Temporary Public work commissioned by Creative Time and The Ritz Carlton, New York. "This outdoor structure was composed of 386 light bulbs situated on two 10 × 13-foot grids and displayed a moving human figure, reminiscent of a shadow. As viewers approached the installation, the figure not only lost form and became amorphous, but the light bulb grid and its rudimentary nature became exceedingly apparent. For Campbell, the shadow with its poetic simplicity evoked absence, the passage of time, and feelings of loss, while the figure’s dissolution alluded to the transience of images, illusions of technology, and most importantly, the necessity to question what is simply perceived with the eye."-Creative Time
Temporary Public work commissioned by Creative Time and The Ritz Carlton, New York. "This outdoor structure was composed of 386 light bulbs situated on two 10 × 13-foot grids and displayed a moving human figure, reminiscent of a shadow. As viewers approached the installation, the figure not only lost form and became amorphous, but the light bulb grid and its rudimentary nature became exceedingly apparent. For Campbell, the shadow with its poetic simplicity evoked absence, the passage of time, and feelings of loss, while the figure’s dissolution alluded to the transience of images, illusions of technology, and most importantly, the necessity to question what is simply perceived with the eye."-Creative Time
Temporary Public work commissioned by Creative Time and The Ritz Carlton, New York.
"This outdoor structure was composed of 386 light bulbs situated on two 10 × 13-foot grids and displayed a moving human figure, reminiscent of a shadow. As viewers approached the installation, the figure not only lost form and became amorphous, but the light bulb grid and its rudimentary nature became exceedingly apparent. For Campbell, the shadow with its poetic simplicity evoked absence, the passage of time, and feelings of loss, while the figure’s dissolution alluded to the transience of images, illusions of technology, and most importantly, the necessity to question what is simply perceived with the eye."-Creative Time