Atomium’s new installation spins a wordless tale
Using light and sound but no words, TALK is a seven-minute show that offers much more than meets the eye and ear
What are words for?
The former is housed next door in the Trade Mart building, but the latter brings a new site-specific installation into the Atomium every year. The current ID# offering is TALK, a seven-minute sound-and-light show conceived by French digital arts collective Visual System.
The installation occupies two levels of the monument’s temporary exhibition sphere as well as the access escalator. It consists of a set of interacting panels varying in size. Some suggest standard computer monitors, while other larger units evoke ancient sarcophagi. All of these flash geometric patterns in synch with a synthesizer-heavy score. The experience builds from flickering, half-mute passages to dazzling crescendos.
TALK can of course be enjoyed as a strictly sensory experience but there is much more than meets the eye (and ear) here. Together, the visual and audio components form an elemental language, a sort of communication without words. It doesn’t tell a story, nor is it linear; it can be entered and exited at any point. But there is a purposeful grammar here, with light and sound standing in for those traditional linguistic units, words.
If the artists of Visual System are comfortable in the space, it’s because the Paris-based collective are regular guests at the Atomium. They contributed the sprawling dystopian rhizome Out of Control to ID# in 2014 and are the architects of the permanent digital installation Transit stretching the length of one of the venue’s longest escalators.
Until 13 November at Atomium, Brussels
Photo: Axel Addidngton/SABAM 2016