Heliogram is a limited edition flexi publication that combines   field recordings by Robin Watkins with a suite of riso prints by Nina Canell.   In their own ways, they consider the ecological effects of static   electricity by tapping into a field of intermingling energy signatures.
	For Heliogram, Robin Watkins used a handheld receiver to modulate   energy into a hearable range, capturing a stream of hum harmonics in   real time. Locating low-frequency audio signals from midge-wings within   the magnetosphere, it is a direct channeling of atmospheric electricity,   pressed on a transparent flexi sheet. 
The recording is accompanied by   12 risograph-printed images from the series Polyethylene Feels by Nina   Canell. Caused by the branching of microcharges, copper particles follow   the indeterminate behavior of ions, exposing sudden intricate   arrangements on plastic polyethylene sheets. Buildup and traces left   behind by fingers, hair, mechanical production processes, and folding   are some of the electrostatic presences that register in the prints.
	Limited edition of 125 copies.
		Born 1980 in Stockholm, Robin Watkins lives and works in Berlin.
		Born 1979 in  Växjö (Sweden), Nina Canell lives and works in Berlin. Her installations give concrete expression to the lightness and intangibility of the everyday. The natural materials she presents—water, stone, air, earth, wood, copper—are traversed by electric arcs and heat sources, giving rise to delicate, ephemeral physical reactions that reveal and underscore our innate relationship with our immediate environment. Her work has recently been shown at the Moderna Museet (Stockholm), the Camden Arts Centre (London), the Sydney Biennial,  at MoMA and the Swiss Institute (New York), and at the 
 13th Lyon Biennale.