“Patuxent River, Chesapeake Bay” from the ‘Water, Land, Sky’ series
Time and space seem to expand for viewers of “Patuxent River, Chesapeake Bay.” In this 2-Channel video corner-installation, videos and audio create an immersive environment via flatscreens or wall projections. Mirror videos produce everchanging patterns, while the corner installation opens up viewer space, adds 270 degrees to the 90 degree corner. “Patuxent River, Chesapeake Bay Watershed” evokes the physical, visual and aural sensations of canoeing the Patuxent in mid-summer. On mirrored screens the camera drifts towards a shoreline green with arrowhead and arum plants that pierce surface reflections of sky and clouds. ‘Reality’ is shaped by insects, birds, the river current, the (audio) slosh of water and slap of the paddle. When completed in 2023, the “Water, Land, Sky- Chesapeake Bay” series of video installations will include videos recorded on rivers in the Bay watershed in Maryland, as well as on rivers in the District, Delaware, Pennsylvania, New York, West Virginia, and Virginia.
Ann Stoddard recorded videos for the “Patuxent River, Chesapeake Bay Watershed” from the bow of a canoe. Stoddard is the videographer, director, editor, and bow paddler, assisted by her husband John Straub who paddled stern. Together Stoddard and Straub have paddled rivers and lakes in Wisconsin, the Chesapeake Bay watershed, and Algonquin Park, ON.] Stoddard learned to canoe in early childhood.
Ann Stoddard recorded videos for the “Patuxent River, Chesapeake Bay Watershed” from the bow of a canoe. Stoddard is the videographer, director, editor, and bow paddler, assisted by her husband John Straub who paddled stern. Together Stoddard and Straub have paddled rivers and lakes in Wisconsin, the Chesapeake Bay watershed, and Algonquin Park, ON.] Stoddard learned to canoe in early childhood.
Medium: video corner installation
Year: 2022
Details: 5:00 Min Looping
Recorder
Recorder gestures toward the ephemerality of information by recording audio into sand.
Medium: Sand, acrylic, electronics including speaker and mic.
Year: 2017
Details: ~18 x 24 x 6"
Wander/Wonder
Wander/Wonder consists of two separate but connected experiences: Wander, a walkable virtual street map of Baltimore City with all buildings removed except for psychic reader storefronts, and Wonder, a zero-gravity digital astral plane experienced as a virtual reality (VR) environment.
As an interactant flies through the Wonder side via VR headset, the Wander side is projected on screen for spectators to view. The interactant uses a crystal ball to navigate both environments simultaneously - guiding the experiences of spectators in Wander while fully immersed in the VR environment of Wonder.
As an interactant flies through the Wonder side via VR headset, the Wander side is projected on screen for spectators to view. The interactant uses a crystal ball to navigate both environments simultaneously - guiding the experiences of spectators in Wander while fully immersed in the VR environment of Wonder.
Medium: virtual reality and immersive projection
Year: 2018
Details: Room-scale installation
Outgrown
Outgrown is a fantasy and a eulogy for weeds. Using augmented reality, this piece resurrects the weeds that once grew in a space and envisions a parallel world in which they now thrive. An interactant looks through one of the provided tablets at each glowing panel and sees the spirits of plants rise up to claim back a space of their own. They are meant to bring a strange kind of beauty, but also a glimpse of post-apocalyptic biodiversity, of a natural world that's had enough and won't sit still for us much longer.
Medium: augmented reality
Year: 2022
Details: variable, roughly 6x8'
"Seeing Things, Personal Devices"
Medium: Four-Channel Electronic Video Installation
Year: 2015
"Seeing Things, Headscarf"
The 4-channel video installation “Seeing Things, Headscarf” produces ambiguity through simultaneous random juxtapositions of a woman donning a scarf. Conceptual art, quad-screen, and fashion challenge stereotypes: Who decides when scarves are fashion, when they signify devotion, - repression? Riffing on the popular video "100 ways to tie a scarf", “Seeing Things, Headscarf” sources include Audrey Hepburn wearing scarf-and-sunglasses in "Charade", Hijab, bridal veils, the Virgin Mary.
“Seeing Things, Headscarf” is a 4-Channel video installation: Final cut pro manipulated video recordings; Quad-video-switcher (signal splitter) distributes 4 DVDs/DVD /players. Each quadrant of the screen displays a version of the same video, asynchronous and non-linear. For flatscreen or projection.
“Seeing Things, Headscarf” involved performance and collaboration, and is part of a series created to protest Trump’s Muslim ban and systemic post-9/11 ethnic profiling of Muslims. This series [videos, installations, site-interventions] is informed by living and teaching in Morocco, activism and a Catholic girlhood.
“Seeing Things, Headscarf” is a 4-Channel video installation: Final cut pro manipulated video recordings; Quad-video-switcher (signal splitter) distributes 4 DVDs/DVD /players. Each quadrant of the screen displays a version of the same video, asynchronous and non-linear. For flatscreen or projection.
“Seeing Things, Headscarf” involved performance and collaboration, and is part of a series created to protest Trump’s Muslim ban and systemic post-9/11 ethnic profiling of Muslims. This series [videos, installations, site-interventions] is informed by living and teaching in Morocco, activism and a Catholic girlhood.
Medium: Four-Channel Video Electronic Installation
Year: 2018