Recent diners at Jamie Oliver's flagship restaurant in Adelaide, Australia, would have had their experience enhanced by the work of Cardigan artist which was projected onto the side of the building as part of the city's Blinc festival.

Sean Vicary's work was chosen to help transform the city of Adelaide into a huge open gallery in one of the world's major celebrations of the arts, and a pre-eminent cultural event in Australia.

Sean's film Taxonomy, supported by Arts Council Wales, was displayed in the centre of Adeleide to crowds of over 150,000 visitors.

Sean, whose moving image pieces have been broadcast in the UK and exhibited worldwide, found inspiration for his new projected artwork in the life and works of Victorian naturalist Edmund Selous.

Edmund was a key pioneer in the 19th century, famous for studying birds and introducing the term 'bird watching'. His brother Frederick was an explorer, a big-game hunter and celebrated Victorian pin-up; but despite his good looks he lost the woman of his dreams, Fanny Maxwell, to his gentle natured brother.

Taxonomy takes place within an imagined museum display case. A succession of animated, evolving specimens representing aspects of the brothers Selous' story, their opposing attitudes to the natural world and their shared love interest.

It considers ideas of data collection, surveillance and industrialised violence and Selous's life is used as a metaphor for our human-centric viewpoint and continued valuing of the quantifiable above the subjective when dealing with the natural world.

The public can see Sean's piece at Small World Theatre's Open Screen Night on Saturday 9 May.