Massive Attack 2008

July, 2008

Quicktime LogoMassive Attack, Inertia Creeps, live at The Royal Festival Hall .

For our fourth tour with Massive Attack, UVA created a new stage set, with a wide, sculptural LED screen as the centrepiece. The visual treatments, created in collaboration with Massive Attack, are the group’s most explicitly political yet. Flickering references to rendition flights, detention without charge and surveillance societies light up the stage, and computer-controlled lights, also designed by UVA, allow perfect synchronisation between the music and the visuals. First Image by Antonio Pagano.

Meltdown Festival 2008

June, 2008
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  • Vangelis Orchestra. Performing the Blade Runner Soundtrack.

Meltdown curators Massive Attack invited UVA to have a unique visual role in the festival. This resulted in the exhibition of their award-winning installation ‘Volume’ on Riverside Terrace, a new large scale projection as a collaboration with the human rights charity ‘Reprieve’ and the architectural lighting of the façade of the building. Inside the Royal Festival Hall UVA created a visual score for the 2 Massive Attack shows and for the Heritage Orchestra’s performance of Vangelis’s Blade Runner.

Natural History Museum - Darwin’s Canopy Exhibition

June, 2008
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  • Canopy Proposal. Exhibition inside The Natural History Museum

Quicktime LogoVideo of proposed fabrication process, including computer simulation of plant growth.

Quicktime LogoVideo of plant growth simulation, software written in house. .

United Visual Artists (along with nine artists including Mark Wallinger, Rachel Whiteread and Mark Fairington) were shortlisted to create an artwork for the ceiling of the Natural History Museum, as part of the celebrations for the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin’s birth. UVA’s proposal demonstrates Darwin’s theory of Natural Selection in action. A computer simulation of evolution covers the ceiling with an intricate forest of abstract “plants”, which are manufactured using rapid-prototyping technology, then fixed to the ceiling. In the center of the ceiling, a single light mimics the sun, towards which the complex ecosystem grows.

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