| Work Type: | projection | | Work Sub Type: | site-specific time-based video projection | | Text: | CLICK here: for related Location | | Date of work: | 1999 | | Materials: | medium: video projection
| | Subject: | sea, ship, light, painting, maritime, heritage, ship, magic, ghost, phosphorescent, pain, luminosity, presence, public art, sculpture, water, danger, safety, boat, ship wrecks, memory, documentation, time-based art, site-specific art, journeys, experience | | Technique: | a retired light-ship was painted with phosphorescent paint and flooded with UV light just before sunset. The artist went out in a dinghy to film the illuminated ship after dark | | Collection: |
| | | Description: | The work Dorothy Cross has made for TRACE is an extension of a recent installation, Ghost Ship, realised near Dublin in 1999. For the original work Cross painted a retired light ship with many layers of phosphorescent paint and moored it out at sea within sight of the esplanade of Dublin Bay. Every evening just before dusk the boat's sides were flooded with strong ultraviolet light. As the sun faded the lights were turned off. The boat remained visible as a luminous, ghostly presence between the shore and the horizon. The original purpose of the light ship as a marker of reefs and dangerous waters brings to mind the many ships that foundered in spite of every precaution. Each evening crowds of sightseers would come to the cold waterside to watch this mystery unfold and speculate about the history of the sea and of this boat in particular.
Cross braved the windswept channel in a dinghy one night to make a video of the glowing boat from the sea. A projection of this video will be screened at dusk each night along the edge of the Mersey in Liverpool, where boats from Dublin used to moor. In years past these Irish boats depended on the light ship for their safe passage to England. At the Exchange Flags the artist has also installed a phosphorescent model of the ship, made in preparation for the original project. [MORE][LESS]The work Dorothy Cross has made for TRACE is an extension of a recent installation, Ghost Ship, realised near Dublin in 1999. For the original work Cross painted a retired light ship with many layers of phosphorescent paint and moored it out at sea within sight of the esplanade of Dublin Bay. Every evening just before dusk the boat's sides were flooded with strong ultraviolet light. As the sun faded the lights were turned off. The boat remained visible as a luminous, ghostly presence between the shore and the horizon. The original purpose of the light ship as a marker of reefs and dangerous waters brings to mind the many ships that foundered in spite of every precaution. Each evening crowds of sightseers would come to the cold waterside to watch this mystery unfold and speculate about the history of the sea and of this boat in particular.
Cross braved the windswept channel in a dinghy one night to make a video of the glowing boat from the sea. A projection of this video will be screened at dusk each night along the edge of the Mersey in Liverpool, where boats from Dublin used to moor. In years past these Irish boats depended on the light ship for their safe passage to England. At the Exchange Flags the artist has also installed a phosphorescent model of the ship, made in preparation for the original project. | | | Source: | "Trace, 1st Liverpool Biennial of Contemporary Art", Festival catalogue | | | Date of source: | 1999 | |
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