| I spent a year (1994/5) with Jackie
        Batey embedding visualisations of light into a multi-media database
on a cdrom - "The Art of Light". A departmental wrangle meant the product
of 18 months work was never published, seldom seen and generally ignored
        in an institution where, it was supposed, ideas were paramount, and the
        technical means of their communications of secondary interest. Given
        the lamentable state of the Faculty's computer hardware, this was a most
        convenient conceit. For three days one summer Jackie and I made the computer
        available in the University's gallery, surrounded by these images of
        the ways in which we depict light. The concept of embedding visual information
        within the space provided by the computer's screen was influenced by
        Frances Yates' ideas of the Renaissance Memory Theatre from "The Art
        of Memory". Robert Fludde's, "Theatre of the World" had been simulated
        by the architect Paul Gammon with sound and music composed by Tim Howlett.  The next year we mounted a display in the Corn Hall in
        Brighton and made many useful contacts at the University of Sussex and
        elsewhere.  The navigational system was innovatory and mysterious.
        The prevailing imagery was more Thomas Rowlandson rather than Myst. The
        culture from which it came had little in common with Bill Gates and the
        United States, and promoted a visual identity from Europe and the seventeenth
        century in particular. The spirit of Andrew Marvell haunted tha landscapes.
        The absence of Light was as important as its Manifestations. It was a
        Manichean experience and almost infinite in its complexities. Small illustrations
        on the packaging gave a clue as to the available terrain.  It was modelled in Director, and is now an inert
        file in the external hard disk on my desk. My, but we had some fun before
        the curtains came down on our Theatre of the World.  
        
           Representing GLOW
  Representing SEARCHLIGHTS
  Representing CANDLE LIGHT
  Representing RAYS OF LIGHT
  Representing LANTERNS
  Representing SUNRISE
  Representing LAMPLIGHT
  The Headlight
              Beam (The World of the Car)
  The Streetlight
  The Lamplighter from Pyne's Costumes of Great Britain 1808
  EVEREADY TORCHES, brochure
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