Remote Pulse

"Remote Pulse" is an interactive installation consisting of two identical pulse-sensing stations that are interconnected over the internet. When a person places their hands on one station automatically the person on the other station feels their pulse, as the plates vibrate in sync with the heartbeat of the remote person, and vice versa. The piece was originally presented as part of Lozano-Hemmer’s "Border Tuner" installation across the US-Mexico border, with one station in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua and the other in El Paso, Texas.

The piece exists in two formats: outdoor plinth version and indoor wall-mounted version.

General info

Spanish name:
Corazonadas Remotas
Year of creation:
2019

Indoor

Technique:
Corian slab, aluminum mount, heart rate sensor plates, circuits, transducers, lightbulbs
Power:
300W (each station) on 110V or 240V
Dimensions:
two slabs each 59 x 32 x 23 cm
Edition:
6 Editions, 1 AP

Outdoor

Technique:
stainless-steel plinth, Corian face-plate, heart rate sensor plates, circuits, transducers, lightbulbs
Power:
300W (each station) on 110V or 240V
Dimensions:
two stands each 40 x 40 x 110 cm
Edition:
3 Editions, 1 AP
Collectors:
private collector

Exhibitions


Credits

  • Programming: Stephan Schulz
  • Hardware: Stephan Schulz, Pipo Pierre Louis
  • Industrial Design: Rebecca Murdock
  • Production Assistance: Jesse Morrison, Carolina Murillo-Morales, Matthew Palmer, Guillaume Tremblay, Sarah Amarica, Karine Charbonneau, Pierre Fournier, Frederic Monast