
landscape
3d
02:23
2022
Dev Harlan was born in Arizona and grew up in Silicon Valley, California. As a self-taught artist, he was particularly interested in the experimental “subcultures” of video and computer piracy in San Francisco. Then the video production took him to New York where he began producing sculpture, 3D animation and video projection mapping. His current artistic practice uses technology to address concerns about climate change and the ecological impacts of a technology-dominated society. His ideas are articulated through the digital transformation of particular objects and materials as well as the surrealist imagination in which he immerses them.
Dev’s projection works often encourage a transcendental viewing mode. Indeed, he aspires to have his work understood as a gateway to the imaginative subconscious. He likes to suggest the existence of fictional objects possessing their own radiant power and let the imagination of the spectators speculate on the sublime cosmic origins of the object. As for his main sources of inspiration, he feels indebted to artists such as James Turrell and other artists of the "Light and Space" movement who have reached the sublime thanks to their clean and radical use of light.

Five Body Problems 2 : Lost And Found in The Wash.
In the digital short film Five Body Problems 2, Dev Harlan uses photogrammetry and 3D animation to explore themes of landscape, technology and anthropogenic change. The digital landscapes were recorded while exploring a derelict mining site in the Mojave desert. The animation references his activity at the site, which included producing a large relief mold of an exposed rock wall. The process, artifacts and technology used while at work in this site are intermingled within the 3D animation as they are mingled subconsciously in his memory.
3d
landscape
02:23
2022