The 2011 Light Year Show at the Archway in DUMBO. Photo: Glowing Bulbs and John Ensor Parker, courtesy Leo Kuelbs.
The 2011 Light Year Show at the Archway in DUMBO. Photo: Glowing Bulbs and John Ensor Parker, courtesy Leo Kuelbs.

If you find yourself in DUMBO tonight, don’t miss “Transflexion: Net of Mirrors,” a light and sound art presentation under the Manhattan Bridge.

The projected display features video work by six artists (Danielle De PicciottoHelga GriffithsThomas LüerRobert SeidelCaspar Stracke, and Grazia Toderi) and an accompanying sound composition, INDRA, by Alexander Hacke.

This evening’s event, timed to coincide with DUMBO First Thursdaysmarks the fourth annual Light Year show at the archway. “Transflexion” debuted in Germany this spring, and is curated by Leo Kuelbs and Eike Berg.

Still from Net of Mirrors, by Danielle De Picciotto, part of “Transflexion: Net of Mirrors.”
Photo: courtesy Leo Kuelbs.

The show’s title takes its name for De Picciotto’s Net of Mirrors, a creepy video featuring a network of blinking human eyes.

All of the videos explore the theme of interconnectivity, from Stacke’s assortment of Flickr-sourced images from Seoul, Tehran, and New York, to Griffiths’s Neural Reflections, which is based on tomographic images of her brain.

“In some ways, it is about how digital-based work can bring people together, not only online, but also in different types of physical spaces,” Leo Kuelbs told the Creators Project.

Still from vitreous, by Robert Seidel part of “Transflexion: Net of Mirrors.”
Photo: courtesy Leo Kuelbs.

The audio and visual components of the show are not synced, so the music, according to the artist’s statement, will be “interacting with, commenting on, reflecting, emphasizing or possibly even contradicting the content of the visuals” as the ten-minute long piece plays on a loop throughout the evening.

“Transflexion” begins at dusk and ends at 10:00 p.m., but if you show up early, a block party under the archway featuring DJ Jesse Mann starts at 5:00 p.m.

Nearby art galleries will stay open until 9:00 p.m. for the First Thursday Gallery Walk.