Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts

11.30.2012

Post Digital : Computer Art Congress 3 : Recap

Okay! Ye$$$!!!!¡¡¡¡

bare with me - i'm just now back to central PA from abroad and my mind is racing. the last week has been an amazing experience : new countries, new peoples, new arts, new ideas : not 'new' entirely, but 'new' for me = double good times.

I'm going to post a little recap, but it will likely be dreadfully incomplete = too many things and too little spaces and captures to be conclusive.

Computer Art Congress 3 : Post Digital

check the website (i missed the group photo on a private tour around paris)

First of all, I was flattered to be included in this international event... and to have two inclusions made it that much more important to me. First, I displayed 'gridSol_altar1' and 2nd the paper I wrote with GOTO80 was published and I presented the text. These things sparked great conversations and I was pleased to be IRL in the environment of the congress. A general common thread I found within the proceedings could be summed up in questions regarding 'digital archiving' - i.e. should we archive? how should we archive? who selects/catalogs/organizes/controls archive? is it necessary? - which all, in a sense, point back to something i'm increasingly interested in: history/future of works/communities online: fundamentally, things come and go - sites move, change, go down, are reinvented, not updated, etc - all of which effect how/who can view/use our works. It is a large ball of wax, i think, and is sometimes good to see it play out although its quite messy. it would be naive to think I could present the tip of the iceberg here, so i'd rather share some photos and a few notes.

I'm deeply indebted to the generosity and accommodating spirit of the congress organizers: Khaldoun ZREIK and Robin Gareus

Our paper 'Future Potentials for ASCII art' in the published conference proceedings. We will be releasing it online fairly soon : stay tuned in

[me] presenting our paper on the first day of the conference!!!!! it was amazing and humorous to me to show giant ascii art on a jumbo sized screen in public. i guess its not so funny though since i'm interested in this topic and so present what i like to think about and consider this way makes sense.

the group N O R M A L S present their thoughts - i may have forgotten some of what they discussed, but I was enthralled with the idea of a speculative design process ( think speculative fiction or SF more generally ) and the presentation aesthetic was also quite interesting. Good conversation!

not pictured: U-RSS presented some ideas about the life of online works. A project of theirs that relied on api and streams from other online sources fell out of development, causing the work to die. they resolve to let the work die, to give it a burial, and not to emulate or recreate. i very much like this idea... if it has been documented in some form, then it doesn't go away completely. But perhaps it is good to allow ones own work to have a finish point - where it stops being available as it was originally created, almost like the photograph of a someone who has passed on into another life.

not pictured: everardo reyes-garcia presented some methods for disrupting 3D models/design. this was a really great work to see - its in a boundary with glitch aesthetics in that he has taken 3D forms and developed ways to manipulate the data into something else. The models explode/expand beyond their intended appearance - the information is the same, its processed and presented in a new/different form. also, i thought, because the work requires him to develop ways to move information or transcode it to be a model he can manipulate it - it may be interesting to try other ways i.e. interactive/kinetic/physical... woo hoo

The final forum/panel was a great chance to open up the common threadz discussionz. it was a really nice way to pull everything together - and rather than attempt to resolve - to open up the conversation and allow it to carry on.

performances

AnAhAtA - performed in the second evening of the events using custom physical controls. the sound moved back and forth - atmospheric, sometimes beat driven, evolving compositions : interesting to watch.

angel faraldo - this was perhaps my favorite performance, although somewhat impossible to describe adequately or photograph. It was a feedback based work, generated within the lecture/performance hall... very experience based, but demonstrating the control/uncontrol that i've come to love (this to me also relates to glitch aesthetics).

VehF - this was a livecoding performance to close the conference also. i know only a little about this sort of stuff, but as you could probably guess - i want to know more. if anyone out there wants to help me get started - i have some ideas re: feedback/ascii art/live that i want to do

exhibitions

the art exhibitions were in two atelliers close by the lecture hall. I only got a few photos. I'd like to describe and talk about everything... but instead I'll just mention a few things. Some great sound installations - can't really 'show' them to you since they, like performances, are meant to be experienced and can't be photographed per se. interactive and game works also fall in this end of the spectrum if you ask me - a momentary image doesn't capture what it is. these artists included: Paul Magee, Fred Périé, Can Henne, Kerry Hagan, Lyndal Hansby, and Lindsay Grace - these weren't the only artists involved, but the ones whose work I felt most drawn to and who I was able to talk to quite extensively.

Finally, I did get some time to visit the city as well. I went exploring with a friend (Agathé André ) but I'll share those photos another time. I can't stress enough, how interesting this experience was. thanks again, to everyone involved. CAC4 will be in Brazil I think in 2014, maybe I will see you there???? in the meantime, I have to get my presentation ready for GLI.TC/H !_!_!__!_!¡1¡1111¡¡¡¡¡111!!!!!!!!

10.03.2009

Byte Scrapers

The online exhibition Byte Scrapers at Unknown Artists Virtual Museum has included a drawing/collage of mine that was originally posted here "gridworks2000-blogdrawings-collage30".

I've been in another show of theirs, Pixel Project, early this past year, but am not sure if I mentioned it.

Thanks UAVM!!! And if you have some time this weekend, check it out!

9.08.2009

RCP.ML2K.PDFzine New Issue Available Today

A side project of mine now available in a new issue! Really excited about this one too!!!
Check it out:
Issue 2 Fall2009 "What We Do Is Secret"
cross-referencing the cycle of liberation/suppression

8.14.2009

Update/News

You may have recognized that (if you still read/view/use this space) that seem to have found a pattern. I'll continue this as long as necessary. The pattern looks something like this:

1 ascii drawing (theme) (Monday)
4 remix, modification drawings (variation) (Tuesday-Friday)
1 digital collage from previous 4 drawings (Friday)
1 animated gif from previous 4 drawings (Friday)

and as of today, I'll be adding the final step in the weekly gridworks2000 cycles:

1 webpage from the week (Friday/Saturday/Sunday)

This brings the weekly total to about 8 elements to fit within the gridworks2000 sub-category of my output. I just made some pages to catch up for lost time, so here is the first installment of this new step (there are three basic ones now):

gridworks2000-page1
Each page is clickable, to move to the next.
Enjoy, and have a good weekend!!!!!

7.21.2009

FILE 2009 & More

This past weekend I got a link to the new FILE 2009 website. Held in Sao Paulo, Brazil, FILE is the Electronic Language International Festival. My work will be show in the "Media Art" portion of the festival. I wish I could afford to go to Brazil for this. Lev Manovich is the keynote lecture and there is also a ton of other work that sounds interesting.

In other news, I'll be doing a special performance drawing/animation in Milwaukee in mid-September. More on that as I learn more!

7.12.2009

Sunday News

Just a quick update, then we'll start with more drawings on Monday again. Tonight was the second Upgrade! Milwaukee and the presentations were great. Nadav Assor showed some things close to my heart: digital camouflage, and layered video. His work looks really interesting because of the performative nature of the way in which the works become realized. Maria Bolivar also presented but I'm at a loss for a link right now. I was in school with her for a bit and her presentation was about her MA installation that brought issues surrounding her involvement and remembrances of the National Strike in her native Venezuela. This work was really interesting when I saw it last Spring.

In other news: just got notice I'll be included in the festival Pixilerations [v.6] in Providence, Rhode Island this coming Fall. I'm excited about this one because the general topic has to do with the current economic climate. My recent work, "gridworks2000-anim09" will be screened (also recently screened at Terminal in TN, Crosstalk in Budapest and soon to be in FILE in Sao Paulo). This work was created as a way to remember and recreate a series of work that I created while working in information visualization at Master-List2000. Although I am not at liberty to disclose the nature of my involvement with that organization, I can say that I was "laid-off" some time ago. Part of our severance agreement was that I destroy all copies of work created for them and allow them to own the only true copies but still retaining the rights to reproduce anything that I cared to from memory only. As a side note, (and still within my rights to disclose) I was never made entirely aware of the nature of the information that I analyzed for them. Anyway, I'm glad to see that the video is going to be seen more. And, since I'll pick back up the drawings tomorrow morning, its worth mentioning that the drawings posted here are a part of the same body of work described above. gridworks2000 is a subcategory of the Gridworks Collection Project Archive and takes on a few different forms most of which are first posted and made visible here.

6.30.2009

Upgrade Milwaukee

My friend Maria will be presenting! Here's the info:

For more information: http://digiwaukee.net/upgrade/

Upgrade! Milwaukee presents Nadav Assor and Maria Bolivar!
Sunday July 12, 7 - 9 PM
MOCT, 240 E Pittsburgh Ave
Milwaukee, WI 53204

Please come to the second Upgrade! Milwaukee, featuring Nadav Assor (Israel) and Maria Bolivar (Venezuela)!

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On Nadav Assor (also a founding member of Upgrade! Tel Aviv):
“I am greatly interested in theories and explorations of urban architectural, emotional and ideological sub-structures. One tactic I use in exposing and reshaping the structures around me is digitization, in the sense of reduction to a primal, reconfigurable matter. The transformed digital matter is recast into its original context, physically manipulated in an ongoing live process that ranges from the absurd to the violent. The outcome often presents various transgressions or inversions of the technological, socio-political structures that served as a starting point. Many of the mechanisms inherent in my work require palpable, physical effort or struggle to manipulate, thus exposing the constant friction between body and media. I do not want my devices to ‘run smoothly’.
My work has been shown in Berlin, Chicago, and in many Israeli venues, including several showings at the Israeli Center for Digital Art, the C.Sides International electronic media festival, the Laptopia festival, the Center for Contemporary Art in Tel-Aviv, The Haifa and Bat Yam Museums and more. I have received a 2006 Leumi (the Israeli national bank) award for excellence in the arts.
I am currently pursuing my MFA with full fellowship in the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.”

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Maria Bolivar was born in Caracas, Venezuela. She was significantly influenced by her father, Cesar Bolivar, who is a well-known film director in Latin America. After attending the most important design academy in Venezuela: El Instituto de Diseño de Caracas, Maria spent three years as a professional designer. Due to the violence and her involvement in the 2002 National Strike in Venezuela, Maria was forced to come to Milwaukee in where she received her BFA in communication design from the Institute of Art and Design (MIAD) in 2006. Maria is currently pursuing a Master’s of Fine Arts degree from the University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee with an intermedia focus.

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Upgrade! Milwaukee is a regular gathering of digital creatives - artists, musicians, performers, writers, curators and the public - that fosters dialogue and creates opportunities for collaboration within the local new media community. It features 1-3 guest speakers at each event, held at a rotating venue: informal, free, and open to all. We welcome suggestions for speakers, panels or gatherings. Upgrade! Milwaukee will continue to grow as a local node within the global Upgrade! International (UI) network.

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Upgrade! is an international, emerging network of autonomous nodes united by art, technology, and a commitment to bridging cultural divides. Its decentralized, non-hierarchical structure ensures that Upgrade! (i) operates according to local interests and their available resources; and (ii) reflects current creative engagement with cutting edge technologies. While individual nodes present new media projects, engage in informal critique, and foster dialogue and collaboration between individual artists, Upgrade! International functions as an online, global network that gathers in different cities to meet one another, showcase local art, and work on the agenda for the following year. There are currently over 30 nodes in UI, across North and South America, Africa, Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Second Life.