Dream Director
The Dream Director is a touring installation[1] by artist Luke Jerram, which continues the artist's exploration of creating art inside people's heads ("on the edges of perception") rather than in the physical world.
Participants in the Dream Director (usually 20 in total) stay overnight in specially designed sleep pods. Each participant wears an eye mask[2] which detects Rapid Eye Movement. When a mask detects the participant is in REM - and is therefore probably dreaming - the participant is played a short sound clip through speakers embedded in his or her sleep pod.[3] Each participant is assigned a certain sound set for the night, although they do not find out what sounds they were being played until the following morning (after they have written down any dreams they had). Each sound set is a group of sound effects with a specific theme: early experiments showed that being played a wide variety of sound effects confused and exhausted the sleeper.[4]
By playing themed sounds to sleepers when they are dreaming, it is hoped to alter the content of their dreams. For instance, sound effects evoking large echoey spaces might result in dreams set in large or open spaces.[5] The question of whether a participant's altered dream could be said to be art is still open to debate, and indeed Jerram encourages this discussion.
The Dream Director is part art, part science: participants' dreams are analysed by sleep researchers at the University of the West of England.[4] One possible outcome of this research is to see if techniques similar to the Dream Director can help people who suffer from sleep disorders such as recurring nightmares.
References
- Touring schedule 2008-09 Archived March 25, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- A specially modified REM Dreamer
- Paul Bignell, "The stuff of dreams", The Independent, 23 November 2008, retrieved 9 December 2008.
- Juliet Rix, "The big sleep experiment", The Times, July 7 2007, retrieved 9 December 2008.
- As described by participants in the short film by Kate Taunton Archived March 25, 2009, at the Wayback Machine