Images as Defibrillators: An Attempt to Resuscitate the World
(2025)
author(s): Giselle Hinterholz
published in: Research Catalogue
This visual essay emerges from a confrontation with interrupted spaces, once places of life and labour, now marked by abandonment. It is not an attempt to document the ruin, but to propose a sensitive listening capable of rediscovering vibration where everything appears still. Inspired by Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology of Perception (1945), I understand the body as a space of resonance with the world, a place where every surface touched by the gaze gains density and breath.
Here, the images function as defibrillators: distortions, cuts, and movements inserted into the photographs act as electric shocks, attempts to resuscitate territories that no longer breathe. Each photograph is less a documentary proof of abandonment than a sensitive reverberation, where silence and noise converge. If social and urban abandonment crystallises time, artistic practice seeks to open fissures, to return a pulse to what once seemed lost.
Thus, the images do not merely record, they react. The photographic gesture is one of listening and response, not restoration, but insistence that something might still vibrate, even when life has already ceased.
Responsive Aesthetics: Remediating Digital-to-Analog Television Converters as Artist Tools
(2018)
author(s): Eric Souther, Laura McGough, Jason Bernagozzi
published in: Journal for Artistic Research
“Responsive Aesthetics: Remediating Digital-to-Analog Television Converters as Artist Tools” documents the research process undertaken to explore the reanimation of a digital-to-analog television converter box as an artistic tool for intervention with the digital broadcast image through real-time datamoshing. We define datamoshing as an exploitation and interruption of the algorithms that comprise high quality digital streaming video, resulting in the visual distortion and alteration of the image. Our goal was to create a responsive datamoshing system that would not only modulate and distort the incoming broadcast image, but also provide artists with a level of control over these variations. We approached this process as artists, rather than technologists. Inspired by a specific visual or aesthetic result, we would reflect on how this result was achieved technically and then experiment with other methods that might offer further enhancement. The final result was the creation of a responsive datamoshing tool for use in exhibition or performance, both on its own or in combination with other systems (i.e., software, apps, image processing machines).