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23 June 2006 by nathaniel

[odys]elicit now CC / GPL and ready for download!

odys elicitFriday 23 June 2006, live from the iCommons iSummit:

[odys] elicit – a full-body, interactive art installation circa 2001 – is now available under a Creative Commons By Attribution Non-Commercial Share-Alike license, and the source code is available under GPL. It works with almost any standard webcam (requiring a few drivers on PC)!

[odys]elicit is a large scale, interactive installation where every movement of the viewer, small or sweeping, births stuttering text onscreen. The viewer’s motion elicits, character by character, passages from odys’ text. The piece responds to small movements, writing the text onscreen slowly for the viewer to read, or to rapid passersby, whose full bodies birth hundreds of flying characters, impossible to decode.

In odys’ work, viewers are forced to look at the spaces between language and meaning, the luxuries of stuttering and silence as communication, and the effects of accelerated and decelerated time. [odys]elicit physically places viewers at the center of co-invented noise, forced to perform – willingly or not. odys’ text has been reduced down to where it no longer has meaning and is re-birthed, with possibly infinite meanings, or none at all.

Click here to see videos of the piece in action.

Dowloading:
Please first check out the read_me file – the PC application requires some extra (free) installs, and you can very easily change video settings or sources, input new text, toggle between birthing letters or full words, adjust the motion tracking tolerance levels given different lighting, or change the direction the text will go on the fly!Send me error messages if you encounter any bugs, or have much success! I am yet to fully test the OS 9 or PC versions. Oh, and about any parties or exhibitions that this thing is a hit at, too ;)

read_me.rtf
OS X Application
OS 9 Application
PC Application (still testing)
Source Code (in Director/Lingo + TTC-Pro; demo versions of these will work)

@ Rio iSummit

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, flickr, me, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

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22 June 2006 by nathaniel

Live from Rio

Hell-ish travel and confusion (dropped at the wrong hotel, wrong date for booking), not too bad jet-lag (considering), and awesome peops at the iCommons iSummit in Rio. Am psyched to re-release [odys]elicit under CC / GPL – I added all kinds of easy-to use menus for custom functionality. Mac.app working great, and I’m hoping to test the PC version in the morrow (but will post the untested compiled version either way, ask for bug reports). Running around to install and see a bit of the town before tomorrow. Will be sure to blog and flickr stuff when/as the conference starts!

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, flickr, me, pop culture, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·

Archives

20 June 2006 by sean slemon

Solid Light opens at David Krut Arts Resource

Solid Light
by Sean Slemon at David Krut Arts Resource
opens on 22 June at 18:00 @ 140 Jan Smuts Avenue, Parkwood
.

Lightness and Being
by nathaniel stern

Sean Slemon’s latest body of work strikes an almost sublime balance between the frivolous, and the momentous. Both a departure from, and continuation of, his last series – which saw three Gauteng solo shows, and won him the Sasol New Signatures award in 2005 – it accents the absurdity, and necessity, of space.

In an informal chat with Slemon while browsing through images of his work, we talked about how architecture is really just a carving out, a framing, of Nothing. His pieces literally draw out this relationship.

Slemon follows beams of light from a windowpane to the floor, and builds solid-but-transient structures of string around them. There’s a witty lightness – literally and metaphorically – to these constructions, which have to make you smile. They are performances within performances, ephemeral arrangements that play off the daily magic of the setting sun. The impossibility of the light’s refractions and distortions, played up by occasional twists or turns in the string, is almost surreal. Slemon simultaneously extrudes, maps and warps light and space, curiously, rather than forcefully.

But there’s also an incredible weight to the questions these installations implicitly ask.  What would the world be like if we could build a home out of light and shadow? What would it mean to Soweto, to New Orleans? Conversely, Slemon highlights the commoditization of Nothing, the sociopolitical questions around finance and ownership. Who gets to build, sell or live inside?

In another of Slemon’s works, he gained legal permission from the Chief of Forestry
at New York City’s Parks and Recreation Department to  down several dead street trees, throughout the island of Manhattan. The hassle of obtaining a permit and finally securing the trees, from what it sounds like, was a comedy of bureaucratic errors worthy of Telkom-like performance art on its own. The plan from here is to splice these trees in half and install a sculptural forest within the confines of a public foyer.  Again, Slemon interrogates notions of inside/outside, growth and light, but with a nuanced allusion to death and the cityscape. The genius is in its simplicity, and how comfortable windows and trees make us feel, even in a restricted space.

For Solid Light, Sean Slemon’s solo show @ David Krut Arts Resource, he will create one of his site-specific window/light installations, and is producing a series of etchings that both document and dialogue with the aforementioned works. These are drawings that portray light-casted edifices, interior forests, and memorialized street trees – all relaying a tangible softness and careful humor, with his trademarked hint to larger uncertainties.

Slemon’s work is fragmentation, distortion and refraction, framed. From his new sketches that turn trees into bound marionettes, to his now-known possession of space through careful measuring, he is confusing our notions of constitution, and asking us to enjoy being confused. Don’t miss this fascinating exhibition @ David Krut Arts Resource on Thursday June 22nd at 18:00.

140 Jan Smuts Avenue, Parkwood.
 Tel: 011 880 4242
 www.davidkrutpublishing.com
 www.davidkrut.com
 09h00-17h00, Sat 09h00-16h00

Posted in art, art and tech, me, reviews, sean slemon, south african art, uncategorical ·

Archives

18 June 2006 by nathaniel

hektor goes CC

hektor.net
screen shot from hektor.net

hektor.net, my old skool (2000), award-winning and recently archived net.art project (say this ten times fast: The Rose Goldsen Archive of New Media, a Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, of the Cornell University Library) has just been (like, uploading as I hit the publish button) re-released under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License. I say something like this on the site:

Sorry to say that since I made this site, I’ve lost all my source flash files (dude, I was like, 23, and just starting out, you know?), but you are welcome to import and re-mix with whatever technologies you see fit / are able to. Click here to download this entire site in one zipped up file (30 MBs of movs, swfs, and html – I can’t believe I ever made sites without CSS).

Why, you ask? Well, it’s in celebration of the first iCommons iSummit, of course! I’ll be heading to Rio (w00t!) as the "Creative Commons Artist in Residence" on Wednesday. Watch this space for live blogging, and a CC/GPL re-release of [odys]elicit, too (will give compiled Apple/PC versions as well as source code, but you’ll need Director and the TTC-Pro Xtra – or their demo versions – for the latter).

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, me, poetry, pop culture, south african art, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·

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13 June 2006 by nathaniel

PJ geek a-go-go

From Paddy Johnson (via email):

Dear friends and colleagues,
This email is sent to announce Geeks in the Gallery, an Interview series between artists Michael Bell-Smith, Tom Moody, and myself which runs on Art Fag City <http://www.artfagcity.blogspot.com>  from Monday June 12 (today [er, yesterday]) through Wednesday, June 14.  I am particularly pleased with the results of this discussion as I think the artists do a excellent job at explaining some of tech concerns their art brings to the surface, as well as providing some very lively debate about these subjects and more.  Tom Moody will be hosting comments <http://www.digitalmediatree.com/tommoody/comment/36471/>  during this time on his site, so I encourage you to join us there for further discussion.

Best regards,

Paddy Johnson  

Posted in art, art and tech, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

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12 June 2006 by nathaniel

V / A & P (various art and press) updated below

The closing party this weekend at Outlet went well – aside from the aforementioned NY Arts and MacFormat features on the series, also check out these glowing reviews in Die Beeld (English translation) and Pretoria News; there’s not a bad one on LQF, either. Abrie has decided to let the show run an extra week, so get out to TUT campus if you haven’t yet!

Finally, take a look at my flickr to see pix from the closing on Saturday, from the Memento performance yesterday, and new images of Sidonie – now 20 days old!

update – beeld article translation now live (rumor has it that the original Afrikaans is way more poetic, but you get the idea)

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, flickr, me, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·
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Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

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Buy Interactive Art for $30 directly from the publisher

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Ecological Aesthetics: artful tactics for humans, nature, and politics

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