Simon Starling
D1-Z1 (22,686,575:1), 2009
Artist
Simon Starling
Title
D1-Z1 (22,686,575:1)
Year of creation
2009
Technology and duration
35 mm film looped, film projector D1
Year of acquisition
2010
Acquisition of the foundation
The abbreviation Z1 in the title of Starling's work refers to the first freely programmable computer, which was designed in 1936 by the engineer and artist Konrad Zuse (1910-1995). With 172 bytes of storage capacity and the ability to add, subtract, multiply and divide, the Z1 was privately financed and built by Zuse in his Berlin apartment. Completed in 1938, the computer was programmed with a punched tape that Zuse made from regular 35 mm photo film strip.
Starling's film, in turn, was animated using the latest computer animation technology and with the help of a surface rendering program also developed in Berlin. Calculating this 30 second sequence showing the paper tape reader (a small part of the huge machine) required 3,992,837,240 bytes of storage, over 22 million times the storage capacity of the Z1. This computer-generated virtual reconstruction was then transferred back to 35mm film. The film is shown on the D1 projector, designed in Dresden in the middle of the last century. The title of the work therefore names the type of computer and the name of the projector on which Starling presents the film.