Rafael Mizrahi: Dreamachine Experience

Dreamachine Experience

"A visual and emotional experience that your brain creates with your eyes closed"



An unusual audio and visual emotional experience that the audience goes through with their eyes closed.
The dream machine emits light and sound patterns that prompt the audience, whose eyes are closed, to spontaneously create perceptual, dramatic and unexpected hallucinations synchronized with the music played by the artist.

The Dream Machine draws inspiration from the work of artist Brian Gysin and writer William Burroughs, who are known as pioneers of the clipping method, later used by David Bowie and Radiohead, to produce random lyrical phrases. In 1959, Gysin developed a device that, by emitting flickering bursts of light, created vivid and colorful illusions in the eyes of the viewer.

Over sixty years after the original invention, the dream machine is rebuilt in a progressive and powerful way of an emotional and collective experience, with advanced vibration capabilities synchronized with binaural frequencies and music played by the artist and creator Rafael Mizrahi.






The DreamMachine draws inspiration from the work of artist Brian Gysin and writer William Burroughs, who are known as pioneers of the cut-up method later used by David Bowie and Radiohead to produce random lyrical phrases. In the 1950s, Gysin developed a device that, by emitting flickering bursts of light, created vivid and colorful illusions in the viewer's eyes. 


The DreamMachine takes advantage of the brain's natural tendency to produce hallucinations in response to specific sensory inputs. Science indicates that dreamlike hallucinations can be caused by flashing lights on closed eyelids at the same frequency as the brain wave oscillations when we are relaxed and awake with our eyes closed.



The DreamachineX works on the same principle with advanced flickering and colors capabilities synchronized using MIDI, DMX and Frequency controlled by the music played by artist and creator Rafael Mizrahi.








Copyright © Rafael Mizrahi Urang-kurai