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24 February 2006 by nathaniel

robot clothes

LED throwies in the streets of NYC
LED throwies in the streets of NYC

James Powderly is currently a Research & Development fellow at Eyebeam in Chelsea, NYC – a fantastic gallery-space-like residency program for art-geeks that work in new media, "etc". On a more personal note, when we were grad students, James was a huge friend and resource in helping to set up my first-ever group exhibition (Johnson Museum, upstate New York); he "gave" me the term Compressionism – something he came up with for a series of his own interactive videos about five years ago, but is letting me have for my prints right now; and he videotaped my and Nicole’s wedding (tho I still have not edited that) – just to name a few niceties. So yes, I am biased, but he was also a director at Honeybee Robotics for a number of years, so we know he is ‘wicked smaht.’ One of his many current goings-on:

Robot Clothes is an art and commercial research and development partnership, specializing in robotic systems, interaction design and product prototyping. This partnership, formed in 2002 by Michelle Kempner and James Powderly, utilizes a hybrid fine art and commercial design and engineering approach to support innovative science and technology development efforts for clients including fortune 100 companies, NASA and internationally renowned artists, such as Diller + Scofidio and Miranda July. In addition to contracted research and development efforts, Robot Clothes internally supports fine art projects ranging from a robotic public sculpture for Central Park to an animatronic opera about Crohn’s Disease.

Dude.

Also, James’ Eyebeam crew recently teamed up with the Graffiti Research Lab to produce the above Electro-Graf – a "graffiti piece or throw-up that uses conductive and magnetic paint to embed LED display electronics." Check out the link for an awesome ‘LED Throwies’ video – hit the streets, throw little trinkets at the walls that stick and light up, and so ‘write’ with live LEDs on the sides of buildings!

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

Archives

20 February 2006 by nathaniel

nathaniel is SUPERCOOL

Under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial Share-Alike license; thanks to Cary Peppermint for being so SUPERCOOL. I know I could not have done this without you. I’m on the path, I know it, I can feel it, cuz I don’t care:

nathaniel is SUPERCOOL video
nathaniel is SUPERCOOL video link, 424kb, 7 seconds

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, me, news and politics, poetry, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·

Archives

19 February 2006 by nathaniel

Happy 3rd b-day, blog!

No sh!t. Tomorrow, the NAN blog is three years old! As I write this, we are at “1,010 posts and 393 comments, contained within 25 categories.” On February 20th, 2003, I started using blogger in a frame on the front page of this (back then, a very different) site, to say, in my very first post:

So, I decided to take a leaf out of the books of josh and jonah and start a weblog on my site. This is the first week of the class I’m lecturing at MCAD, and things are looking good so far. In other news, odys, Nathaniel, hektor, x goes up in Cape Town on Saturday and [odys]elicit has been selected as an exhibition piece for The Chiangmai First New Media Art Festival [note: used to link, but now dead], Thailand. More to come…

Funny, Josh never really updated his blog (like, three times in 3 years) and Jonah, at that point, really just used it for news in a pop-up (and later down the road started the awesome Coin-Op blog, tho this has taken a back seat to his other great writings for more popular web sites). But hey, I didn’t know, and wanted to join (what I perceived to be) the cool club! Art Fag City says that, “2004 saw the rise of blogs in popular mainstream media, but the art community has started to see this medium explode only recently,” and MTAA-RR also only celebrated its 3rd b-day this month, so I am Mos Def an Innovator (early 2003! do I get double points for being in SA, and kind of still being the only art blogger?) and am undoubtedly in good company. (Shout out to Tim – the ‘T’ in MTAA – wazzup?) I win. W00+.

Some highlights of blogging here have been, I think:

  • Kaganof as a one-year guest, now into his own spin-off: Kagablog
  • WordPress upgrade (thanks, Jonah!), and I have since designed 3 Open Source – GPL – WordPress 2.0 themes:
    • NAN
    • stuttering
    • artsemerging – UPDATED 30 August 2007, now widget-compatible!
  • Guest blogging (the very first!) on networked_performance
  • Ripping off Lawrence Lessig (and him saying he liked it!) on the Blogging the Commons panel at the commons sense conference
  • More recently, re-blogs at (just some samples) rhizome, networked_performance and rssjockey, features on DVblog
  • contacts from (and upcoming features in) MacFormat, NYarts, Cimaise Art & Architecture and Metropol
  • the launches of SAartsEmerging, @Joburg and The Upgrade! Johannesburg
  • Live Kebble and KKNK coverage
  • The announcement of my baby – we now know is a girl – due 24 May
  • And so much more I’m sure I’m missing, so feel free to post your favorites in the comments below. I’m expecting my current guest bloggers – not Kaganof – to feel insulted that they are not mentioned, and am hoping that this may influence them to participate more, and not less….

Not bad for a three year run, and as I said in the very first post, More to come….

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, south african art, technology, uncategorical ·

Archives

16 February 2006 by nathaniel

Bronwyn Lace on SAartsEmerging.org

Bronwyn Lace on SAartsEmerging.org.

Nice interview. Edited by Simon Gush and myself….

Posted in art, bronwyn lace, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art ·

Archives

16 February 2006 by nathaniel

Prix Ars Electronica

Just got this mail courting me for the Net Vision category at Ars. I don’t have any new net.art this year, but did send in some Compressionist stuff as performative/interactive analog/digital art for the obvious category… Would be great to see some South Africans represent – in any category! Here it is:

The Prix Ars Electronica – International Competition for Cyberarts is being conducted for the 20th time in 2006. In addition to the classic categories – Interactive Art, Net Vision, Computer Animation / Visual Effects and Digital Musics – Digital Communities and [the next idea] Art and Technology Grant competition will be reprised.

Prix Ars Electronica 2006
Start of Online Submissions: January 10, 2006
Online Submission Deadline: March 17, 2006
Details about entering are available online only at http://prixars.aec.at/

A Golden Nica, two Awards of Distinction (cash prizes) and up to 12 Honorary Mentions will be awarded in the Net Vision category in 2006.

Net Vision
The "Net Vision" category singles out for recognition artistic projects in the Internet that display brilliance in how they have been engineered, designed and-especially-conceived, works that are outstanding with respect to innovation, interface design and the originality of their content. The way in which a work of net-based art deals with the online medium is essential in this category.

For further information about Net Vision donÂ’t hesitate to contact us.

Under 27? Mos Def check [the next idea] – great prize!

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

Archives

05 February 2006 by nathaniel

latest Compressionist images

Titled: earth, wind and fire, true colors and Johannesburg Boogie Woogie, respectively. Click for larger images, details and sizes.  Note web colors are more than slightly dulled. moCo (mobile Compressionism) is going well…

earth, lambda print metallic paper, 30 x 15 cm
wind, lambda print metallic paper, 30 x 15 cm
fire, lambda print metallic paper, 30 x 15 cm
true colors, lambda print metallic paper, 40 x 20 cm
Johannesburg Boogie Woogie, lambda print metallic paper, 35 x 22 cm

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, flickr, me, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, 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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