Dripping water might trigger a need to go to the restroom for some, but Eve Warnock instead found inspiration for a production in trickling liquids.

Warnock, a graduating senior in art, said she started pouring paint onto canvas as a visual way to capture the trail of a pour but found that pouring also has audio qualities.

Her project, “Retrospective of the Pour Project,” will be held in Plumb Hall and delves further into Warnock’s exploration of pouring liquids by adding microphones to dripped upon surfaces.

“Retrospective of the Pour Project” was financed by an undergraduate research enrichment grant that Warnock received and consists of seven dripping water experiments, some accompanied by video projections and others with music.

In “Destruction to Creation” Warnock will create rhythm on a thin sheet of metal with water dripping on it as a film of an erupting volcano plays.

A volcano is the perfect example of something that destroys and also creates, Warnock said.

Warnock will use paint instead of water in “Public Execution in Blue,” a pour project that involves Warnock pushing shirts hung on hangars suspended by nooses through streams of blue paint.

The shirts will be covered with paint and will splatter the paint all over, Warnock said.

Eileen McDonough, a third year art student, will model in a pour project called “Mock water torture.”

McDonough will be dressed in all white with a white wig in front of a white background. She will sit beneath a bucket that drips water on her head for the entire two hours of the show.

McDonough said she has only sat beneath the water for 10 minutes and acknowledges that she will be very wet and possibly cold.

“I’m a little worried about it, but I think it will still be an interesting experience,” McDonough said.

Warnock will also have a band comprised of a bass player, percussionist, electric guitarist, and someone playing an aluminum sheet. The band will play during a piece entitled “The Pour Project Band.”

Josef Salyer, an independent film-maker, created lighting for “Retrospective of the Pour Project” and will be filming the production.

Salyer created spotlights from paint cans and PVC pipes.

“I took an industrial approach to lighting the show,” Salyer said.

Warnock is filming “Retrospective of the Pour Project” for the application of a grant from the Ohio Arts Council.

The project will be performed at 8 p.m. today in Plumb Hall.