{"id":8220,"title":"EVENING RISE","featured_image":"https:\/\/staroriga.lv\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/11\/32.jpg","number":"32","address":"","address-text":"","lat":"","lng":"","working_hours":"","object_type":"","object_color":"#000000","content_old":"<p>St. Peter\u2019s Church Square<\/p>\n<p>The installation by Anita Ackermann called \u201cEvening rise\u201d creates an interplay between the viewer, a moving object and the environment. Festival visitors can become the choreographers of this object; the light source is in the hands of the viewer. When the subject is moving, the light moves over environmental surfaces, creating a kaleidoscopic effect. Viewer participation creates a sense of continuous motion. Depending on movement and positioning, viewers blur the borders of their physical existence in a particular space and seemingly transform the environment with radiance. The object was previously exhibited in the Tallinn Light Festival.<\/p>\n<p>Authors and implementers of the object: Anita Ackermann (Germany)<br \/>\n<\/p>","contentt":"St. Peter\u2019s Church Square\nThe installation by Anita Ackermann called \u201cEvening rise\u201d creates an interplay between the viewer, a moving object and the environment. Festival visitors can become the choreographers of this object; the light source is in the hands of the viewer. When the subject is moving, the light moves over environmental surfaces, creating a kaleidoscopic effect. Viewer participation creates a sense of continuous motion. Depending on movement and positioning, viewers blur the borders of their physical existence in a particular space and seemingly transform the environment with radiance. The object was previously exhibited in the Tallinn Light Festival.\nAuthors and implementers of the object: Anita Ackermann (Germany)\n","content":"<p>St. Peter\u2019s Church Square<\/p>\n<p>The installation by Anita Ackermann called \u201cEvening rise\u201d creates an interplay between the viewer, a moving object and the environment. Festival visitors can become the choreographers of this object; the light source is in the hands of the viewer. When the subject is moving, the light moves over environmental surfaces, creating a kaleidoscopic effect. Viewer participation creates a sense of continuous motion. Depending on movement and positioning, viewers blur the borders of their physical existence in a particular space and seemingly transform the environment with radiance. The object was previously exhibited in the Tallinn Light Festival.<\/p>\n<p>Authors and implementers of the object: Anita Ackermann (Germany)<br \/>\n<\/p>","excerpt":"<p>St. Peter\u2019s Church Square The installation by Anita Ackermann called \u201cEvening rise\u201d creates an interplay between the viewer, a moving object and the environment. Festival visitors can become the choreographers of this object; the light source is in the hands of the viewer. When the subject is moving, the light moves over environmental surfaces, creating [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","link":"https:\/\/staroriga.lv\/en\/objekti-2015\/32-vakara-ausma\/"}