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Available Dates
1st October 2025 - 31st December 2027
Exhibition Size
75 - 100 square or running metres
Price
Contact to discuss price
Originating State
VIC

Noisy Eyes

With this new exhibition Daniel O’Toole presents a new body of textural colour field paintings that investigate the perceptual distortions associated with Visual Snow Syndrome (VSS)—a neurological condition that causes continuous visual static, comparable to film grain or analogue television interference. This series evolves from an ongoing photographic project titled Cosmic Soup, in which 35mm film is deliberately degraded through chemical interventions using household
substances.

These interventions disrupt the image surface in ways that parallel the persistent visual interference experienced in VSS, where the field of vision is constantly overlaid with a field of flickering lights. The process reflects O’Toole’s interest in how sensory distortions can be both externalised and aestheticised through material experimentation.

The transition from photography to painting is not merely a shift in medium but part of a broader investigation into the overlaps between sound, image, and touch. Central to this interdisciplinary approach is The Particle Plate, an experimental sound interface developed during a residency at Outer Magnolia in Northern New South Wales. The device captures the impact of dropped particles—such as mung beans and chickpeas—on metal plates and converts these into audio signals and MIDI
data, effectively transforming random physical gestures into structured sonic outputs. The performative use of this instrument draws from traditions in sound art and its intersections with kinetic and conceptual practices, recalling works by artists such as Max Neuhaus and Rolf Julius.

The same particles used in the audio experiments are redeployed in the painting process, establishing a feedback loop between sensory modalities and media. This integrated approach resonates with the legacy of synaesthetic art—from Kandinsky’s theories of spiritual vibration to the multi-sensory experiments of 1960s expanded cinema—while remaining
grounded in the personal, lived experience of perceptual disorder.

O’Toole’s earlier Refraction Painting series employed frosted acrylic surfaces to create actual refraction events, physically bending and scattering light across the painted surface. In contrast, Noisy Eyes marks a return to raw surface painting. These works distil the flicker and pulse of visual noise into static yet densely layered chromatic fields. Rather than reproducing perception literally, they evoke the cognitive pressure and sensory overload of VSS through painterly means—resulting in immersive surfaces that are both chaotic and compositionally controlled.

Exhibition Video

About the Artists

Daniel O'Toole

Artist Video

About the Curators

Byron Bowman Kehoe / Daniel O'Toole

Supporting Materials

Artist TalkCatalogue / BookDigital CatalogueFloor ListInstallation Support AvailableInvitations or Invitation TemplateMaterials for InvitationsMedia KitMedia ReleasePublic Program OpportunitiesPublic Workshops

Other Materials

The Link below is to show the Particle plate, (interactive audio visual installation element in action) https://vimeo.com/1125752597?share=copy

I can facilitate, community workshops about sound and using electronic instruments to make music. Groups of up to 12 people. I would also be open to performing an ambient/experimental set with some of my own custom made instruments. The Essay by Caroline Field will be made available for future exhibitions as part of the supporting text. The Visual Snow institute in California have offered to provide some support material, writing in relation to VSS.

Primary Contact

Lana designer mgnsw df comms@mgnsw.org.au

Acknowledgements

Caroline Field- For her Essay

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