NEW HAVEN, CONN.- Slow Dancing, a video installation by artist David Michalek, transforms
Yales Cross Campus into a work of art this fall. Presented by the Institute of Sacred Music (ISM) with support from the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, it is on view from Wednesday, Sept. 10 to Tuesday, Sept. 16, from 8 to 11 p.m. each night.
The installation is free and open to the public.
Slow Dancing is a series of 43 larger-than-life, hyper-slow-motion video portraits of dance artists from around the world, displayed on a triptych of screens, each measuring 24 feet high by 18 feet across, mounted from scaffolding approximately four stories high.
Each dancers movement (approximately five seconds in real time) was shot using a high-speed, high-definition camera recording at several thousand frames per second (standard film captures 30 frames per second). The result is approximately 10 minutes of extreme slow motion. The trio of portraits is randomly selected for each cycle, allowing viewers to simultaneously compare dancers from different styles and cultures, while enjoying the individual performances.
ISM has had a long association with Michalek, and hosted an exhibition of the artists 14 Stations in 2013. He has taught several courses in religion and visual arts.
ISM is an interdisciplinary center for the study and practice of sacred music, worship, and the related arts, says director Martin Jean. Having just entered our fifth decade at Yale, it is a pleasure to offer David Michaleks supremely beautiful work to the community as an extension of our anniversary celebration.
Slow Dancing has been exhibited in 28 cities around the world, including Los Angeles, London, Berlin, and New York, most often as a work of public art, offering an opportunity for contemplative observation in the midst of a busy city center or campus.