Tuesday 10 April 2012

New Media Old Philosphy

 

     Mark B N Hansen, has written a hell of an article discussing space and new media. Most interestingly he reintroduces the work of French philosopher Giles Deleuze to support his thoughtful and elaborate findings.

     The idea of the Any Space Whatever is an interesting philosophical tool of Deleuze's which I've interpreted as meaning; The world exists and a single space, Humans have divided this space into many spaces through measurements, photography, cinema, property, national borders ect. The actual existence of these spaces can be debated.

     I think it's important to be aware of how we shape the world around us with the ever so popular square viewfinder or the always precise metric system. These examples create a false sense of the definite and often lead us astray specifically when it comes to trying to understand art. This is what I believe Hansen's article is trying to say.

     So what Hansen does is he attempts to apply the theory of the ASW to digital media where I have to say it fits tensely. This is of course because the digital world is made up entirely of measurements, numbers, and empirical data construed from the  philosophy of definitive space. The virtual world mirrors the empirical minds of humans and for this reason I have great difficulty envisioning a digital ASW.

     Regardless I think the philosophy here is still helpful in understanding Digital media. Specifically Lazzarini's Skulls where space is the subject. The perspectival distortions causing the viewer to shift about the room shows that people are looking for that comfortable division of space they have been trained to employ. They want the sculpture to fit nicely into their empirical frame of mind, and the point is driven home by them never being able to do so.

The BLIVET Illusion is a helpful example here.  As humans we attribute space to the areas in between the lines, and never to the lines themselves. Though in fact in the real world these lines take up space. But in the digital world space isn't defined the same way. I'll use the example of a Pixel, nothing existed between the pixels, It isn't considered space. I'm sure Hansen would argue that there is space there. To this I would say that in some sense the virtual world contains no real space at all.

Thursday 29 March 2012

     Check out this room. The different light filters change the wall completely. Simple and stunning idea from Milan based collective Carnovsky comprised of Francesco Rugi and Silvia Quintanilla .





      I would love to see what would happen with a strobe light. This would have great applications for a club environment.

Thursday 1 March 2012

Applied Creativity



      I'm absolutely enamored by the The Creators Project. They're networking some of today's greatest artists, designers, engineers, and musicians with the aim to discuss creative technology, culture, and art. While there is no doubt some major corporate initiatives here,  I'm sold. These are types of events that new media needs. The work is mind-blowing I have spent the majority of today checking out the artists and their works. Looking forward to seeing coverage of their event in San Francisco on March 17.


      Strongly encourage people to check it out. With artists applying technology to every facet of human life there is something for everybody to enjoy. Specially Megan Keough who may enjoy their video on fashion designer and LED enthusiast Hussein Chalayan.

The creators video section can be found Here.



                              Colourful touch interactive LED boxes by Zigelbaum + Coelho 

Saturday 25 February 2012

Sarah Esteje




     There is something about limiting materials that really inspires creativity like no other. Jack White once explained that he only uses poor quality guitars and amps because they force a certain type of creativity and sound. While I'm not the biggest White Stripes fan, I've always felt the best art work comes from the editing, limiting,and regulating aspects of one's practice.

    Here's the work or Sarah Esteje an artists who drawings only using red and blue ball point pens. Her work has been circulating over all the major art blogs.

Her website has a bunch of great examples.

Monday 20 February 2012

Kill Your Idols

 
       Found an interesting documentary on Netflix the other day, called Kill Your Idols. It examines the massive influence of a very tiny New York musical movement, known as "No Wave". The movement lasted just under 2 years in the late 70's. The sound was characterized as free-form, arrhythmic, atonal, emotional, experimental noise.

       The No Wave philosophy was fascinating to me specially given the bitter and spiteful tone of the film. Here we have groups from older generation who  felt compelled to create music that references nothing, that sounds like nothing else, as a form a backlash to mainstream culture. In this sense they were very nihilistic, rejecting the established expectations of music, being skeptical of the mainstream. The No Wavers appear to be the dadaists of the music world. The film portrays them as unique, groundbreaking geniuses who's artistry couldn't be tainted by (or attracted by) commercialization. The anti-everything mentality runs aground towards the end of the film as the revolutionaries of old begin to preach that same type of bland homogeneity that fought so hard against.

       The new generation of New York musicians in the film are on one hand expected to fight the same tireless fight and are on the other accused of stealing that sound and turning it into commercial success. The hypocrisy hurts my brains.

Tuesday 14 February 2012

Record Playing Bike


Created by three dutch designers and crafted from from a 30 year old Alpina bike is this record playing bicycle. Features include the ability to change records on the fly and a megaphone style speaker. Interestingly though, you will need to peddle evenly to keep the record speed correct.

Monday 16 January 2012

3D Sound


1. Put on some headphones.
2. Listen to this.
3. Be amazed.