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Cameron Robbins, Artworks

Wind Section Instrumental, MONA Series, 16/7/14 Light Winds

A$3,900.00

CAMERON ROBBINS
Wind Section Instrumental, MONA Series,16/7/14 Light Winds, 2014

ink on paper, unframed
57 x 76 cm
$ 3900

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Loddon River, Equinox trembling 2hrs Sept 21 cameron-robbins-river-pulse-1.jpg

Loddon River, Equinox trembling 2hrs Sept 21

A$3,500.00
New Wire, 20/10/18 went South- 12:30pm 38.5kmh, Hepburn Wind Farm cameron-robbins-new-wire-20-10-18-hepburn-wind-farm-12.jpg

New Wire, 20/10/18 went South- 12:30pm 38.5kmh, Hepburn Wind Farm

A$3,900.00
23/10/18 10am Southerly 22kmh, 10 degrees 40kmh cameron-robbins-23-10-18-10am-southerly-2.jpg

23/10/18 10am Southerly 22kmh, 10 degrees 40kmh

A$3,900.00
Loddon River, Equinox 21-09-2023 cameron-robbins-river-pulse-7.jpg
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Loddon River, Equinox 21-09-2023

A$2,000.00
Loddon River, Sept 21 Equinox Net 1 1/2hrs cameron-robbins-river-pulse-5.jpg

Loddon River, Sept 21 Equinox Net 1 1/2hrs

A$1,850.00

Additional Info

The Red Queen exhibition, June 2013 – October 2014
Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) Tasmania, Australia

Wind–powered mechanical instrument able to produce large ink drawings on paper.
As the south-easterly weather systems race up the Derwent Estuary off the Southern Ocean, they hit the site and drive the machine to make its marks. In summer, northerlies spill over the museum creating a turbulent airflow and different drawings.
Wind Section has an outdoor a wind-turbine and vane on an 8 metre tower, which - via 36 metres of spinning axles and ball-bearings - motivate the indoor drawing instrument, installed in the museum next to a large window. Viewers can follow sight lines from beginning to end of how the drawing is being created.
The machine uses wind speed to drive the pen, wind direction to swivel the drawing board, and time/electricity to move the paper slowly along at 250 cm per week. An entire weather system leaves its trace over the days it takes to pass.

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