In Hyderabad, technology meets art for an interactive showcase
The Hindu
Synchronised Spectrum: Hyderabad technocrats and art enthusiasts Tanvir Nagore, Mehdi Saajid and Trilok Chander design an immersive new media art exhibition at Goethe Zentrum
With a keen interest in technology and art, Tanvir Nagore, Mehdi Saajid, and Trilok Chander are presenting an immersive showcase of new media art at Goethe Zentrum, Hyderabad. The exhibition ‘Synchronised Spectrum: How Bees See Flowers’ brings together varied facets of the city - Cyberabad and its technological strides and the cultural ethos of the Old City.
The trio believes that art can be fun when it offers visitors an interactive experience rather than passively viewing a painting or a sculpture. On one wall of the Hamburg Hall at Goethe Zentrum is a large installation featuring rows of illuminated floral structures on a panel. Mehdi explains that this “digital kinetic sculpture” will help humans view flowers the way bees do.
To understand the idea behind this installation, we have to recall science lessons. Bees have compound eyes composed of thousands of tiny lenses called Ommatidia. “These lenses work together to create a mosaic , which allows bees to see a wider field of view than humans. Bees can see flowers in ultraviolet light that is not visible to the human eye. The digital kinetic sculpture will replicate that vision for humans,” Mehdi explains. Tanvir elaborates that facilitating humans to “be a bee” and look at flowers in a different light will help further the understanding of how flowers evolved to attract certain bees.
Mehdi is a new media artist who has been fascinated with the idea of the coming together of art, design, and technology. A designer from the the National Institute of Design, he crossed paths with technophile Tanvir Chander who has been working in the area of esports and video games for about 15 years and has a penchant for art, and creative technologist Tanvir Nagore who has a background in engineering, management, and digital fabrication. This is their first collaborative exhibition.
On another side of the hall is a large LED panel with floral imagery. The sensors can track the hand movements and postures of visitors who stand in front of the panel. The installation can give viewers an idea of how the tiny bees get immersed in the large flowers. The movement of human hands from one flower to another can also replicate the act of cross-pollination.
Another installation has multiple images facilitated by robotic machines. Tanvir says the trio was intrigued by the mathematical accuracy of symmetry and patterns in flowers. Based on trigonometric equations of such symmetry, the robot generated wave-like patterns and straight lines to create artistic patterns.
The old and the new come together in another series anchored by a fictional female superhero named Ninja-Bee. “She is Niloufer; she hails from the Old City, studies Unani medicine and has her superpower drawn from the bees,” says Trilok.
While residents are worried over deaths due to diarrhoea in Vijayawada, officials still grapple to find the root cause. Contaminated drinking water supplied by VMC officials is the reason, insist people in the affected areas, but officials insist that efforts are on to identify the disease and that those with symptoms other than diarrhoea too are visiting the health camps.