Hito Steryl’s essay In Free Fall: A Thought Experiment on Vertical Perspective talks of groundlessness, the loss of a stable horizon as we enter an age of remote viewing and constructed visualisations that can invoke disorientation and require acclimatisation to new perspectives. Gravity is explained by Einstein as the curvature of space time; we are constantly falling through space. A black hole occurs when a massive star runs out of fuel and collapses in upon itself, compacting its mass to be so dense it causes a deep pocket in space time so that anything falling into that hole beyond the event horizon has no chance of escape.
It may sound a little dramatic but when an event you have been focused on for so long is no longer on the horizon but you have passed into its gravitational field and are sucked into its vortex it can feel like free fall, you pass through so quickly and just keep falling.
At least we took some photographs on the way through. For many of these we are extremely grateful to Sara Lynd for capturing Laboratory of Dark Matters so expertly and considerately.
In the short space of time at Guest Projects between the Lab. Talks+ and the exhibition opening I worked on some images I had taken when running the cloud chamber.
The original intention had been to print images of cosmic particles from the cloud chamber onto acetate and fix them behind the etched aluminium plates on the dodecahedron frame, there would be a band of light inside that would rotate, scanning the universe.
In practise the cosmic particle images were lost behind the etched plates along with the open structure of the frame and the rotating light proved temperamental.
There was also a large expanse of wall available.

Susan Eyre The Forms photo Sara Lynd
The result was I have two works.

Susan Eyre Diazôgraphô photo Sara Lynd
The immutable truths Plato discovered in geometry belong to the realm of abstract thought he called The Forms. This is where ideals reside, outside the limitations of the physical world and where, if anywhere, paradise might be found.
In visualisations of dark matter created from scientific data we see familiar organic patterns emerge; the fronds of dark matter spanning galaxies could be the spreading branches of trees or the veins under our skin.

Susan Eyre The Forms (detail) photo Sara Lynd
These projected shadows of The Forms that govern the structures of our universe invoke a primordial response. Plato suggested we harbour memories of universal truths in our souls.

Susan Eyre Diazôgraphô photo Sara Lynd
The exhibition suddenly came together.
We were honoured by a visit from our lovely and generous host Yinka Shonibare.
and really appreciated his interest and chatting about our individual responses to dark matter research

Amy Gear Nudge photo Sara Lynd
Amy Gear’s digital video work projected onto suspended body parts was edited from footage of the Women’s Self Defence and Green Screen Workshop that explored the visibility of women in the universe and the anticipation of the nucleus of a Xenon atom being nudged by a dark matter particle.

Amy Gear Nudge photo Sara Lynd
We enjoyed the way the works overlapped with each other.

Daniel Clark Veil photo Sara Lynd
Programming a vinyl cutting machine to draw with a marker pen instead of to cut, Daniel Clark created Veil, a reimagining of the single line engraving of the Face of Christ, known as the Sudarium of Saint Veronica, by Claude Mellan from 1649.

Daniel Clark Veil photo Sara Lynd
Daniel also installed Edge-work, a series of radio receivers delineating the space with sound waves being received or distorted by the interference of the human form.

Daniel Clark Edge-work photo Sara Lynd
Every so often the words of U.S. defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld echoed through the space… ‘ there are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns – the ones we don’t know we don’t know.’
In keeping with pinning down the unknowns is Peter Glasgow’s work.

Peter Glasgow The Indicators of Illusive Ideas photo Sara Lynd
Hints lie in the MDF stand and printed text, a DVD booklet from Game of Thrones. These are really props for a live performance when the text is richly spoken and like the text itself they make no claims to legitimacy.

Luci Eldridge Untitled (Dark Matter, Reconstructed) photo Sara Lynd
Luci Eldridge’s 3D print with silver leaf, reflected on privacy screen, and scanned Germanium fragments isolated in the blackness of space take on metaphors of time-warp spaceships and thundering meteors.

Luci Eldridge Germanium Fragments photo Sara Lynd
Sarah Gillett uses methodology borrowed from Private Investigators creating a detectives evidence board to map the history of a gold ring that began in supernova explosions billions of years ago, arriving on the earth through an asteroid bombardment and now sits on her mothers finger.

Sarah Gillett The Case of the Gold Ring photo Sara Lynd
The journey of the ring from raw element to love token brings the incomprehensible and the everyday together in a story we can relate to.
It gives us pause to wonder at the origins of matter that surrounds us.
Kate Fahey takes us further into the subconscious

Kate Fahey Dark Adaptation (video still) photo Sara Lynd
How long does it take our eyes to adapt to darkness? What other ways of seeing exist?

Kate Fahey Optimistic photo Sara Lynd
What senses should we rely on? What role does intuition play?

Kate Fahey Divination Sticks photo Sara Lynd
Her video installation, live performance and emblematic sculptures draw on old forms of knowledge and refer back to the lectures of Rudolf Steiner to open a dialogue between ancient and modern technologies.

Kate Fahey Feelers photo Sara Lynd
There is a hypnotic allure created in the dark space where Melanie King’s Cosmic Ray Oscillograph operates. A laser light is sporadically jolted by a solenoid translating data from the LUX project to traverse a rotating disc coated in phosphorescent powder.

Melanie King Cosmic Ray Oscillograph photo Sara Lynd
While we cannot see dark matter directly, only infer it indirectly from the spin of the galaxies and gravitational lensing we sense something is present and speculate its structure and role in the universe. Elizabeth Murton tests these theories, creating hand spun porcelain galaxies vulnerable to breaking apart, strung across the universe palpably supported by the threads of dark matter.

Elizabeth Murton Connective Matter photo Sara Lynd
End of residency Going Dark gathering begins
Late viewing opened with a performance curated by Kate Fahey. Tim Zercie, as spiritual scientist urges us to awaken, to open our eyes and our minds, to engage our senses and be transported aided by the mesmeric playing of uileann piper John Devine.
Peter Glasgow’s spoken contemplation on the commentaries that run alongside a process; the vagaries of trying to get close to something but failing.
Captivating storytelling in The Case of the Gold Ring from Sarah Gillett
Light dimming
Within that ordinary space were hidden the building blocks of the universe.
Dark matter allows structures in the universe to form by pulling matter into its gravitational field.