The Michael Theodore show in the David B. Smith gallery was pretty incredible. His work was the first thing you notice when walking in. At first I thought that all the main piece did was change color automatically but when I walked up and go closer to it the back of the piece started moving close to where I was standing, and the color of the piece was different where I was standing compared to the rest of the piece. I walked back and forth in front of the piece and the color and movement moved along with me. I also noticed that there was sort of a beach sound, like waves and the wind, that got louder the closer you got to the piece and got softer the further away you were from the piece, and it got so soft that the sound wasn’t even noticeable when you’re standing five feet away. I took a look at some of his other pieces around the corner, they weren’t interactive but they were still just as incredible. There were three canvases with this sort of etched pattern on each of them in a radial design. There were also smaller canvases scattered across one wall with the same sort of pattern that was on the interactive piece but they were done in the way that the bigger canvases were made. Overall I think that Michael Theodore’s exhibit was very modern, interesting, creative, and just really cool to look at and interact with. The only thing I was disappointed about was that there was only one of his interactive pieces and I wish that the gallery could have had room for more of them.