of its venues to the next, building a database of lived experience in which the captured video images become memories of the original event. As a mediator of experience this robotic entity has the ability to manifest human behavior by generating responsive movements, processing information, and accessing long term or short term memory. Recollection, physicality and sentience become mutable entities.

Credits
Dave Sandeman - Programmer, machinist
Chad Harris - Machinist
Victor Goertzen - Technologist
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2000-2002

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carnevale 3.0, camera

Carnevale 3.0, camera

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78876

Description: Carnevale 3.0
Carnevale 3.0 consists of a life-sized, double aluminum cutout surrogate of the artist as a young girl that moves through the gallery space on a robotic platform. Sandwiched between two identical cutouts are a small video camera and a small video projector. As visitors enter the gallery space, the figure interacts with them by turning and moving toward them. At random intervals, their image and movement is video captured. These images are combined and overlaid with previously stored images and projected outward from its metal body through the small video projector. Carnevale 3.0 carries images from each of its venues to the next, building a database of lived experience in which the captured video images become memories of the original event. As a mediator of experience this robotic entity has the ability to manifest human behavior by generating responsive movements, processing information, and accessing long term or short term memory. Recollection, physicality and sentience become mutable entities.

Credits
Dave Sandeman - Programmer, machinist
Chad Harris - Machinist
Victor Goertzen - Technologist
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2000-2002

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carnevale 3.0

Carnevale 3.0

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78872

Description: Carnevale 3.0
Carnevale 3.0 consists of a life-sized, double aluminum cutout surrogate of the artist as a young girl that moves through the gallery space on a robotic platform. Sandwiched between two identical cutouts are a small video camera and a small video projector. As visitors enter the gallery space, the figure interacts with them by turning and moving toward them. At random intervals, their image and movement is video captured. These images are combined and overlaid with previously stored images and projected outward from its metal body through the small video projector. Carnevale 3.0 carries images from each of its venues to the next, building a database of lived experience in which the captured video images become memories of the original event. As a mediator of experience this robotic entity has the ability to manifest human behavior by generating responsive movements, processing information, and accessing long term or short term memory. Recollection, physicality and sentience become mutable entities.

Credits
Dave Sandeman - Programmer, machinist
Chad Harris - Machinist
Victor Goertzen - Technologist
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2000-2002

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carnevale 3.0

Carnevale 3.0

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78870

Description: Carnevale 3.0
Carnevale 3.0 consists of a life-sized, double aluminum cutout surrogate of the artist as a young girl that moves through the gallery space on a robotic platform. Sandwiched between two identical cutouts are a small video camera and a small video projector. As visitors enter the gallery space, the figure interacts with them by turning and moving toward them. At random intervals, their image and movement is video captured. These images are combined and overlaid with previously stored images and projected outward from its metal body through the small video projector. Carnevale 3.0 carries images from each of its venues to the next, building a database of lived experience in which the captured video images become memories of the original event. As a mediator of experience this robotic entity has the ability to manifest human behavior by generating responsive movements, processing information, and accessing long term or short term memory. Recollection, physicality and sentience become mutable entities.

Credits
Dave Sandeman - Programmer, machinist
Chad Harris - Machinist
Victor Goertzen - Technologist
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2000-2002

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carnevale 3.0, platform

Carnevale 3.0, platform

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78875

Description: Carnevale 3.0
Carnevale 3.0 consists of a life-sized, double aluminum cutout surrogate of the artist as a young girl that moves through the gallery space on a robotic platform. Sandwiched between two identical cutouts are a small video camera and a small video projector. As visitors enter the gallery space, the figure interacts with them by turning and moving toward them. At random intervals, their image and movement is video captured. These images are combined and overlaid with previously stored images and projected outward from its metal body through the small video projector. Carnevale 3.0 carries images from each of its venues to the next, building a database of lived experience in which the captured video images become memories of the original event. As a mediator of experience this robotic entity has the ability to manifest human behavior by generating responsive movements, processing information, and accessing long term or short term memory. Recollection, physicality and sentience become mutable entities.

Credits
Dave Sandeman - Programmer, machinist
Chad Harris - Machinist
Victor Goertzen - Technologist
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2000-2002

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carnevale 3.0

Carnevale 3.0

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78869

Description: Carnevale 3.0
Carnevale 3.0 consists of a life-sized, double aluminum cutout surrogate of the artist as a young girl that moves through the gallery space on a robotic platform. Sandwiched between two identical cutouts are a small video camera and a small video projector. As visitors enter the gallery space, the figure interacts with them by turning and moving toward them. At random intervals, their image and movement is video captured. These images are combined and overlaid with previously stored images and projected outward from its metal body through the small video projector. Carnevale 3.0 carries images from each of its venues to the next, building a database of lived experience in which the captured video images become memories of the original event. As a mediator of experience this robotic entity has the ability to manifest human behavior by generating responsive movements, processing information, and accessing long term or short term memory. Recollection, physicality and sentience become mutable entities.

Credits
Dave Sandeman - Programmer, machinist
Chad Harris - Machinist
Victor Goertzen - Technologist
Kristine Thoreson (The Walter Phillips Gallery, Banff) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2000-2002

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carnevale 3.0

Carnevale 3.0

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78874

Description: Carnevale 3.0
Carnevale 3.0 consists of a life-sized, double aluminum cutout surrogate of the artist as a young girl that moves through the gallery space on a robotic platform. Sandwiched between two identical cutouts are a small video camera and a small video projector. As visitors enter the gallery space, the figure interacts with them by turning and moving toward them. At random intervals, their image and movement is video captured. These images are combined and overlaid with previously stored images and projected outward from its metal body through the small video projector. Carnevale 3.0 carries images from each of its venues to the next, building a database of lived experience in which the captured video images become memories of the original event. As a mediator of experience this robotic entity has the ability to manifest human behavior by generating responsive movements, processing information, and accessing long term or short term memory. Recollection, physicality and sentience become mutable entities.

Credits
Dave Sandeman - Programmer, machinist
Chad Harris - Machinist
Victor Goertzen - Technologist
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) - Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2000-2002

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression 5

Imaginal Expression 5

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78903

Description: Imaginal Expression Print Series

In the early 1990's, I completed an installation that consisted of three-dimensional images of protein molecules. This installation implicated the body in a complex interplay between representations of embodiment and assumptions underlying visualization technology. The molecules were wrapped with scanned imagery that referenced the living body—flesh, hair, blood vessels, bruising, and scarring. Details from the wrapped three-dimensional molecules were then rendered from the custom software program to create the Imaginal Expression Series of 8 giclee prints.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression

Imaginal Expression

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78884

Description: Imaginal Expression

In Imaginal Expression, I continue to explore issues surrounding technology’s reconfiguration of the human body. The imagery is derived from technological representations of protein molecules that make up the basic units of living cells and direct all biological processes. They are responsible for alterations in the genetic makeup of all organisms. I use these molecular components to provide a visual metaphor through which I can express my questions and concerns about an expanding scientific field that has the potential to change the very nature of what it means to be human.

Credits
David Kelly - 3D Programmer
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) – Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression 1

Imaginal Expression 1

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78899

Description: Imaginal Expression Print Series

In the early 1990's, I completed an installation that consisted of three-dimensional images of protein molecules. This installation implicated the body in a complex interplay between representations of embodiment and assumptions underlying visualization technology. The molecules were wrapped with scanned imagery that referenced the living body—flesh, hair, blood vessels, bruising, and scarring. Details from the wrapped three-dimensional molecules were then rendered from the custom software program to create the Imaginal Expression Series of 8 giclee prints.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression

Imaginal Expression

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78877

Description: Imaginal Expression

In Imaginal Expression, I continue to explore issues surrounding technology’s reconfiguration of the human body. The imagery is derived from technological representations of protein molecules that make up the basic units of living cells and direct all biological processes. They are responsible for alterations in the genetic makeup of all organisms. I use these molecular components to provide a visual metaphor through which I can express my questions and concerns about an expanding scientific field that has the potential to change the very nature of what it means to be human.

Credits
David Kelly - 3D Programmer
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) – Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression

Imaginal Expression

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78885

Description: Imaginal Expression

In Imaginal Expression, I continue to explore issues surrounding technology’s reconfiguration of the human body. The imagery is derived from technological representations of protein molecules that make up the basic units of living cells and direct all biological processes. They are responsible for alterations in the genetic makeup of all organisms. I use these molecular components to provide a visual metaphor through which I can express my questions and concerns about an expanding scientific field that has the potential to change the very nature of what it means to be human.

Credits
David Kelly - 3D Programmer
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) – Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression 3

Imaginal Expression 3

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78901

Description: Imaginal Expression Print Series

In the early 1990's, I completed an installation that consisted of three-dimensional images of protein molecules. This installation implicated the body in a complex interplay between representations of embodiment and assumptions underlying visualization technology. The molecules were wrapped with scanned imagery that referenced the living body—flesh, hair, blood vessels, bruising, and scarring. Details from the wrapped three-dimensional molecules were then rendered from the custom software program to create the Imaginal Expression Series of 8 giclee prints.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression 6

Imaginal Expression 6

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78904

Description: Imaginal Expression Print Series

In the early 1990's, I completed an installation that consisted of three-dimensional images of protein molecules. This installation implicated the body in a complex interplay between representations of embodiment and assumptions underlying visualization technology. The molecules were wrapped with scanned imagery that referenced the living body—flesh, hair, blood vessels, bruising, and scarring. Details from the wrapped three-dimensional molecules were then rendered from the custom software program to create the Imaginal Expression Series of 8 giclee prints.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression

Imaginal Expression

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78882

Description: Imaginal Expression

In Imaginal Expression, I continue to explore issues surrounding technology’s reconfiguration of the human body. The imagery is derived from technological representations of protein molecules that make up the basic units of living cells and direct all biological processes. They are responsible for alterations in the genetic makeup of all organisms. I use these molecular components to provide a visual metaphor through which I can express my questions and concerns about an expanding scientific field that has the potential to change the very nature of what it means to be human.

Credits
David Kelly - 3D Programmer
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) – Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression

Imaginal Expression

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78880

Description: Imaginal Expression

In Imaginal Expression, I continue to explore issues surrounding technology’s reconfiguration of the human body. The imagery is derived from technological representations of protein molecules that make up the basic units of living cells and direct all biological processes. They are responsible for alterations in the genetic makeup of all organisms. I use these molecular components to provide a visual metaphor through which I can express my questions and concerns about an expanding scientific field that has the potential to change the very nature of what it means to be human.

Credits
David Kelly - 3D Programmer
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) – Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression

Imaginal Expression

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78883

Description: Imaginal Expression

In Imaginal Expression, I continue to explore issues surrounding technology’s reconfiguration of the human body. The imagery is derived from technological representations of protein molecules that make up the basic units of living cells and direct all biological processes. They are responsible for alterations in the genetic makeup of all organisms. I use these molecular components to provide a visual metaphor through which I can express my questions and concerns about an expanding scientific field that has the potential to change the very nature of what it means to be human.

Credits
David Kelly - 3D Programmer
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) – Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression 10

Imaginal Expression 10

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78906

Description: Imaginal Expression Print Series

In the early 1990's, I completed an installation that consisted of three-dimensional images of protein molecules. This installation implicated the body in a complex interplay between representations of embodiment and assumptions underlying visualization technology. The molecules were wrapped with scanned imagery that referenced the living body—flesh, hair, blood vessels, bruising, and scarring. Details from the wrapped three-dimensional molecules were then rendered from the custom software program to create the Imaginal Expression Series of 8 giclee prints.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression 7

Imaginal Expression 7

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78905

Description: Imaginal Expression Print Series

In the early 1990's, I completed an installation that consisted of three-dimensional images of protein molecules. This installation implicated the body in a complex interplay between representations of embodiment and assumptions underlying visualization technology. The molecules were wrapped with scanned imagery that referenced the living body—flesh, hair, blood vessels, bruising, and scarring. Details from the wrapped three-dimensional molecules were then rendered from the custom software program to create the Imaginal Expression Series of 8 giclee prints.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression 4

Imaginal Expression 4

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78902

Description: Imaginal Expression Print Series

In the early 1990's, I completed an installation that consisted of three-dimensional images of protein molecules. This installation implicated the body in a complex interplay between representations of embodiment and assumptions underlying visualization technology. The molecules were wrapped with scanned imagery that referenced the living body—flesh, hair, blood vessels, bruising, and scarring. Details from the wrapped three-dimensional molecules were then rendered from the custom software program to create the Imaginal Expression Series of 8 giclee prints.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression

Imaginal Expression

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78881

Description: Imaginal Expression

In Imaginal Expression, I continue to explore issues surrounding technology’s reconfiguration of the human body. The imagery is derived from technological representations of protein molecules that make up the basic units of living cells and direct all biological processes. They are responsible for alterations in the genetic makeup of all organisms. I use these molecular components to provide a visual metaphor through which I can express my questions and concerns about an expanding scientific field that has the potential to change the very nature of what it means to be human.

Credits
David Kelly - 3D Programmer
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) – Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression

Imaginal Expression

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78879

Description: Imaginal Expression

In Imaginal Expression, I continue to explore issues surrounding technology’s reconfiguration of the human body. The imagery is derived from technological representations of protein molecules that make up the basic units of living cells and direct all biological processes. They are responsible for alterations in the genetic makeup of all organisms. I use these molecular components to provide a visual metaphor through which I can express my questions and concerns about an expanding scientific field that has the potential to change the very nature of what it means to be human.

Credits
David Kelly - 3D Programmer
Ernest Mayer (The Winnipeg Art Gallery) – Photographer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Imaginal Expression 2

Imaginal Expression 2

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78900

Description: Imaginal Expression Print Series

In the early 1990's, I completed an installation that consisted of three-dimensional images of protein molecules. This installation implicated the body in a complex interplay between representations of embodiment and assumptions underlying visualization technology. The molecules were wrapped with scanned imagery that referenced the living body—flesh, hair, blood vessels, bruising, and scarring. Details from the wrapped three-dimensional molecules were then rendered from the custom software program to create the Imaginal Expression Series of 8 giclee prints.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2004-2006

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 12, Print Series

Engram 12, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78918

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 6, Print Series

Engram 6, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78912

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 3, Print Series

Engram 3, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78909

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 5, Print Series

Engram 5, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78911

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 2, Print Series

Engram 2, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78908

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 13, Print Series

Engram 13, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78919

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Portal

Portal

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78890

Description: Portal

Portal is an interactive installation work that uses altered cell phones to investigate how networked devices for human communication are dramatically transforming the intersections between our bodies, our consciousness and our machines. The phones are programmed to perform a series of specific behaviours that give them the appearance of sentience. The use of recorded audio and video, rotating motors, video capture to evolve the content, and the phone's accelerometer for touch response all add to the illusion of consciousness. This work is in its final testing stages.

Credits
Andrew Winton - Circuit Board Design/Electronics
Chad Harris - Mechanical Design Technologist
Felix Jodoin - Symbian, C++ and Ruby Programmer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 11, Print Series

Engram 11, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78917

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Portal

Portal

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78889

Description: Portal

Portal is an interactive installation work that uses altered cell phones to investigate how networked devices for human communication are dramatically transforming the intersections between our bodies, our consciousness and our machines. The phones are programmed to perform a series of specific behaviours that give them the appearance of sentience. The use of recorded audio and video, rotating motors, video capture to evolve the content, and the phone's accelerometer for touch response all add to the illusion of consciousness. This work is in its final testing stages.

Credits
Andrew Winton - Circuit Board Design/Electronics
Chad Harris - Mechanical Design Technologist
Felix Jodoin - Symbian, C++ and Ruby Programmer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 10, Print Series

Engram 10, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78916

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 1, Print Series

Engram 1, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78907

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Portal

Portal

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78886

Description: Portal

Portal is an interactive installation work that uses altered cell phones to investigate how networked devices for human communication are dramatically transforming the intersections between our bodies, our consciousness and our machines. The phones are programmed to perform a series of specific behaviours that give them the appearance of sentience. The use of recorded audio and video, rotating motors, video capture to evolve the content, and the phone's accelerometer for touch response all add to the illusion of consciousness. This work is in its final testing stages.

Credits
Andrew Winton - Circuit Board Design/Electronics
Chad Harris - Mechanical Design Technologist
Felix Jodoin - Symbian, C++ and Ruby Programmer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 9, Print Series

Engram 9, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78915

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 7, Print Series

Engram 7, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78913

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Portal

Portal

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78888

Description: Portal

Portal is an interactive installation work that uses altered cell phones to investigate how networked devices for human communication are dramatically transforming the intersections between our bodies, our consciousness and our machines. The phones are programmed to perform a series of specific behaviours that give them the appearance of sentience. The use of recorded audio and video, rotating motors, video capture to evolve the content, and the phone's accelerometer for touch response all add to the illusion of consciousness. This work is in its final testing stages.

Credits
Andrew Winton - Circuit Board Design/Electronics
Chad Harris - Mechanical Design Technologist
Felix Jodoin - Symbian, C++ and Ruby Programmer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 8, Print Series

Engram 8, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78914

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Portal

Portal

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78887

Description: Portal

Portal is an interactive installation work that uses altered cell phones to investigate how networked devices for human communication are dramatically transforming the intersections between our bodies, our consciousness and our machines. The phones are programmed to perform a series of specific behaviours that give them the appearance of sentience. The use of recorded audio and video, rotating motors, video capture to evolve the content, and the phone's accelerometer for touch response all add to the illusion of consciousness. This work is in its final testing stages.

Credits
Andrew Winton - Circuit Board Design/Electronics
Chad Harris - Mechanical Design Technologist
Felix Jodoin - Symbian, C++ and Ruby Programmer


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Engram 4, Print Series

Engram 4, Print Series

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78910

Description: Engram Print Series

‘Engram’ is an historical, hypothetical concept coined by memory researcher Richard Semon, as a way to explain the way in which memory traces are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain.

Each of the images in this series suggests a fleeting moment captured in time. They are iconic fragments of common life experiences intended to remind us of how our identities are constructed from memory and bodily existence.

The Engram Series is part of a multi-faceted body of work that includes robotic installations such as Carnevale (2002) and Portal (2012). This work investigates the cultural, social, and technological contexts that give rise to consciousness, thought and memory.


Measurements: 73.66 x 91.44 cm

Collection:

Date Made: 2010-2013

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carrier Signal

Carrier Signal

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78895

Description: Carrier Signal

Hilary Harp (USA) and Reva Stone (Canada) collaborated to create this work that uses vintage radios to mark the centenary of the birth of John Cage (Sept. 5, 1912) and the 20th anniversary of his death (Aug. 12, 1992). This work takes into account the impending demise of analog radio and its replacement by a digital signal. As a result of this technological change, important compositions of John Cage's work for radio which includes Radio Music (1955) and Imaginary Landscape No. 4 (1951) may soon not be performable at all.

Cage’s works for radio were based on scores developed through chance operations, which designated a series of tunings and volumes for radios. The compositions that resulted included static between stations, silence, and bursts of talk and music. In Cage’s compositions live performers adjusted the knobs on the radio according to Cage’s score. We developed an electro-mechanical system, using programmable stepper motors to tune vintage radios, producing similar compositions. Our system includes the capacity to record the compositions, preserving the sounds of the soon to be obsolete radio signals in a database for our future use.

Credits
Hilary Harp - collaborator and video editor


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Instructograph

Instructograph

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78897

Description: Instructograph

Instructograph was commissioned by Grant Guy for his Adhere and Deny Theatre, in 2011. I was asked to make a small circus object no bigger than a bread box. It has become the first in a series of ambiguous, obsolete objects that I plan to re-purpose.

An HDMI monitor is built into the top of the lid. A glass shelf adds a second layer inside the box. These shelves hold a small Beagleboard computer, an external hard drive, an infrared sensor, the original cranking mechanism, etc. In the video documentation provided, you can see the Linux operating system on the screen. The operating system is installed on an SD card.

When the Instructograph is first plugged in the computer starts up, a light comes on inside the box to reveal the inner workings through a plexi glass window that was cut into the front of the box, and a random display of videos starts to show on the screen. These introductory videos consist of diverse images and the musical work the Entry of the Gladiators that is commonly associated with the circus. These videos continue to play until the crank at the side of the box is turned. At that point, the videos switch to another group of videos that refer to the history of the circus.

Credits
Felix Jodoin - Programmer
Richard Sipinski - Development


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carrier Signal

Carrier Signal

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78894

Description: Carrier Signal

Hilary Harp (USA) and Reva Stone (Canada) collaborated to create this work that uses vintage radios to mark the centenary of the birth of John Cage (Sept. 5, 1912) and the 20th anniversary of his death (Aug. 12, 1992). This work takes into account the impending demise of analog radio and its replacement by a digital signal. As a result of this technological change, important compositions of John Cage's work for radio which includes Radio Music (1955) and Imaginary Landscape No. 4 (1951) may soon not be performable at all.

Cage’s works for radio were based on scores developed through chance operations, which designated a series of tunings and volumes for radios. The compositions that resulted included static between stations, silence, and bursts of talk and music. In Cage’s compositions live performers adjusted the knobs on the radio according to Cage’s score. We developed an electro-mechanical system, using programmable stepper motors to tune vintage radios, producing similar compositions. Our system includes the capacity to record the compositions, preserving the sounds of the soon to be obsolete radio signals in a database for our future use.

Credits
Hilary Harp - collaborator and video editor


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carrier Signal

Carrier Signal

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78891

Description: Carrier Signal

Hilary Harp (USA) and Reva Stone (Canada) collaborated to create this work that uses vintage radios to mark the centenary of the birth of John Cage (Sept. 5, 1912) and the 20th anniversary of his death (Aug. 12, 1992). This work takes into account the impending demise of analog radio and its replacement by a digital signal. As a result of this technological change, important compositions of John Cage's work for radio which includes Radio Music (1955) and Imaginary Landscape No. 4 (1951) may soon not be performable at all.

Cage’s works for radio were based on scores developed through chance operations, which designated a series of tunings and volumes for radios. The compositions that resulted included static between stations, silence, and bursts of talk and music. In Cage’s compositions live performers adjusted the knobs on the radio according to Cage’s score. We developed an electro-mechanical system, using programmable stepper motors to tune vintage radios, producing similar compositions. Our system includes the capacity to record the compositions, preserving the sounds of the soon to be obsolete radio signals in a database for our future use.

Credits
Hilary Harp - collaborator and video editor


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carrier Signal

Carrier Signal

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78893

Description: Carrier Signal

Hilary Harp (USA) and Reva Stone (Canada) collaborated to create this work that uses vintage radios to mark the centenary of the birth of John Cage (Sept. 5, 1912) and the 20th anniversary of his death (Aug. 12, 1992). This work takes into account the impending demise of analog radio and its replacement by a digital signal. As a result of this technological change, important compositions of John Cage's work for radio which includes Radio Music (1955) and Imaginary Landscape No. 4 (1951) may soon not be performable at all.

Cage’s works for radio were based on scores developed through chance operations, which designated a series of tunings and volumes for radios. The compositions that resulted included static between stations, silence, and bursts of talk and music. In Cage’s compositions live performers adjusted the knobs on the radio according to Cage’s score. We developed an electro-mechanical system, using programmable stepper motors to tune vintage radios, producing similar compositions. Our system includes the capacity to record the compositions, preserving the sounds of the soon to be obsolete radio signals in a database for our future use.

Credits
Hilary Harp - collaborator and video editor


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Instructograph

Instructograph

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78896

Description: Instructograph

Instructograph was commissioned by Grant Guy for his Adhere and Deny Theatre, in 2011. I was asked to make a small circus object no bigger than a bread box. It has become the first in a series of ambiguous, obsolete objects that I plan to re-purpose.

An HDMI monitor is built into the top of the lid. A glass shelf adds a second layer inside the box. These shelves hold a small Beagleboard computer, an external hard drive, an infrared sensor, the original cranking mechanism, etc. In the video documentation provided, you can see the Linux operating system on the screen. The operating system is installed on an SD card.

When the Instructograph is first plugged in the computer starts up, a light comes on inside the box to reveal the inner workings through a plexi glass window that was cut into the front of the box, and a random display of videos starts to show on the screen. These introductory videos consist of diverse images and the musical work the Entry of the Gladiators that is commonly associated with the circus. These videos continue to play until the crank at the side of the box is turned. At that point, the videos switch to another group of videos that refer to the history of the circus.

Credits
Felix Jodoin - Programmer
Richard Sipinski - Development


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Carrier Signal

Carrier Signal

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78892

Description: Carrier Signal

Hilary Harp (USA) and Reva Stone (Canada) collaborated to create this work that uses vintage radios to mark the centenary of the birth of John Cage (Sept. 5, 1912) and the 20th anniversary of his death (Aug. 12, 1992). This work takes into account the impending demise of analog radio and its replacement by a digital signal. As a result of this technological change, important compositions of John Cage's work for radio which includes Radio Music (1955) and Imaginary Landscape No. 4 (1951) may soon not be performable at all.

Cage’s works for radio were based on scores developed through chance operations, which designated a series of tunings and volumes for radios. The compositions that resulted included static between stations, silence, and bursts of talk and music. In Cage’s compositions live performers adjusted the knobs on the radio according to Cage’s score. We developed an electro-mechanical system, using programmable stepper motors to tune vintage radios, producing similar compositions. Our system includes the capacity to record the compositions, preserving the sounds of the soon to be obsolete radio signals in a database for our future use.

Credits
Hilary Harp - collaborator and video editor


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List

Instructograph

Instructograph

Artist: Reva Stone

Work ID: 78898

Description: Instructograph

Instructograph was commissioned by Grant Guy for his Adhere and Deny Theatre, in 2011. I was asked to make a small circus object no bigger than a bread box. It has become the first in a series of ambiguous, obsolete objects that I plan to re-purpose.

An HDMI monitor is built into the top of the lid. A glass shelf adds a second layer inside the box. These shelves hold a small Beagleboard computer, an external hard drive, an infrared sensor, the original cranking mechanism, etc. In the video documentation provided, you can see the Linux operating system on the screen. The operating system is installed on an SD card.

When the Instructograph is first plugged in the computer starts up, a light comes on inside the box to reveal the inner workings through a plexi glass window that was cut into the front of the box, and a random display of videos starts to show on the screen. These introductory videos consist of diverse images and the musical work the Entry of the Gladiators that is commonly associated with the circus. These videos continue to play until the crank at the side of the box is turned. At that point, the videos switch to another group of videos that refer to the history of the circus.

Credits
Felix Jodoin - Programmer
Richard Sipinski - Development


Measurements:

Collection:

Date Made: 2012

Materials:

Virtual Collection:

Add to List