David Haines & Joyce Hinterding

Invisible energy

By Biennale of Sydney

23rd Biennale of Sydney: rīvus

Pink Steam (2022) by David Haines & Joyce HinterdingBiennale of Sydney

About the participants

David Haines & Joyce Hinterding
Based on Dharug and Gundungurra land (Blue Mountains, Australia)

David Haines
Born 1966 in London, England
Joyce Hinterding
Born 1958 in Melbourne, Australia

David Haines and Joyce Hinterding work both collaboratively and independently. Their solo and collaborative practices span various media from large-scale immersive video installation and experimental audio works for performance to discrete objects, images and aroma compositions.

‘Much of our fieldwork has revolved around the signals that come from the sky. The resonance of cosmic level forces in action that continually glue together the cosmos and the ground.’ 
—David Haines & Joyce Hinterding

Liquid Languages – Haines & Hinterding | Sound (2022) by Ankit MishraBiennale of Sydney

Hear from Haines & Hinterding as they discuss their collaborative practice. 

Pink Steam (2022) by David Haines & Joyce HinterdingBiennale of Sydney

Pink Steam, 2022

Pink Steam brings together the earth & sky by way of radiation expressed through cosmic rays and the infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum. It was filmed on the Fish River, a tributary of the Macquarie Darling System in Western NSW that passes through Wiradjuri Country.

Pink Steam (2022) by David Haines & Joyce HinterdingBiennale of Sydney

Using specially modified cameras we were able to see parts of the spectrum that transmit beyond visible light.

Pink Steam (2022) by David Haines & Joyce HinterdingBiennale of Sydney

The work’s sound comes from the real-time detection of muons, particles of energy that are the result of cosmic rays colliding with the earth’s atmosphere.

Pink Steam (2022) by David Haines & Joyce HinterdingBiennale of Sydney

The muon detectors and custom electronics were built by amateur radio astronomer Robert Hart based on an Open-Source Muon detector design.

Pink Steam (2022) by David Haines & Joyce HinterdingBiennale of Sydney

The circuit allows us to hear the presence of muon activity in the exhibition space in real-time, as the particles shower down upon us and pass through everything, like another kind of rain made of invisible energy.—David Haines and Joyce Hinterding

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Navigate through The Cutaway and explore David Haines & Joyce Hinterding's Pink Steam, 2022.

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