Concept 01 / Performance · Installation
Your voice becomes motion, becomes colour, becomes a thing you carry home.
You step into a room wearing a blank garment — something meant to be marked. At the centre, a vertical spinning tube. You make sound: you sing, you hum, you hold a note. That sound drives the piece in real time.
The louder you are, the faster the tube turns. The note you sing maps to a colour. And over a minute or two, the point of delivery lowers — from shoulder height down toward the belly — so the painting accumulates as a vertical record of the performance. You walk out wearing the result.
It isn't trying to be profound, and that restraint is the point. It's about ephemeral fun — a heightened, present-tense moment in a kind of incubator, after which you carry a lasting artifact of that brief participation. The meaning lives in the experience and the object it leaves behind, not in over-explanation.
Sound made visible. Presence made permanent. Synesthesia as souvenir.
The guiding principle is elegance over engineering — the minimal mechanical solution rather than the over-built one. A promising direction: the spinning tube itself becomes the delivery mechanism, a funnel where paint is poured and mechanically mixed as it falls. Gravity and rotation do the work.
No fixed figure. Cost is interdependent with the build — the engineering approach determines the number, not the reverse. The bias is toward lean, economical solutions, costed once a prototype direction is validated.
Confirm the pitch-to-hue and loudness-to-speed mappings. Sketch the spinning-funnel delivery. Identify the cheapest viable rig for a proof-of-concept spin-and-paint test. Gather visual references.