David Lawrey & Jaki Middleton
The sound before you make it (installation view), 2005, kinetic sculpture.
 Wood, plastic, paint, motor, strobe light, sensor, sound Sound sampled from Michael Jackson’s Thriller video (1983)
Remixing a scene from     Michael Jackson’s Thriller, this work employs the technology of the zoetrope;     animating three-dimensional figures via the sequencing of movement and a strobe     light to create the illusion that the disk is stationary and the zombies are     dancing.

David Lawrey & Jaki Middleton

The sound before you make it (installation view), 2005, kinetic sculpture.


Wood, plastic, paint, motor, strobe light, sensor, sound
Sound sampled from Michael Jackson’s Thriller video (1983)

Remixing a scene from Michael Jackson’s Thriller, this work employs the technology of the zoetrope; animating three-dimensional figures via the sequencing of movement and a strobe light to create the illusion that the disk is stationary and the zombies are dancing.

David Lawrey & Jaki Middleton
The sound before you make it (installation view), 2005, kinetic sculpture.
 Wood, plastic, paint, motor, strobe light, sensor, sound Sound sampled from Michael Jackson’s Thriller video (1983)
Remixing a scene from     Michael Jackson’s Thriller, this work employs the technology of the zoetrope;     animating three-dimensional figures via the sequencing of movement and a strobe     light to create the illusion that the disk is stationary and the zombies are     dancing.

David Lawrey & Jaki Middleton

The sound before you make it (installation view), 2005, kinetic sculpture.


Wood, plastic, paint, motor, strobe light, sensor, sound
Sound sampled from Michael Jackson’s Thriller video (1983)

Remixing a scene from Michael Jackson’s Thriller, this work employs the technology of the zoetrope; animating three-dimensional figures via the sequencing of movement and a strobe light to create the illusion that the disk is stationary and the zombies are dancing.

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A collaborative blog by Catherine Dyhin, Luke McMaster, Rachel Famularo & Tegan Emerson for "Ways Of Being and Seeing in an Electronic Age"

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