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01 June 2005 by nathaniel

Rhythm_01 – VJ event + experimental interactive elements

…reblogged from christo on Art & Techonology, Johannesburg (AT.joburg)…

Kicking off this Friday (3 June) is Rhythm_o1, the first of several events inspired by the visit of New York VJ, digital artist and theatre designer, Josh Goldberg.
josh goldberg
VJ Josh Goldberg at the annual Burning Man Festival, Black Rock Desert, Nevada

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Josh Goldberg, a top New York City VJ is the first digital artist in residence at Wits Digital Arts this June. Organised by Wits Digital Arts together with AT.joburg, his visit is designed to expose Johannesburg artists and musicians to a new kind of video artist, the VJ, who mixes live visuals and effects together with music. Josh will be hosting various workshops as well as a cutting-edge live performance at Carfax on the 11 June and a presentation of a site-specific work at the Johannesburg Art Gallery on the 17th.

carfaxcarfax_bagexhibits
Carfax: conceptual by nature in downtown Johannesburg. Scene from the 2004 group exhibition, Cube.

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With the rapidly growing popularity and increasing visibility of VJs, an exciting variety of visual styles have emerged from around the world, ranging from conceptual work which overlaps with contemporary art to hardcore psychosis-inducing trance. Like a DJ mixes audio, VJs mix imagery with sound using multiple sources of media to project them on to large-scale screens at parties, at events and in clubs.

underworld in performance with vj/design group, tomato
The group Underworld in performance with British vj/design collective, Tomato.

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eyewash
VJ Jay from the Brooklyn, USA group, Trigger Motion.

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Rhythm_01 will be an opportunity to participate in a music, visuals and dance event at Carfax, in Newtown, Johannesburg. A bunch of the top local VJs (christo_d and matr-x with guests) will be blasting images in sync with the left-field house beats supplied by DJs Glenn, Pierre, and Greg. This combination has happened before, but the totally new ingredient to the mix will be the Max/MSP patches developed by the Interactive MA students from Wits Digital Arts, under the leadership of lecturer, Nathaniel Stern.

Wits Digital Arts Interactive MA class of 2005
The 2005 Wits Interactive Media Design class – Nic (mentor); Mitch; Mac (with the cap); Tegan; Onica; Mayav, & Nicky – checking out the venue for Rhythm_01 . . . the sidebar at Carfax, Newtown.

The whole system will run on two lightning fast Apple PowerMac G5s, sponsored by Apple IMC Southern Africa….

Um, like. am not sure where carfax website is, but found one here and one here

Posted in art, art and tech, me, poetry, pop culture, south african art, technology ·

Archives

31 May 2005 by nathaniel

the goldberg is coming

hot sh!t VJ and digiart events over the next few weeks in Joburg, thanks to NYC and internationally acclaimed visiting artist, Josh Goldberg (landing tomorrow). watch this space for announcements, soon….

Posted in art, art and tech, me, music, pop culture, south african art, technology, uncategorical ·

Archives

27 May 2005 by nathaniel

blogging the commons

re-mixing culture - nathaniel stern and lawrence lessig

me & the double L (that’s the larry to the lessig) remix

Howdy y’all. Am at the commons sense conference, and was just on a panel discussion with Megan Knight (PhD Wits), Vincent Maher (New Media Lab, Rhodes/Grahamstown) and Matthew Buckland (Mail & Guardian online).

It was a pretty cool panel, tho admittedly a lot was centered around the debate of “what gets to be journalism” (this, which often gets confused for value – like the old “what gets to be art” debate – doesn’t interest me much) – still, there was plenty of provocation around freedoms, positive connotations to the amateur, helping creative economies through the creative commons, and even a few jokes (gasp!). I have to say that everyone I saw and met at the whole conference was excitable, and exciting – some super interesting and smart people who want to add something to the world!

My own presentation was a re-mix of one I found here by our keynote, Larry Lessig. It was pretty much a hit, if I do say so myself, and I promised Lessig et al I’d put it online.

Download it (3.3 MB powerpoint presentation + quicktime movie that you may need to point to the first time you open it – slide no. 32)

Other links:
You can get the Mac and PC fonts here.
Commenter’s blog

Posted in art, art and tech, music, news and politics, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, technology, theory ·

Archives

26 May 2005 by nathaniel

Cape Town Project

posted by request….

The youth of Cape Town and Amsterdam, two cities that are both torn and connected by history, convene in this project and show a new urban reality through the use of the arts. Artists are invited to submit relevant work on the website.

Want to see your work on the world wide web? Want to share your urban experience? Interested in connection? Join artists, designers and photographers from Cape Town and Amsterdam in this unique web-based project.

Visit www.unseencity.uct.ac.za

Posted in art, art and tech, south african art ·

Archives

25 May 2005 by nathaniel

li’l larry lessig

lawrence lessig in johannesburg

Lawrence Lessig giving his presentation to a bunch of Joburgers at Wits

Lawrence Lessig, digital copyright guru, Stanford Professor of Law, advocate of creativity, and chairman for creative commons, gave a talk to a bunch of artists and businesspeople over at Wits yesterday afternoon. It was really great. Most of the gist of his talk can be found here; it was about Exclusive Rights vs. non-Exclusive Rights economies, how we need both to foster creativity, and that there needs to be a space between the two, where the world can reside (and thanks to America, this is not happening… we are leaning too far to the "ER" economy). It was actually a pat on the back. Look at Joburg’s small community of bloggers (JoBlog, plankman for example) and anti-copyrighters (Christian Nerf, Aryan Kaganof for example) who both encourage re-mixing their work, and also sell their "big guns" to the likes of collectors/consumers. I, myself, have a CC blog (with loads of content – text and images – I’ve seen re-used), and also give away a lot of my software source code, video, images, etc, to any who ask… On the flipside, I use this popularity to sell works like step inside to the JAG (did I mention they bought it? First sale of a digital interactive installation in the country!) as an edition of 3, and promise NOT to copy it and distribute. It was cool to hear how cool we are. And he also said a lot of other stuff I hadn’t thought of that was pretty smart. Watch Lawrence Lessig for more – he says he posts all his content online, and for free. Oh, and also check out creative commons and ccmixter – the remix family tree. Creative commons, south africa launch party tonight, 17h30, Rosebank Hotel. Don’t miss it!

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, news and politics, pop culture, south african art, technology, theory ·

Archives

24 May 2005 by nathaniel

rhizome.org is now free again!!!

Rhizome.org is a member-supported non-profit organization. We depend on our community for financial support, but we also need their active participation in our programs. When we enacted a $5 membership requirement in January 2003, we thought that such a policy would balance our need for a stable revenue source with our mission to serve new media arts communities around the world. However, having reviewed Rhizome’s usage and subscription statistics and having recognized that online communities now rely on blogs and Google, we have concluded that our membership policy was stifling wide-scale participation in our online programs. We have rethought and restructured our membership policy to make Rhizome more inclusive, relevant, and open.

As of today, anyone, regardless of whether they have donated to Rhizome or not, will be able to post or access Rhizome content from the last year simply by signing up for free. This content includes artworks in the ArtBase, or texts published on Rhizome Raw, or Rare; anyone will be able to subscribe to Raw, Rare and Rhizome Digest, and review discussions from the last year. Artworks and texts that are *more than one year old* will reside in Rhizome Archives. Only Rhizome Members will be able to access the Rhizome Archives. From now on, site users will have to make an annual contribution of $25 to be considered a Rhizome Member.

more….

Posted in art, art and tech, technology, uncategorical ·
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nathaniel’s books

Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

from Amazon.com

Buy Interactive Art for $30 directly from the publisher

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

from Amazon.com

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