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[Photos] See A Hong Kong Skyscraper Transformed Into An Interactive Light House

Carsten Nicolai's "α (alpha pulse)" was unveiled today at China's Art Basel, and it put the entire city in a trance.

Image credits: Carsten Nicolai Art Basel in Hong Kong 2014 © MCH Messe Schweiz (Basel) AG

Hong Kong certainly is no stranger to towers and neon, and towers lit up by neon. If you need further evidence, just check out M+'s digital archive, aka the museum of the future, as the Kowloon Cultural District is billing it. So one might imagine when artist Carsten Nicolai outfitted the 1,600-foot-high International Commerce Centre (ICC) in a soaring spectacle of syncopated lights, the skyline would barely flicker any brighter. However over the course of nearly an hour, his installation for Art Basel Hong Kong, titled α (alpha pulse), quite literally had the city beaming with flashing lights and pulsating sounds, as the project turned the building into a massive light house, blinking in synchronized frequency.

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For its unveiling today, Nicolai enhanced the project with a parallel light show on Pier 4, directly across from the ICC building. The artist channelled his inner Berghain (he is from Berlin, after all) and synchronized minimal techno beats with large, speaker-sized light structures that whizzed with geometric vertical interplays, contrasting with the building just a stone's throw away.

Nicolai casually mentioned the project at large was delineated by the human brain’s neural reactions to flashing lights. The set-up is meant to explore the effects that light impulses might have on the mood, relaxation, attention, and creativity of viewers. Even if the scientific inspiration isn’t immediately apparent, the cascade of bright horizontal light that scale up and down the massive ICC tower in an ever-changing narrative structure is enough to capture any passer-by's focus.

While the artist, on his night of glory, was shy to speak about the specifics of the project, from the visual composition, one can only glean that α (alpha pulse) stems from Nicolai’s preferred themes of randomness and self-organizing patterns. The zips and blips certainly challenge the city’s otherwise static-but-fluorescent displays of neon decorative flair. After tonight’s major unveiling, Nicolai himself popped over to fellow artist Nadim Abbas’ bunker bar installation, Apocalypse Postponed, to jump on the DJ decks—only to continue the full-throttle trance that his installation had already inspired in everyone at Basel.

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The display continues for the next two nights until May 17, as a commission in conjunction with Art Basel Hong Kong. The ICC, which sits directly on Victoria Bay in Kowloon, will continue to illuminate the harbor and the grand cultural hub with Nicolai’s creation. For more on the artist visit: http://www.carstennicolai.de/

Related:

Carsten Nicolai Invites You To Explore His univrs [Q&A And Photo Gallery]

Overcoming Sensual Perceptions with Carsten Nicolai

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