Projection Design

“Projection Design” offers a hands-on approach to the design, planning and execution of digital projections in a variety of performance spaces by using a combination of industry standard and open source research software tools. This blog will serve as an online text for the developing book, "Technical Ecstasy" and link for the web-readings, online tutorials,software resources historical examples, video art and performance examples and essential class communications for Projection Design class taught by Patrick Pagano

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Powers of Ten

After watching a piece like that, you realize how small you and your problems are as compared to something as vast as outer space.  Numerically that makes each one of us a mere 1ish verses 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.  Also noteworthy was that the video explored all the way down to 10^-18, near the level of quarks.  This is interesting because in 1977 when the film was made, quarks were very much a young theory and were not as readily accepted as they are today.


Taking a look around, this piece is continually referenced.  A few noteworthy references from Wikipedia include:

The opening scene was spoofed in the couch gag for The Simpsons episode, "The Ziff Who Came to Dinner" (going from 1026 to 10-16 to Homer's head, to which Homer says, "Wow!"), and has been repeated twice with different dialogue on "On a Clear Day, I Can't See My Sister" (where Homer says, "Cool!" after the scene returns to the living room and Kang and Kodos can be heard laughing) and "Eternal Moonshine of the Simpson Mind" (where Homer says "Weird!" after the scene returns to the living room).

For their Twisted Logic Tour in 2005 and 2006, the band Coldplay used Powers of Ten as the backdrop for their performance of The Scientist.

At the ending of Men in Black, the camera pulls out showing that the universe is one of many marbles in an alien's bag, an intergalactic spoof of this.

The opening of the film Contact is a Powers of Ten-style montage that takes the viewer from Earth to the edge of the universe before ultimately resolving into the pupil of the main character's eye.

An unreleased advertisement for Apple's Mac OS X 10.2, "Jaguar," is similar to Powers of Ten"Jaguar - Touching"


Wow, it is quite amazing to see that a mere nine minutes of video has made such a huge cultural impact.  

2 comments:

lmcurrell said...

It definately makes you take another look at your own perspective of the world, your life, etc. It is a great influence in the art world in that artists tend to think outside of the box...what if the box were really as big as 24 powers of 10? That's a really big box to try and think outside of.

slaurentz said...

You realize how small and insignificant we all are in the world and how we are really just a tiny spec in the entire universe. And makes you rethink how small of our issues actually are.