LONDON.- Space Popular: The Portal Galleries will present new work and research by the multidisciplinary design practice Space Popular, led by Lara Lesmes and Fredrik Hellberg.
The exhibition responds to the virtuality of
Sir John Soanes Museum by focusing on the portal: a door or threshold that grants entrance into another environment, whether physical or virtual. The desire to travel virtually across time, space and realms has been a recurring theme in the collective imagination one that many have explored through fictional narratives. Visitors will be guided through the magic and mechanics of virtual travel in an exhibition that bridges the technologies of Soanes time and ours. Using Sir John Soanes Museum as the point from which to begin this journey, Space Popular present their research on the portal through time and across media.
Lara Lesmes and Fredrik Hellberg of Space Popular comment: Portals have been present in fiction for centuries. Today they are the primary means to travel between virtual worlds. During the past two years we have made a study of the history of the portals - in literature, television, cinema and gaming - that inspire the teleportation infrastructure being built today.
Unfolding walls, cleverly placed mirrors, and scale shifts are just some of the numerous examples of portals at Sir John Soanes Museum. We see the Soane as the greatest collection of pre-electronic media teleportation devices, making it an inspiring and challenging setting for our current research.
The future of our virtual experiences will be about touch. Spatial computing will take away screens, keyboards and touchpads but we will continue to use our hands to navigate and interact with virtual space. This will lead us to a whole new world of haptics where a furniture, objects, and tools become interfaces or, in other words, portals to virtual worlds.
Exhibition curator Erin McKellar comments: Sir John Soanes Museum is intricate, varied and full of surprises. Space Popular have peered through the buildings doors and frames and have found inspiration in the myriad worlds within. The virtual worlds that theyre creating in their new work will be as fresh and invigorating to todays visitors as Soanes spaces still feel. Through Space Populars work, which is at the forefront of technology and of our understanding of architectures limits, this exhibition also speaks to Soanes goal of creating an academy of architecture within his museum.
Virtual reality technology stands at the forefront of advances in architecture, art, gaming and communication. Yet the notion of virtual space non-physical environments has its roots in pre-electronic media, such as frescoes and tapestries, and has fascinated architects, artists, writers and others for centuries. Sir John Soane himself opened the doors of his house museum to transport visitors to other realms, with walls folding to reveal hidden spaces, cleverly placed mirrors tricking the eye and pictures by Soanes office creating imaginary cities from assemblages of his work.
The Portal Galleries sees Space Popular drawing from and continuing Soanes architectural experiments by creating two new spatial films. One is shown on the Museums ground floor, and is experienced through virtual reality headsets, allowing visitors to enter a series of portals across environments derived from Soanes spaces. Accompanying this will be a cross-media historical study of fictional portals, including examples such as the wardrobe from The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and the Cheshire Cat Shortcut from Alice in Wonderland. At the centre of this study, a large new handcrafted portal table offers a three-dimensional timeline of fictional portals and is also the stage for a second spatial film. Visitors are invited to interact with the table, which is covered in Alcantara, the soft touch and innovative material produced by the Italian firm Alcantara, to illustrate how the experience of the physical and virtual worlds is always paired.
In addition to the portal table, a series of Soane office drawings, Space Popular drawings and Space Popular films will show visitors how some of the most beloved fictional portals have shaped our understanding of the virtual today.