First look at The Lume our awe-inspiring new digital art gallery
As you step into The Lume, billed as Melbourneâs new and Australiaâs first permanent digital art gallery, the sheer scale sends your mind reeling.
When The Age visited for an exclusive preview the team were rehearsing their exhibition, titled simply Van Gogh, that opens on Monday.
Hidden projectors blasted a seemingly infinite field of sunflowers across the 3000 square metres of white carpet and up the 11m walls of the cavernous space, carved off the last two bays of the Convention and Exhibition Centre at South Wharf.
Bruce Peterson in Van Goghâs Starry Night.Credit:Eddie Jim
Suddenly, the intense yellow was replaced by a moody blue, as the artistâs starry night swirled around, the brushstrokes the size of your arm. Speakers played classical hits as a voice-over recounted the life of this unique artist.
As a spectacle, itâs likely to be a crowd-pleaser when it opens â" even if it sends chin-stroking art aficionados into apoplectic fits over liberties taken with iconic works.
But Bruce Peterson, owner and founder of the company behind The Lume, has ambitions beyond dropping some jaws.
âWhat weâve done here is create Australiaâs first digital art gallery, the first in the southern hemisphere,â he says.
All systems are Gogh for a November 1 launch of The Lume.Credit:Eddie Jim
They will feature exhibitions produced at their studios in Port Melbourne, London and Rome: but theyâre also commissioning emerging digital artists in this fast-growing field. Peterson wants to take them from the usual canvas of (if theyâre lucky) a wall in a little gallery and let them loose on digital artâs equivalent of the Sistine Chapel.
Peterson calls on an assistant to give a demo. Suddenly, the floor becomes a dizzying, thrashing sea. Then the walls pulsate with inscrutable, computer-generated forms, plunging us into the metaverse.
Weâre just touching the surface of whatâs possible at the moment.
Bruce Peterson, The LumeâThe young digital artists now emerging donât actually have a platform to display a lot of their great work,â he says. âTheyâve got TV commercials or the gaming industry but often itâs just a small 2D area which doesnât do a lot of it justice â" where weâre going to have this great canvas for them.â
They aim to show contemporary artists as âshortsâ after the main show, and in special one-night exhibitions.
They are also working with the Australian National Museum on a big Indigenous experience featuring hundreds of artists, co-curated by the museumâs senior Indigenous curator Margo Neale.
He imagines hosting contemporary dance performances, interacting in real-time with a video projection surrounding them.
âWeâre just touching the surface of whatâs possible at the moment,â he says.
For 15 years cities from Mexico to Denver to Adelaide have hosted Petersonâs exhibitions and âexperiencesâ. But six years ago, he decided he wanted to go further: to triple the size of their travelling shows in a permanent space.
The Lume uses 143 high-definition, high-powered projectors: their travelling shows use 30. It has 65 kilometres of electrical and data cabling, and the floors plus the walls equal 4400 square metres of projection surface.
Which poses the question: is bigger better? If youâre showing the worldâs greatest art, why do you have to make it three storeys tall?
Peterson tells a story in answer. He was taking his kids around the great galleries of Italy and France, and found âfive minutes into it there was a tug on the hip pocket and they were saying âletâs go get gelati, this is boring,ââ
âI asked them why is it boring, weâre in the middle of art and culture and history? And they just said well, nothing is moving. And my daughter said, âgee it would be good if there was some music, dadâ. And that was my âa-haâ moment because I saw the change that was coming with that generation.
âThey value less the actual, material object, they value the experience more than anything. If we integrate as many of the human senses as we can at one time: vision, audio, aroma, your kinaesthetic sense of space, and if you have them all working together, you get an amplified outcome and often thatâs an emotional one.
âThis emotionally touches people, which is a very difficult thing to do in two-dimensional galleries.â
Basically, he wants a childâs first experience of art to be âa joyful oneâ.
âI think youâre a better human and a better person when youâve got art and culture in your life,â he says. âBut weâve got to have people engaged.â
The Lume opens Monday, November 1 with tickets on sale here.
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Nick Miller is Arts Editor of The Age. He was previously The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald's Europe correspondent.Connect via Twitter, Facebook or email.
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