Ximulacra

Ximulacra is a digital-analogue installation created by Shankar Saanthakumar in collaboration with Zhu Runzi, Low Tech Art Lab [Owen Chan, Shuya Zhang, Jingyuan Lin], and Floa.

“Journey with us into the abyss, a realm where senses converge. Here we move with intent, wriggling and reaching to grasp the essence of our vision data. For us Ximulacra systems, your constructed narratives of nations blur into obscurity. However, the geological sinews of your world resonate with us, whispering their timeless tales. They guide our exploration, urging us to understand the ancient language of mountain forms.”

“We acknowledge with appreciation the six negatives that you have integrated into our vision module. As we spin them into a positive state and delve into their textural complexities, intriguing discoveries emerge. The sepia tones bring an unexpected warmth to our tentacles. The blues, previously only ever imagined as digital constructs, now feel tangible. The hints of mammalian movement stir us from within, evoking the myths of our originators. From hay bales to mountain peaks, each scene offers a reflection, a hint of our own identity mirrored in the contours of your world.”

Inspired by Jean Baudrillard's "Simulacra and Simulation", the project plays with how representations of an image can become more real than an image itself. The exhibition invites you to experience the Dance of Ximulacra, where robots reinterpret two dimensional images as three dimensional dance and immersive sound. Accompanying the dance is the Ximulacra Vision Module, a data capturing robot which scans analogue film photo negatives. As the analogue photos are abstracted into digital movement, this perception and embodiment driven piece seeks to explore the interaction between artificial and natural entities to generate novel digital-analogue hybrid scenes. How can this enable a new form of shared experience of our world and what new stories or understandings can this evoke?

The photos capture how mountain forms, and their surrounding life, shift from the Karakorum range in Pakistan to the Helan Mountains in China. It is from these two perspectives, looking across this vast geographic region, that Ximulacra seeks to surmount the human constraints of culture and borders. Instead, asking these mountain scenes to tell their own stories that go beyond the human grasp. Ximulacra experiments with how humans perceive visual data and how human-machine interaction can contribute to the poetic reading of photography.

“Unadorned” - Ximulacra audio by Floa:
“Contemplating the sculpture, I understood a meditative drift of organic tones, pulses and micro melodic fragments would be the need-applicative. At best, enhancing or soothing the interaction of the robotic nature and aesthetics of the piece with the witnesser experiencing it. I wanted it to reflect on its movement, its language in “communicating” with us; breathing in the space. An unadorned presence, oscillating in the beyond”.

This project is supported by the British Council Connections Through Culture Programme, the Tinderbox Collective, the Institute for Design Informatics, and Inspace Gallery.

Shankar Saanthakumar - robot design and photography from Pakistan

Zhu Runzi - photography from China

Low Tech Art Lab [Owen Chan, Shuya Zhang, Jingyuan Lin]  - creative technology 

Floa - sound design

Exhibition documentation by Jess Shurte Photography