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Meow Wolf Denver features work by CU Boulder community

people dancing in front of black and white projection lines
At least 12 members of the CU Boulder community contributed to the newly-opened, $50-million Meow Wolf Denver location, and all 12 share an association with the Creative Technology and Design program, offered by the  through the .

Justin Gitlin, a renowned multimedia artist and a lecturer for the Creative Technology and Design program, designed and built Moir茅 Room, a mesmerizing, algorithmically-generated audiovisual experience made up of ever-changing black-and-white projections accompanied by constantly varying computer music. The sound and visuals are both infinitely variable and interactive, subtly responding to visitors around the exhibit.

Ria Khan, a 2020 graduate of the Creative Technology and Design master鈥檚 program, designed and built Galactic Autoquarium, involving a team of nine ATLAS students and alumni in the creation of a visually eye-popping space that features robotic fish, riddles and digitally generated interactions.

Corrina Espinosa, CU Boulder alumna (MFA鈥17 Integrated Art), who was an artist-in-residence in the ATLAS BTU Lab in 2016 and teaches Digital Art 1 and 2 for the Department of Art and Art History, built a three-panel installation made up of life-sized, dancing puppets. She says the ATLAS Institute and the BTU Lab are 鈥減aramount in her growth as a tech-based artist." Her first introduction to ATLAS was a course in wearable electronics when she was an MFA student. This connection led to her yearlong BTU artist residency, which was primarily focused on her MFA thesis work. She subsequently returned to teach the wearable electronics course that gave her the entr茅 to the community in the first place.

Officially named Meow Wolf Denver Convergence Station, it is the latest permanent art exhibition for the organization, which began in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and opened its second location in Las Vegas in February 2021. More than 200 artists working in a wide variety of mediums have contributed to creating bold and immersive experiences found throughout the exhibition space.
 

people dancing in front of black and white projection lines
Altered Vision
Justin Gitlin鈥檚 involvement with Meow Wolf goes back four years to a meeting with the organization's Santa Fe鈥檚 technical director. Gitlin, who had by then worked on high-profile installations for Nike, Madame Tussauds wax museum and others, pitched his idea for the Moir茅 Room, which was quickly accepted.

He explains that the concepts behind Moir茅 Room are rooted in his fascination with the mesmerizing effects black-and-white patterns can have on perception. He wanted to generate these kinds of patterns dynamically using algorithms that would incorporate variability based on data streams from the immediate vicinity of the installation.

Since these data streams would never be the same, the patterns generated would always be unique. In addition, he wanted to intensify the visual experience with an audio accompaniment that was integrated into the graphics; with the audio environment taking cues from an ever-changing visual field, and the graphics influenced by a constantly changing auditory and spatial environment, the feedback loops create practically infinite variability. As a result, each visitor experiences鈥攁nd helps create鈥攕omething entirely unique in Moir茅 Room. Gitlin likes the idea that each visitor plays a role in making their visit to Moir茅 Room unlike anyone else's鈥攈ow it creates a more intimate connection between visitors and the artwork, he says.

Developing the concept was one thing, implementation another. Small prototypes for the project's components were built over several years: refining the visual pattern generation and audio analysis came first, body-tracking with computer vision and projection mapping followed. 鈥淲henever I get a chance to integrate my music into my code that's always really exciting for me,鈥 says Gitlin.

The experience can be calming one moment and anxious the next, as sounds and shapes evolve together over time, Gitlin says.

Gitlin has seen scores of Instagram selfies posted by fans who have visited his installation.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been fun to watch the public interacting with the piece,鈥 says Gitlin. 鈥淓ach person has their own moment in time, where the backdrop is whatever they鈥檙e taking a photo of.鈥
 

woman dancing in rainbow room
Fish Tales
Galactic Autoquarium, designed and fabricated by Ria Khan (MS-CTD鈥20, they/them/theirs) and a team of students and alumni from CU Boulder鈥檚 ATLAS Institute, immerses visitors in an 鈥渋ntergalactic and ancient community of robotic fish,鈥 Khan explains.

As an undergraduate fine arts major, Khan spent a lot of time in the institute鈥檚 BTU (Blow Things Up) Lab, where they began experimenting with and creating robotic fish. As interest grew, Khan presented workshops to students eager to replicate the fish.

"People enjoyed the weird whimsey of dinky fish swimming in mineral oil and wanted to learn how to do it,鈥  Khan said. 鈥淲hen the (Meow Wolf) call for entries came out, I thought it would be really cool to have a whole installation about them.鈥 Khan pitched to Meow Wolf the Autoquarium idea as a first-year ATLAS graduate student enrolled in the College of Engineering鈥檚 Creative Technology and Design (CTD) program.

As visitors enter the whimsical creation, their reflections multiply in a mirrored room of celestial and oceanic themes. Wall-mounted, brightly-colored domes scattered along the walls hold swimming robotic fish. Above, 鈥渃elestial鈥 aquatic coral, a 鈥済alactic infinity mirror鈥 fish pond, and starry lights float; below, light patterns reminiscent of water reflections twinkle. And to the sides, two painted murals of fish project a rainbow onto an adjacent wall covered with animated projection visuals.

Throughout the exhibit, old-fashioned talk boxes (typically utilized in the real world to notify apartment residents they have visitors) contain the room鈥檚 secrets. Some fish 鈥渄eities鈥 speak in riddles, interacting through talk boxes to share 鈥渉idden wisdoms,鈥 ultimately guiding visitors to the other artists鈥 exhibits.

鈥淪eeing people enjoying it was magical,鈥 says Khan, noting that visitors became very engaged with the riddles during the installation鈥檚 preview days.  

Khan says they are proud of their team鈥檚 work, which included complicated object-oriented computing, and Raspberry Pis and Teensy (USB-based microcontroller development system) hardware.

Khan also adds that they鈥檙e proud of the diversity of the arts and technology team who built it. 鈥淲e have women, trans and non-binary folk, and people of color, showing the diversity in our skill sets and in ourselves. Speaking as a femme non-binary person of color, I especially appreciate that.鈥


CU Boulder contributors to Meow Wolf Denver
  • Title: Moir茅 Room

Collaborator: Justin Gitlin, aka Cacheflowe, lecturer for the MS-CTD program

  • Title: Galactic Autoquarium

Collaborator: F. Ria Khan (MS, TMS鈥擟reative Technologies + Design '20), BTU, THING and Living Matter labs alum
Assisted by: Armon Naieini* (BS, TAM鈥19)鈥攑rojection visuals; Sofia Rubio-Topete (TAM minor '20);  Harrison Bolin (BS, CTD鈥21);  Calvin Logan* (CTD/Art undergraduate student)鈥搉arrative designer and primary ceiling decor fabricator; Luke Collier (BS, mechanical engineering '20, BTU Lab alumnus) and Charles Candon* (mechanical engineering undergraduate; BTU Lab member)鈥攑hysical fabrication; Sky Johnson* (BS TAM 鈥20)鈥攍ead programmer; Blake Gambel* (BS, TAM鈥19)鈥攍ead programmer/general fabrication; Maria Deslis (MS-CTD鈥20) senior programmer.
(*key contributors)

  • Title: Time Machine Malfunction Dance Party

Collaborator: Corrina Espinosa, MFA integrated art '17; BTU Lab artist-in-residence '16