About

Robert Henke

Robert Henke is a composer, artist and software developer, mainly known for his contributions to electronic music and for his laser works. His audiovisual installations are based on self written software and explore a fragile balance between determination and chance operations to create complex behaviours and endless variations in expression. His musical work oscillates between ambient, contemporary music and club. His long term project Monolake became one of the key icons of a new electronic club culture emerging in Berlin after the fall of the Wall. He is one of the main creators of Ableton Live, a software which became the standard for music production and completely redefined performance of electronic music. He writes and lectures about the creative use of computers and held teaching positions at CCRMA/Stanford University, at IRCAM, and the Studio National des Arts Contemporains - Le Fresnoy, in Lille, France.

Medias

Phosphor

Focused rays of ultraviolet light paint temporary landscapes on a layer of phosphorous dust. Operating on concepts of erosion and mutation, the installation changes its behaviour and visual appearance during the exhibition period: Each trace of light leaves a mark on a virtual mountain range, like water slowly washing out deep canyons. At the hidden digital core of the installation, a piece of code represents that imaginary landscape. Every beam of light projected onto it behaves like a drop of water, finding its way down to the valley. Whilst doing so, it slightly changes the mountain's shape, resulting in different trajectories throughout the passing of time. The evolution during the exhibition period is unpredictable, yet driven by simple universal laws, which once defined, remain untouched. The visual complexity of the work is created by repeated calculations of relatively simple mathematical functions. Phosphor is inspired by Benoît Mandelbrot's fractal geometry, early algorithmic art and contemporary big data models. The software and the mathematical processes have been developed by the artist.