In audiovisual artist Claudia Robles' new exhibition at the Harvest Works Gallery, the viewer very much dictates the work. Using a GSR (Galvanic Skin Response) interface, SKIN is an exhibition which measures participants' skin moisture and transforms the data into an audiovisual experience. It's of interest not only in bringing emotions to the forefront, but in the ways responses and reactions can change the tone of the work in the moment. By doing so the human body is re-imagined as an artist's work tool, painting the room with colour and also operating as a musical instrument.

The GSR used in SKIN is a biofeedback interface that is usually used to help calm anxious people. The skin's moisture, once measured, is converted into colour using MAX software. Each participant wearing the GSR is then responsible for the room with blue colours representing a relaxed state and orange representing a more anxious environment.