The exhibition of David Hoffos in MOCCA is pretty impressive. David Hoffos, a contemporary Canadian artist, is widely recognized for unique illusionist installations. His works in the exhibition in MOCCA are somehow a little bit crappy but still interesting.
Most of his works has an interior environment and one or two glass broads. He used many old TV screens to make the images of people and other things like curtains in the interior environment. As long as I knew, making a image in an environment look 3D would probably need several projectors to build a light body for the image, but in this exhibition, David Hoffos just used TV screens and glass broads to make the images look like they are 3D. We found that the image was projected by the TV screen to the glass broad and the images on the TV screen are short videos of either human or other things we can find in our lives.
Since the images are coming from the TV screen, the whole interior looks pretty crappy because of the colors of the image (mostly, blue and white). Although there are more equipment we can use to make a 3D image in such an interior space, David Hoffos still chose an easy way to show the image, but hard way to think about.


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