Zoosphere

 

Zoosphere is a multi-channel audio-visual installation where zoo animals are virtually relocated in a different kind of captivity: the gallery space. The exhibition is lit only by video projections depicting life-size zoo animals freed from their habitats through digital manipulation. Unlike at a real zoo, there is no map or guide or predictable enclosure. Rather than viewers coming upon enclosed animals where they may be predictably found, the animals come upon the viewer unexpectedly, appearing and disappearing randomly throughout the installation space.

The walk-through environment encourages an active rather than passive engagement with the art showing the vitality of the animal subjects as living creatures moving in time—a dynamism not possible in the static mediums of photography or sculpture. It also makes possible a more dynamic encounter with animal life than what we experience at a traditional zoo. The conventions of display and the “infotainment” nature of many modern zoos exert a deadening effect on our experience of these animals. We see them, but we don’t see them. And yet the animals here are digitally projected while those we encounter in zoos are flesh and blood. This project thus raises questions about where and how to locate the reality of our relations with our fellow creatures, and it invites the viewer to speculate on the parallels between the conventions of display in the modern zoo as well as the contemporary gallery and museum space.

"Allison Hunter’s Zoosphere (2010) is a transcendent, site-specific installation investigating humankind’s relationship to the natural world. In her first ever immersive video installation, Hunter upends the power dynamic between the human and non-human animal within a dark, mazelike environment in which man and beast co-mingle. Against the backdrop of a rapidly shifting ecological landscape in which species across the globe are threatened with extinction, Zoosphere reconnects humanity with the beauty and wonder of the animal kingdom and forces us to examine our relationship with and responsibility to it." 

—Diane Barber, DiverseWorks

 

Screen on column in lobby showing water flowing over rocks

Installation detail of "Zoosphere," Diverseworks, Houston, TX