A placid pedestrian walks, as usual, along the narrow sidewalks of the Kattenburgerstraat underpass in Amsterdam. However, a new light is shining where previously only darkness was glimpsed: it is the Het Licht van Jan (Jan's Light) lighting installation. Located in a central industrial traffic crossing, this creation by Matthias Oostrik is activated to the rhythm of passers-by on the worn slabs of its sidewalks.

Developed commissioned by the city of Amsterdam and under the patronage of the Amsterdam Fund for the Arts, the work consists of growing projections of light that are undulatingly illuminated against the old tiles. Alluding to the history of the city, the reflections recreate the fall of the sun's rays on the water that previously flooded the area, now replaced by artificial islands.
To create Het Licht van Jan, Matthias Oostrik employs a simple arrangement of steel grilles and widely spaced lights that he places in triads on either side of the road. With its cool white light, it contrasts with the warm orange tones of the street lamps, interacting with the surface creating moiré patterns using digital technology.

Historically, many places in the Dutch capital have been characterized by the presence of these passes over the water that, in the 19th century, would be covered by strips of artificial earth for the railroad. With this, Oosttrik's work not only recovers the aquatic past of these places but also instills a sense of security in walkers.
 

Description of project by Matthias Oostrik

The light installation Het Licht van Jan (Jan's light) was unveiled today in an industrial traffic underpass near Amsterdam's city center. In the artwork by Matthias Oostrik, passersby activate surging light projections that illuminate the narrow sidewalk and weathered walls of the underpass. These undulating projections echo Amsterdam's history, recreating the reflections of sunbeams on the water, now replaced by artificial islands. To create the dynamic projections that move with the passersby, Het Licht van Jan uses a surprisingly simple arrangement of steel grates and widely spaced lights. 

Matthias' artworks enable new and unusual connections between people and their surroundings. Using digital technology, his installations respond to visitors with changing light, video, or sound, allowing visitors to reshape their environment. His works in public space are often functional. They contribute to a sense of security and are designed to last. 

An early and well-received example of his work is the Bijlmer Moodwall (2009), located in a pedestrian passage in Amsterdam. This interactive facade reacts to visitors with playful streaks of light that move alongside them. In the recent installation A Trail of Water (2020) in the Dutch city of Assen passing trains trigger a unique light composition: A waterfall of light cascading down over the concrete embankment and overgrown slopes of an overpass.

Het Licht van Jan is activated by pedestrians who walk on the narrow sidewalks of the Kattenburgerstraat underpass. In the darkest parts of the tunnel, they trigger bright projections of light. On the aged tile walls, beams of light move along with the pedestrians, while on the sidewalk, waves of light gently sway towards them. 

The projections, three on either side of the road, are created by shining a row of ultra-bright lights through a series of custom-designed grates. The shadows of the unique grates interact to create moiré patterns, producing entirely different effects on both the wall and the floor. In stark contrast with the existing warm, almost orange streetlights, the projections use cold white light.

Like so many places in Amsterdam, the underpass is located on a historical site, where several natural and constructed bodies of water existed before the railway was constructed on an artificial strip of land in the late 19th century. Het Licht van Jan brings back this past by reviving both the flow of water on the ground as well as the sunlight radiating through the railway tracks on the walls.

Het Licht van Jan is developed in commission by the City of Amsterdam and is supported by the Amsterdam Fund for the Arts.

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Artist
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Collaborators
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Technical design and construction.- Spectro Productions. LED technology.- Invent Design.
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Client
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Builder
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J. Boonzaaijer Aannemingsbedrijf.
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Developer
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Dimensions
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Approx. 40 m. wide.
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Data set
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Type.- permanent light installation. Materials.- steel, concrete. Media.- 160 channel light, 12 channel optic sensor. Runtime.- infinite. Software.- C++.
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Dates
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2021.
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Location
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Amsterdam, Netherlands.
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Matthias Oostrik works at the intersection of digital art, installation art, film and architecture. His artworks establish unexpected and unpredictable relationships between people and their surroundings. Using digital technology, his installations respond to visitors with transforming light, video, or sound, enabling visitors to reshape their environment.

Matthias Oostrik collaborates with renowned performance artists, neuroscientists, engineers and, crucially, his audience, who often become an integral part of his award-winning work: From the poetical, blending human expression and algorithms into visual landscapes. Past the irrational, inverting surveillance technology to activate audiences. To the impossible, using EEG brainwave devices to create intimacy.
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Published on: March 12, 2021
Cite: "Light Projections for the underground walker. Het Licht van Jan by Matthias Oostrik" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/light-projections-underground-walker-het-licht-van-jan-matthias-oostrik> ISSN 1139-6415
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