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February 28, 2005

Don Quixote - a Digital Puppet Show: Thesis Project

Theis Project Idea:

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Quick beginnings of a concept collage - I plan to add more images as I hone in on the core of the design concepts.

The interactions possible between artist, video, and sound in real-time have reached incredible levels. However, there is little exploration in what this actually has to do with live performance. I would like to take these systems of interaction and add physical interfaces, so that the performer can have direct and indirect effects on video and sound through physicalization. Through this experiment I will examine how the ability for real-time mixing can be enhanced by the element of a live, physical performance, and vice-versa.

In my production of Don Quixote, performers will control digital characters being projected on a screen. Just like a traditional puppet show, the audience will be able to see both the performer and the character(s) they are controlling. The performers will also have possibility for control over video and sound elements.

Just as the puppet is a physical extension of the puppet-master in marrionette shows, my production of Don Quixote will explore this relationship between performer and digital media.

I chose the story of Don Quixote to explore ideas of reality, virtual reality, and augmented reality through my content. Also, the story often jumps between different planes of existence (reality, imaginary, both), just as my actors will exist on multiple planes of performance in the show, which could prove to be a very interesting dynamic.

February 27, 2005

489: Midterm Progress

Peter Brinson and Chris Swain have thrown together a mid-term progress page for our 489: Intermediate Game Design class. Check out some of the objects we've created, sims 2 machinimas (SARB done by me, AKEA done by Andrew), and object ideas. I'm so proud of the work our class has done!

Check it out.

February 23, 2005

History of Visualizing Sound, Pre-Computers

For my research assignment in our "Tech on Stage" module in 544, I began researching Golan Levin. However, as I was reading his thesis paper, I became enthralled in the history of visualizing sound, and decided to dig more into this field.

The first well-known experiment in visualizing music took place in 1730 and was pioneered by the French Jesuit monk Lois Bertrand Castel, who was also a well-known mathematician and physicist. He believed that each of the seven units of the scale corresponded directly with one of the seven colors of the light spectrum:

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http://homepage.tinet.ie/~musima/visualmusic/visualmusic.htm

Kenneth Peacock, "Instruments to perform color-music: Two centuries of technological experimentation," Lenorado, 1988.
and he wished to give the colors an intensified quality of liveliness and lightness which he felt they lacked upon a canvas, where he believed them to be without life or motion.

Castel constructed an Ocular Harpsichord, which consisted of a 6-foot square screen mounted above a normal harpsichord. The frame was made up of 60 small windows, each with a different colored glass pane and a small curtain attached by pullies to a specific key. Each time the key was played, the curtain would lift briefly to allow light to travel to the glass pane and display the corresponding color. In 1754, Castel built an “improved” model with over 500 candles with mirrors to project light for a larger audience(prior to this people had to visit his studio to see the harpsichord in action).

Castel predicted that every home in Paris would one day have an Ocular Harpsichord for recreation, and dreamed of a factory making some 800,000 of them. However, the technology was so clumsy and did not become as popular as he dreamt it would be. “What stranger enterprise could be imagined in the whole field of art,” wrote Castel, “than to make sound visible, to make available
to the eyes those many pleasures which Music affords to the
ears?”

Castel’s work inspired many other artists to pursue visual music instruments, such as Frederic Kasner, Bainbridge Bishop, McKinnon Wood, Jordon Belson and many others through the twentieth century. These artists all employed similar methods of corresponding colors and lights to certain notes.

However, in the early 20th century, Thomas Wilfred decided to break away from attempting a direct mapping between color and sound. A Danish-born American, Wilfred worked with a group of Theosophists who sought to create color organ that demonstrated spiritual principles. In his research, Wilfred discovered the failures and differences of his predecessors, and decided that there was no direct correlation between color and sound whatsoever. Instead, he focused his attention on creating an instrument that displayed light without the need for sound or music, or only used them as accessories.

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The first instrument was the “Clavilux” and worked similar to an organ and pipes, consisting of a large keyboard with sliding keys and stops that could be couple to obtain different colors, six projectors and some auxiliary reflectors. His following series of performances were called Lumia, and he toured with the instrument until housing a 32-projector Clavilux in the Art Institute of Light in NYC, which he also founded. Wilfred also constructed self-playing instruments that would run themselves, as well as Home Clavilux systems.

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Wilfred argued that Lumia compositions could not be compared to music or paint, and believed that this art of moving light had to be judged on its own merits. (balh)

In an opposite line of work, many artists investigated the possibility of visually creating music. In the late 1940’s, the abstract animator Oskar Fishinger experimented with “sound scroll” – long sheets of paper on which he would draw the sound waves.

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Simultaneously, the animator Norman McLaren developed a variety of template-based methods. McLaren created index cards that each corresponded with a note in the chromatic scale.

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In the early 1950’s, John and James Whitney created a system of pendulums using decommissioned war machinery, which would periodically interrupt the light arriving at a film shutter. By slowly advancing the film past the shutter and swinging the pendulums back and forth, the Whitneys were able to record optically a soundtrack on the film.

By combining the senses of sight and sound, and experience can be created which feels more immersive than if the visual and audio components of a piece are created independent of on another. There are many instances of serendipity, in which the music and the video match perfectly; however, the organic creation of the two elements with one another can produce an incredible sensory experience for the audience, and is something I enjoy both as a spectator and as an artist.

Wired News: Where Are All the Women?

The theories as to why women are poorly represented at tech companies are varied. But most pundits seem to agree -- and studies back them up -- that companies with women in the higher ranks are making more money, and companies that don't actively recruit and support women executives are missing the boat.

Companies with the most women in senior management had a 35 percent higher return on equity than those with the fewest, according to a study by Catalyst, a nonprofit group that studies women in business. It also found those companies paid their shareholders 34 percent more than companies with the fewest women in top management.

But Silicon Valley companies don't seem to get it. Another Catalyst study in 2003 found that among Fortune 500 companies, 12.4 percent of board members were women, while women represented just 9 percent of high-tech boards. The same study looked at female corporate officers and top earners, who made up 15.7 percent of all Fortune 500 employees, but just 11 percent at high-tech Fortune 500s.

Catalyst's results show the numbers are consistently, but slowly, increasing. Reasons for the slow pace of change are unclear, but theories include the glass ceiling, an unfriendly environment toward women and the much-debunked innate gender differences theory. Whatever the true cause, it's most pronounced in Silicon Valley, experts say.

But don't take my word for it,read the full article.

February 22, 2005

Travel Plans to the GDC

Who's going and doesn't know who they are travelling/staying with?

February 15, 2005

Interactive Inspiration from My Past

Couldn't find my iPod this morning, so as I'm sitting on Sunset I throw in an old mix tape: "Kellee's Punk Years." I am reminded of a group, Shelter - a hardcore straighedge (sXe for short) band from D.C. I hadn't thought of them in years, but in undergrad, we were asked to write about performances that were influential to us, and I wrote about them.

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From Rudy's Photos

In a tiny space in downtown Richmond, VA, there are hundreds of kids (all the great clubs broke fire safety laws) packed in to see them. The usual opening line up, nothing spectactular that I can remember. Then the haire-krishna music begins. Chanting. The band members take their instruments. The whole crowd is waiting and waiting and the anticipation is building. No one speaks, and the air gets so thick you can choke on it. The lead guitarist raises his hand and throws it down, beginning the first distorted chords. People, literally, come out of the walls. Bodies flying, jumping, dancing, falling, in every direction. I begin front and center, and end up on the floor to the right. I throw myself back into the center, screaming, arms flying. I don't know if my feet are touching the floor, everyone is holding each other up, pushing each other around, clawing, grabbing,we scream and dance as we release our demons to the air.

Found this surfing:
"Between SHELTER and it's legendary predecessor Youth Of Today, Ray and Porcell's ground-breaking hardcore/punk tunes not only set musical standards, but also brought a new consciousness into the scene: intelligent optimism, healthy living and a drug-free lifestyle which made them one of the godfathers of the positive hardcore movement. Youth Of Today defined themselves as a counter-movement to the tough-guy attitude that often went along with self-destruction and severe drug-abuse, as well as political and social apathy. "There was a lot of slogans around, but it seemed to me that any real change would have to happen inside first," explains Ray."

February 14, 2005

Inspiration

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Performance artist Karen Finley has smeared herself with chocolate, painted with her own breast milk, put Winnie the Pooh in S&M gear, and locked horns with conservative Sen. Jesse Helms.

A New York-based performer, author, playwright, and director, Finley probes themes of the body, sexual abuse and violence, AIDS, suicide, female sexuality, and American politics. While she has received significant critical and popular acclaim within the art world, it was her 1993 free speech battle with Jesse Helms, the National Endowment for the Arts, and ultimately the Supreme Court that brought Finley to a wider audience.

Her work onstage smashes stereotypes of Performance Art as Gong-Show castoff fare. They are mesmerizing experiential masterpieces. Finley takes her audiences through contemporary terrain at an accelerated pace, unheard of even in this age of instant access and continual gratificiation. Instead of the "shock" so many would have you believe they center on, her performances tend towards religious frenzy, complete with potent, quasi-spiritual transformation.

In an art world still confused about experiencing the moment versus purchasing the object, Karen Finley’s artworks balance wicked humor with humanistic morality. That entire ‘90s Brit Pack’s system of manufacturing shock could be contained in one of Karen’s pieces. Take your pick: She raked Jackson Pollock over the coals in documenting the "action" of her Breast Milk Paintings.

The word of the decade was TABLOID and Karen spread the word. In ten short years sex is less of a threat to your life but more of a threat to your career. Fear of sex is a fear of our bodies, their potency and their mortality. For all the faith in God that America preaches, its obsession over the physical is a belial eloquently pointed out by the Art World & America’s profound problem child, Artist Karen Finley.

via her artist of the decade award and this review.

February 9, 2005

T-Shirt Rough Draft

remember when will was trying to get us to do that? well, here is my suggestion, props to Nelson for the idea =)

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February 8, 2005

DIM at Coachella

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I got my ticket for Sunday, May 1st to see Nine Inch Nails(among others, which you can look up here). If anyone else is coming, let's go together! I've never been before, but I'm interested in live performance and group experiences, so this seemed like a good place for research ;-)

February 2, 2005

Relaxation

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Feeling burnt out from an already-long week, my roomate and I take paint to canvas.