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Entries in Video Art (7)

Monday
Jan072013

David Linton

David Linton: Cortical Degausser 
OPENING ON: FRIDAY, January 11TH 7:00 - 11:00PM. 
ON VIEW THRU January 27TH, 2013.

First installed at the conclusion of a 2011 Residency at the Clocktower Gallery, Cortical Degausser is a site-specific Intermedia installation in which visitors experience pulsating harmonic bands of colored light “Flicker” and synchronous sound “Drone” ( both generated from a fundamental frequency range of 10-15 Hz ) delivered via video signal that is in turn mediated by parabolic diffusion screens. The immersive relational environment thus established stimulates neurological mechanisms within each viewer’s own visual cortex triggering the spontaneous display of self animating geometric patterns which appear to hover in space in front of the subject’s field of vision with eyes either open or closed.

David Linton (born Newburgh NY 1956) is a Time based multiple media artist traveling the vectors of sound, subculture, and signal flow. He has been active in the downtown NYC experimental arts community for 30 years. Originally a percussionist, David has created sound, music, and something in between, for many collaborative dance, theater, & performance settings since his arrival in NY at the end of 1970's. By the later 80's - after a good deal of percussion work along side other musicians: Lee Ranaldo, Rhys Chatham, Glenn Branca, Elliott Sharp among others - he was equally known for his live wired solo electro-acoustic drumkit performances as well as his soundscore productions. His 1986 solo Lp "Orchesography" was an unlikely collusion of street beats, early sampling tek, and theatrical post modernism. By the early 90's he had retired from performing in the live electro-acoustic vein to concentrate on the vocabulary of entirely electronic music and the resultant paradigm shift in performance priorities that this new 'compressed' format suggested. Throughout the 90's Linton became a dedicated advocate for the expansion and appreciation of realtime performance in electronic media through the design and/or production of event/environments such as 'SoundLab' (1996) and eventually 'UnityGain' (1997-present). From 2001 Linton's fascination with instantaneous collaborative audio visual communication among select units of electronic sound and visual artists assumed the form of a live experimental television Manhattan cable/webcast project - UGTV - Unitygain Television (2001-2004) - for which he was producer/director - and occasional performer. In 2004 David embarked upon his present course with the launch of his solo audio-visual project: the Bicameral Research Sound & Projection System. With his "Bicameral Research Sound & Projection System" (2004) Linton aims to make vibrational wave induced perceptual energy states manifest by deploying interconnected measures of electric sound & pulsing light in live action with hand manipulated objects in physical (live camera) space. He employs an integrated recursive audio & video feedback system of his own perversely simple design modulated by freehand intervention to deliver vigorous eye, ear, and - sometimes - body shaking realtime audio visual performances from which a kind of retro-tech animist ritual "medicine show" emerges where subject and object blur. Thematically David likes to consider that within the 20th Century 60 Hz alternating electrical current gradually came to function as a primary subliminal Prana in the mass bio-energetic body/culture of human life in North America...

Wednesday
Oct122011

Algorithmic Unconscious

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Algorithmic Unconscious

Curated by Phillip Stearns

Digital is anti-noise. In the shift from analog, physical, or chemical forms of art making—where physical agents operate on physical material—to digital, the noise of the medium is minimized (controlled) as a default of the technological substrate.

Algorithmic Unconscious highlights machine/human collaborations where the primary material in the works exhibited is the inherent noise of electronic systems. By emphasizing random fluctuations, the artists explore the potential for electronic technologies to misinterpret and re-imagine the signals they are processing in order to complete the work. The featured artists work within and parallel to the Glitch Art movement, recognizing that algorithms for processing signals function as key materials of digital art. By feeding these algorithms "unconventional data" or by putting them through unconventional routines, noise is reintroduced as a signature of the machine.

Jeff Donaldson’s work takes analog VHS tapes and Flash video compression and twists them into a system where the product is an "interpretation" of noise that mirrors the phenomenon responsible for the noise of our visual sense organs being perceived as visions in dreams. Dan Temkin puts Photoshop’s dithering algorithm into a situation where it is forced to get creative with incompatible color palettes in the production of large scale, low-resolution images. Arcangel Constantini re-wires the electronics of an Atari 2600 game console from the 70s so that the internal memory is expressed in a fragmented machine style stream-of-consciousness: a frenetically changing barrage of fragmented geometries and saturated colors. The images of Phillip Stearns’s DCP Series explore a machine dream-state induced by rewiring the brains of digital cameras. The analog plotter drawings of Jeff Snyder utilize technologies from which contemporary digital art practices originated: analog computing, providing an elegant counter point to the digital works in the show.

The algorithmic unconscious itself may not yet be something that we can clearly define or identify, however, we may be able to view the works in this exhibition and identify between them a revised metaphor for ourselves and our relationship to our technology.

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Jun052011

Recolony: A Short Film by Ryan Junell & Tanya Newton-John

Recolony: A Short Film by Ryan Junell & Tanya Newton-John
June 11th – June 26th, 2011
Opening: Saturday, June 11th, 6pm – 9pm.

 "Recolony" HD 1080p, 30fps, 2 min, Stereographic Anaglyph, 2011. 
Recolony is a twelve chapter tale of creation, abandonment, magical emergence, dis-integration, humanoid fury, and ultimate self-destruction. Once upon a time... humanoids create a great lush forest before moving onwards to create large cities. In the humanoids absence, strange magical creatures emerge quite naturally from the trees. Goblyns, Nomes and Faeries inhabit the forest and live happily and in harmony with each other and their environment. They dance around fires and sing ancient little tunes and chant until... the humanoids return to the forest from the city. They attempt to accept the creatures' presence, but ultimately become annoyed and irritated by the spawn of their forest. The humanoids initiate an all out creature holocaust in an effort to recolonize the forest. Grabbing, hurling, and destroying the creatures one by one, the humanoids finally clear the forest only to realize that the magical creatures *are an essential part of the forest and their death also means the death of the forest itself. Engulfed in flames, the humanoids die along with the forest... mortally sad they meddled with the mysteries of the universe. 

Click to read more ...

Saturday
Jun122010

AIRtime@Devotion Exhibition Series



Transmission art exhibition series

Bike box from Bill Brown on Vimeo.

Technology behind Bike Box created by Aris Games at University of Wisconsin’s Games, Learning and Society research group.

free103point9 is pleased to present AIRtime@Devotion, an exhibition series taking place July 2nd though August 16th at Devotion Gallery in Williamsburg, as part of the free103point9 AIRtime Fellowship Program.  The series consists of solo exhibitions by Zach Poff (Radio Silence), Sabine Gruffat & Bill Brown (Bike Box), and Brett Balogh (Noospherium), which span the contemporary genre of Transmission Art.  The Transmission Art genre is informed by works which employ an intentional use of space -- often the airwaves -- and manifests in participatory live art or time-based art, including radio, video, light, installation, and performance.


AIRtime@Devotion exhibitions open throughout the month of July:  AIRtime@Devotion: Radio Silence opens at 6:00 p.m. on July 2nd, 2010;  AIRtime@Devotion: Bike Box opens at 6:00 p.m. on July 16th, 2010;  AIRtime@Devotion: Noospherium opens at 6:00 p.m. on July 30th, 2010.  All openings and exhibition-related events take place at Devotion Gallery (54 Maujer Street, Brooklyn, NY, 11206). 

Admission is free and open to the public.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Jun022010

Digital Intelligence & Analogous Interactions 

digital emergence and social-interaction analogues

Analogous Projects is pleased to present Digital Intelligence & Analogous Interactions, as part of the International Computer Music Conference (ICMC). Works include three committee-selected ICMC AI pieces by Brett Balogh (Chora), Scott Mc Laughlin (Shoals), and Steve Bull + Scot Gresham-Lancaster (Cellphonia), as well as additional complexity-driven works by Nick Lesley (Epic Doom) and Philip Galanter (RGBCA).

The audiovisual installations and performative social activities present evolutionary- and generative-art as a tool for social sculpture and immersive gaming. An ICMC AI concert will take place on May 31st at Issue Project Room as a preface to the exhibition, with committee-selected works by Arne Eigenfeldt (In Equilibrio), Jon Weinel (Entoptic Phenomena), Will Orzo (Giraffe). Together, these ICMC AI events draw inspiration from performative ecologies, musical improvisation, reality-based games, social experiments, neural networks, and swarm-optimization.

Digital Intelligence & Analogous Interactions opens at 5:00 p.m. on June 2nd at Devotion Gallery (54 Maujer Street, Brooklyn, NY, 11206) with a performative social activity by Scott McLaughlin (Shoals). Please bring a laptop with WiFi capability and audible sound. Admission is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served.

Presented by Analogous Projects.

Admission is free and open to the public.


ICMC AI Committee

Marie Evelyn (Chair, on behalf of Analogous Projects)
Jenny Torino (Assistant Chair)
Douglas Repetto
Galen Joseph-Hunter
James McDermott
Kurt Gottschalk
Philip Galanter
Zach Layton


Press Materials

EXHIBITION: Opens 5:00 p.m., Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010. Through June 13th.
                    At Devotion Gallery, L to Lorimer, G to Metropolitan.
PERFORMANCE: At 8:00 p.m., Monday May 31st, 2010.
                    At Issue Project Room, M/R to Union.
OPENING FLYER: DigitalIntelligenceAnalogousInteractions.jpg
PRESS RELEASE: diai-PressRelease.pdf
MEDIA RELEASE: diai-MediaRelease.pdf
FULL PRESS KIT: DiAiPressKit.zip
CONTACT: Marie Evelyn at Marie@AnalogousProjects.org