18 May 2009
Spencer Finch| The River That Flows Both Ways

I can't believe it's finally here: the first section of the much-talked-about High Line will be open to the public as a park. I remember being at a party 10 years ago and hearing about the High Line for the first time. At the time of it's opening, the High Line has teamed up with Creative Time and artist Spencer Finch for its inaugural art commission The River that Flows Both Ways.

Inspired by the light and the water of the Hudson River, The River that Flows Both Ways will transform an existing series of windows with 700 individually crafted panes of glass representing the water conditions on the Hudson River over a period of 700 minutes on a single day. The installation will be placed in a semi-enclosed former loading dock where the High Line runs through the Chelsea Market building, between 15th and 16th Streets, viewable from the street and on the High Line. The work links the movement of the river, viewable from the site, with the historic movement of the railway and the atmospheric conditions of its location on Manhattan's West Side. The piece, with its varied levels of color, translucency, and reflectivity, addresses the impossible search for the color of water.

The title of this work comes from the original Native American word for the Hudson River, Muhheakantuck, which means "the river that flows both ways." This flow in two directions is analogous to the way both water and glass work optically, as both windows and mirrors, allowing a view into depth as well as a reflection of the surrounding environment.

To create the colors of the glass, Finch fastened a camera to the railing of a tugboat, and used an intervelometer to photograph the Hudson River 700 times, once a minute for 700 minutes. The boat began the trip at the 79th Street Boat Basin and floated upriver with the current to 120th Street, reversed direction with the tide and traveled down to New York Harbor, and lastly back upriver. The boat flowed naturally with the river in both directions, rather than relying on its engines to propel it.

Read the full press release here. There's more information on the artist, the project, and the inspiration behind the project. Don't forget to check out Finch's site and his Wiki for more information on the artist.

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