95
硅砂組
keisagumi
4,400,000,000yrs-10min-1/1000s
Crustal movement, volcanic eruptions, sedimentation, earthquakes, and floods. Since the oldest rock on Earth was formed 4,400,000,000 years ago, it has continued to record tremendous changes on Earth. “KEISAGUMI” search for rocks by walking through mountains and watersides and recording the landscapes and some of their shapes. The camera sensor records light for 1/1000 seconds between opening and closing the shutter. For 10 minutes until the thermoplastic resin pressed against the rock cools and solidifies, the resin records the shape. And the record of light becomes a photograph, and the shape record becomes glass. “KEISAGUMI” record the light and shape that cannot be taken home and follow the record of the flow of time in the rock. While continuing to ask what a record is. This exhibition explores the relationship between phenomena, substances, and time through the two-dimensional record of light, the three-dimensional record of shape, and the four-dimensional record of time, and explores the existence of photographs, glass, and rocks. ※ Currently, zircon particles discovered in the Australian Jack Hills are considered to be the oldest rock mineral on Earth, dating back 4.4 billion years.
Gallery Heptagon
523,Nakamura-cho,Kamigyo-ku,KYOTO,JAPAN
Open: 4.27 Sat.–5.6 Mon.
12:00–18:00
Closed: 5.2
12:00 - 18:00
Free