Museum visitors Claire Covert, left, and Ryan Salem absorbed in Leo Villareal: Animating Light at the Nevada Museum of Art.
Museum visitors Claire Covert, left, and Ryan Salem absorbed in Leo Villareal: Animating Light at the Nevada Museum of Art.

Leo Villareal got lost at Burning Man. It was the early โ€™90s, and there werenโ€™t crowds or roads. It was pitch-black desert. โ€œI experienced a child-like sense of panic,โ€ he remembers.

The next year, Villareal came prepared with a 16-bulb light sculpture that he and others could use as a point of reference on the playa.

He soon found himself merging his love of sculpture with his love of direction. A few years later, he and some friends were shipping huge crates from New York to the festival, all full of building materials ranging from geodesic domes to more rudimentary light sculptures that challenged the design software available at the time.

Not only does Villareal no longer worry about getting lost in the desert, but his work is now on display at the National Gallery of Art and museums throughout the art world, and heโ€™s recognized as a pioneer in the use of LEDs and computer-driven light art and architecture.

If any unassailable trace of magic is ever found in one of native New Mexican artist Villarealโ€™s mystic, indefatigable sculptures of light or in one of his many luminous odysseys and installations, it will likely exist in the marginalia between the linesโ€”in the infinite room left open like some wild random gesture. It will shock as it takes root, like a weed growing in cement. And it will look nearly identical to any of the thousand other algorithms that program the movements of lights, the code that causes the artifice of 0s and 1s, offs and ons, to suddenly blossom from the dim into what should necessarily be impossibleโ€”a kind of life, as we understand it, in the unerring and exacting medium of truth: light. But thatโ€™s a huge โ€œif.โ€ An even bigger, โ€œwhen.โ€ For now, Villareal is content to explore and play with the shadows and the illusions.

โ€œIโ€™m trying to create emergent behavior,โ€ says Villareal.

That magical, transcendent moment will have to wait. But itโ€™s hard to slow down anything moving at the speed of light.

Certainly, mere complication itself does not breed artificial intelligence any more than blinking strobe lights and repetitious bass knocks impart some omniscient invisible choreographerโ€™s hand on a group of tripping hippies or club clowns.

Before the clean well-lit conflagration, the visitor to Villarealโ€™s exhibit is met first by a brainwave-tweaking drone that seems to imitate the second-per-cycle hum and dub of electricity being squeezed like juice from the electromagnetic spectrum.

โ€œPrimordial,โ€ one of Villarealโ€™s most inspired and evocative pieces welcomes the visitor to the show. Itโ€™s the most human and humane of his work on display. Its Plexiglas-muddled LEDs seem to connote a live, ongoing MRI or CAT scan. The beating fetusโ€”certainly not meant to spark that debate, but rather to remind us that we are both outside and insideโ€”moves in pixilated bursts and creases. Visitors dance with โ€œPrimordialโ€ more than with any of Villarealโ€™s other piecesโ€”they step lightly forward, back away, squint, move forwardโ€”all an attempt to see if they do indeed have any effect on what theyโ€™re seeing.

Both โ€œOpen Airโ€ and โ€œSunburstโ€ seem to reflect sun cyclesโ€”the former a reddish solar minimum and the latter an activated yellow solar maximum.

โ€œI donโ€™t always know whatโ€™s going to happen,โ€ says Villareal of the moment when a new project gets plugged in and turned on. โ€œChance and randomness play their parts.โ€

While he says he used to write his own software, as the projects grew more complex, so did the code needed to cycle in and out of them. Heโ€™s now sourced that part out to experts.

Villareal is fascinated by synesthesia.

โ€œIโ€™m really interested in the remapping of the senses,โ€ he says, often wondering, โ€œWhat would some of these pieces sound like if you could hear them?โ€

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