Pulse Front

Rafael Lozano-Hemmer

Pulse Front ,
Co-workers & Funding
Conroy Badger - Programming
Pierre Fournier, Natalie Bouchard, Matt Biederman, Paul Zingrone, Helder Melo - production support
Westbury National - staging
Presented by TELUS
Documents
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Description
Pulse Front was a matrix of light over Toronto’s Harbourfront, made with lightbeams from twenty powerful robotic searchlights, entirely controlled by a network of sensors that measured the heart rate of passers-by. Ten metal sculptures detected the pulse of people who held them: the readings were immediately converted into light pulses by the computers and also determined the orientation of the beams. The resulting effect was a visualization of vital signs, arguably our most symbolic biometric, in an urban scale. When no one was participating, the matrix showed the heart rate recordings for the last 10 people who tried the interfaces.

(Photos by Antimodular Research)
Keywords
  • aesthetics
    • installation-based
    • multi-user
  • subjects
    • Art and Science
      • anthropology
    • Body and Psychology
      • bodies (animal components)
    • Society and Culture
      • public spaces
Technology & Material
Installation Requirements / Space
Year of Creation: 2007
Technique: Heart rate sensors, computers, searchlights, dmx distribution and metal stands.
Dimensions: Variable dimensions.
Keywords: biometric, database, interactive, lights, outdoor, recorder.
Exhibitions & Events
Bibliography