Archive for October, 2009

Video: Rishaug & Watz live at The Villa, Oslo (video by Andreas Paleologos)

Alexander Rishaug and I just completed a mini-tour of Norway, playing gigs in Oslo (The Villa), Bergen (EKKO Festival), Trondheim (The Black Cube at Verkstedhallen) and finally the Insomnia festival in Tromsø this weekend. Thanks to everybody who turned up! In Oslo we were fortunate to have Andreas Paleologos in the audience with a HD camera, resulting in the video above (possibly the nicest documentation of our set to date!)

The Rishaug vs. Watz project is now over two years old, having debuted at Lovebytes 2007 in Sheffield. It continues to be a very satisfying experiment in exploring sound and visuals as a continuous narrative space. I look forward to seeing what possible new iterations it can take, not least of which will be the upcoming release of Alexander’s album and possible extensions of the project into installation form.

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Exploder wall - Install 05

Exploder, wall drawing (made with 1 cm black tape)

It’s always a pleasure to do new types of work when an exhibition calls for it. This time the occasion is “system:system”, an exhibition of 30+ artists opening this Friday in the defunct St.Cecilia’s nun’s convent in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. According to curator duo Adam Henry and Christina Vassallo (aka Super Square), system:system is…

…a three-day event that reflects on the nature of associations between parts of a whole. The title is a play on the term “complex systems,” which are characterized by their connections and tendencies toward unpredictable behavior. The organizing of this event evokes these qualities and embraces the small world phenomenon of strangers being linked through minimal degrees of separation to form a dynamic structure.

The list of artists is full of friends and family, including Peter Kirn, Yeni Mao, Derick Melander, SoftLAB, Studio Mode, Lee Wells, and many others. See the full list here. Random Number has some very promising photos from the installing.

Given the nature of the building, which is filled with tiny rooms that previously served as bedrooms for the nuns, I wanted to do a physical installation rather than using projectors or screens. I’ve been wanting to try to do a wall drawing for quite a while, using artist tape to trace vector outlines from a projected image.

After doing a few sketches I chose to base the walll drawing on Exploder, an “exploding sphere” form I have done variations on in the past (see Architek209 and GasWorks). Rendering it as a wireframe meant that it is technically feasible to trace while maintaining an implication of movement in space. The number of polygons had to be reduced to control the number of lines in need of tracing, but the form proved to take the scaling down well. Rather than worry about the inevitable distortion caused by the projector I decided to incorporate it, making sure the form could stretch to cover the entire wall while taking on an exaggerated perspective.

I’m quite pleased with the result and will definitely be expanding on this strategy in the future. Come along to the opening this Friday to see it in person!

system:system information

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Jer Thorp: NY Times visualization

Jer Thorp: NY Times: 365/360

Processing visualization head Jer Thorp is putting his money where his mouth and publishing 7 pieces of code in 7 days, free to download and experiment with. Judging from the three that he’s released so far they’re not your standard 20-minute sketches either:

  1. GoodMorning! is a Twitter vizualization, showing users around the world popping up on a globe as they utter the magic words “good morning”. With a little geocoding and spherical mapping thrown in, this is a sweet sketch
  2. NY Times: 365/360 uses the New York Times open data API to retrieve news stories for an entire year and draw connections between them. The results combine complexity with elegance for that true infoporn look.
  3. tree.growth revisits that old classic, the L-system tree. Thorp uses colors and abstract “leaves” to great effect.

With such a strong start, one certainly looks forward to seeing the next four sketches to come. It’s not so common to find sketches of this complexity freely available, so they’re a great study for users who are on the threshold of making more complex applications.

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Good news for Processing heads who use sound: Damien de Fede has released a new major version of his excellent Minim library. Along with bug fixes, new features include:

  • added functions to FFT for doing forward transforms with an offset: forward(float[] samples, offset) and forward(AudioBuffer samples, offset)
  • added a freqToIndex(float freq) method to FFT for finding out the index of the spectrum band that contains the passed in frequency.
  • added a stop() method to AudioSample, so that playing samples can be immediately silenced.
  • added setPanNoGlide(float pan) to Controller, which will snap the panning setting of a sound to the provided value.
  • added setInputMixer(Mixer) and setOutputMixer(Mixer), which allow you to specify which Java Mixer object should be used when obtaining inputs (AudioInput) and outputs (AudioOuput, AudioPlayer, AudioSnippet, AudioSample).

Download from the Minim project page. Read more about the development process on the Compartmental blog.

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A collection of early sketches for a new piece, titled “Bridge Hypothesis”. It looks at the the bridge as a spatial stereotype, deconstructing it into formal expressions. This video was compiled from Quicktimes I saved as I iteratively experimented with and improved the code. I like that you can see the spontaneous evolution from a primitive wireframe representation, to increasingly stylized forms that reference the bridge as spatial stereotype but clearly have abandoned all regard for gravity.

I am making this piece for “Bright Nights”, an evening of projections on the anchorage of the Manhattan Bridge in DUMBO on October 7th. The event is part of a program of events in connection with the Centennial celebration of the bridge.

Bright Nights will feature the works of myself, Burak Arikan, Motomichi Nakamura and Lee Wells. The event is curated by Christina Vassallo. Practical details follow:

  • October 7, 2009 / 7pm – 10pm
  • Manhattan Bridge Anchorage, Front & Adams Street side in DUMBO, Brooklyn
  • The event is free and open to public.

See the Random Number site for more details about the other artists.

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