Chameleon Eyes

Chameleon Eyes

About Chameleon Eyes

Chameleon Eyes is a site-specific public artwork in Heiligfeld Park and the surrounding residential area in Zurich-West. The work is conceived by artist Thomas Julier, realised with a host of collaborators and jointly commissioned by the housing co-ops Siedlungsgenossenschaft Eigengrund and Stiftung Gemeinnütziger Wohnungsbau Letzigraben. Chameleon Eyes centres around the movement of birds: the flight paths of resident and migratory birds are tracked and broadcast live on a double-sided LED display in the park. The display is fed by data from two thermal imaging cameras installed on the rooftop of the co-ops’ newly built housing blocks. Much like a chameleon’s eyes, the two heat-sensitive cameras can move independently of each other, chart a 360-degree field of vision and spot their prey in the sky even at a considerable distance. Choreographed through algorithms, protocols and variables, Chameleon Eyes captures the vibrant activity of birds in the local habitat and visualises their movement using the abstracted colour scale of thermal imagery. The artwork reveals the expanded interrelations between non-human and human beings, technology, architecture and the environment. This website publishes transdisciplinary perspectives on Chameleon Eyes from the fields of art history, technology, natural sciences and social sciences, along with additional resources that allow users to explore the work’s wide net of relations. A varied programme of events further invites active participation.

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Thermal imaging camera

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View of the integration of the display in the park

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View of the display

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