DRIFT
Teri Rueb
The ubiquity of GPS (global positioning satellite) and other tracking
technologies suggests that "being lost" may itself be an experience
that is being lost. However, simply knowing one's geographical location
as expressed in longitude and latitude coordinates has little bearing
on one's personal sense of place or direction. "Drift" poses
the age-old question "Where am I and where am I going?" in
a contemporary moment in which spatial positioning and tracking technologies provide
evermore precise, yet limited, answers to this question. The installation
embraces the flow of wandering, the pleasure of disorientation, and
the playful unpredictability of drifting as it relates to movement and
translation. Sounds blend footsteps on different surfaces with spoken word in different
languages. Spoken word passages are drawn from poetry and literature
dealing with the theme of wandering, being lost, and drifting. Meaning also drifts as Rousseau,
Joyce, Kerouac, Mann, Dante, Woolf, and others are presented in the original and in translation. The Watten Sea becomes a
metaphor for hertzian space as visitors are invited to wander among
layered currents of sand, sea and interactive sounds that drift with
the tides, and with the shifting of satellites as rise and set, introducing another kind of drift.
The installation covers a 2 km x 2 km region that is filled with areas
of interactive sound. The region moves with the tide such that at low
tide all the sounds are out on the Watt, at high tide they flood the
town. Sounds play automatically as you wander through these interactive
areas with a Pocket PC, GPS and headphones. The location of the areas changes constantly with the shifting
tides - therefore, the best strategy for finding them is simply to
wander.