Galleri Image presents The Color of Water 
 by the American artist Sarah Schorr
The Color of Water
 is an investigation of one of our life sustaining elements: water. What
 is the color of water? The answer is part science and part emotion; yet
 the answer is elusive and shifting. Through the dual processes of 
examining gradations of color and gradations of emotion, Sarah Schorr follows 
the ephemeral refractions of light and mood in water. How will we 
preserve this resource for future generations?
  
 Opaque, 
transparent, or translucent, entering water can delineate both a 
physical passage and a metaphysical pathway. The point of ingress 
creates surface tension. A shift in pressure causes liquid to quiver as 
it is pierced. Air is reduced and then removed. Sound changes: Music 
becomes obscured and redacted. Silver to black to emerald green: Water 
is often not blue. Sometimes the sea is a rolling red from deep sea 
algae. Assisted by the waterscape, these transitions open us to 
different reflective experiences, sparking introspection about 
attention, physicality, and mobility in our media-saturated landscape. 
Schorr’s work does not answer the rhetorical question: what is the color
 of water? Instead, this project is an invitation to engage in a process
 of inquiry and contemplation.
 
 Using water as a reflecting pool
 for seeing color, the exhibition also includes two interactive works. 
“The Algorithmic Sea", a collaboration between Sarah Schorr and creative
 coders Gabriel Pereira and Carlos Oliveira, invites viewers to explore 
how both humans and computers see color. “Longing Messages,” an 
iterative installation work by Sarah Schorr made during Covid-19 invites
 participants to explore what they miss through the visual metaphor of a
 message in a bottle.
The Color of Water 
 by the American artist Sarah Schorr
March 12 - May 2, 2021
 The dates of the exhibition period are subject to change depending on Covid-19 restrictions
  
The dates of the exhibition period are subject to change depending on Covid-19 restrictions




 
 
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