Friday, September 11, 2009

Google Making History With The National September 11th Memorial & Museum



Check out this website(maybe a bit chunky today because of high traffic) where you can add your story, search by location, and browse photos that tell the story of that fateful day: http://makehistory.national911memorial.org/ I thought it was quite a beautiful use of Flash.

Read a thoughtful intro by Jill Szuchmacher of Google here.

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Thursday, February 05, 2009

I LEGO NY



Awesome use of LEGO bricks!

From the NYT's Niemann's blog >
more on christophniemann.com >

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Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Interactive Jitter Video Installation for Chanel


I finally uploaded some photos for an installation for which I did the Interaction Design and Jitter programming -- it was a video installation in Chanel's NY storefront to publicize the release of their new perfume (promoted by Kiera Knightly) in September 2007.



We had a large projection screen and bright projector, and the challenge was really to get the interference from the street outside and the reflections on the glass not to trigger the animations. It was not easy to get the infrared cameras to see only the people in front of the projection.

With Vilamedia and Scharff Weisberg doing the projection and camera equipment setup, and myself doing interaction design and programming and Diego Bauducco also doing programming.

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Saturday, November 03, 2007

Marathon Sadness


A tragic day for marathon fans today as Ryan Shay passes away inexplicably at mile 5 of the Olympic trials. An Olympic favorite, Ryan Shay was running with his good friend Ryan Hall and other "usual suspects" to compete for the US Olympic team in New York City today, on the eve of the great NYC Marathon, which happens tomorrow morning.

An article in the NY Times describes the shock and disbelief at the sudden death of this fit 28-year-old whom many people admired.

read the NY Times article >

Just another reminder to enjoy every moment of your life....

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Friday, June 08, 2007

3rd Ward Open House / Brooklyn this Weekend!


If you don't know already, 3rd Ward is a huge arts center in Bushwick (easy to get to on the L train-- Morgan stop) with welding (all kinds) a NICE woodshop, dance studios, and office space you can rent, classes (all kinds!) and performances/art shows/parties that really rock.

They're having an open house this weekend, with BBQ and BEER!! I would go but I'm 3000 miles away. I have yet to find anything like it in SF.

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Here's some more info:

3rd Ward, Brooklyn's dynamic, multi-dimensional workspace for artists and creatives is hosting an Open House Saturday June 9th and Sunday June 10th beginning at 2pm each day at our facilities at 195 Morgan Ave in East Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

The Open House will feature hands-on workshops in the many educational programs 3rd Ward offers including welding, wood-working, graphic design, video editing, loft building and more amidst the usual summer fun of live music, bbq, and beer.

Please come join us for what promises to be a great weekend.

www.3rdwardbrooklyn.org

3rd Ward is a 20,000 sq. ft. workspace and studio facility in East Williamsburg, Brooklyn developed for artists & creative professionals, by artists & creative professionals, to provide for the needs of contemporary artists and those whose work is often multidisciplinary.

3rd Ward is an über-studio environment containing a photo studio, wood shop, metal shop, dance studio, audio/music recording & rehearsal studio, digital media lab, post production suite, conference room, large shared office space, and computer lab all of which are cost-effective and provides open-source access to space, facilities, and equipment while still addressing personal and private work needs of all creative professionals.

We offer a fully-comprehensive collection of on-going classes and intensive programs featuring instruction in everything from Illustrator, InDesign, AfterEffects, and Web Design to Pro Tools and Soundtracks, MIG Welding, Furniture Design, Photography, and much more.

Our facility is designed to be used for private rentals, continuing education programs, group work and more. And because we are a member-supported organization, 3rd Ward proves that you don't have to spend a lot of money to have the best technology, resources, and equipment at your fingertips.

By helping artists pursue professional careers and creative projects, 3rd Ward is spearheading a movement that aims to create a permanent artist community in Brooklyn.

Please check out www.3rdwardbrooklyn.org to see all we have to offer the arts and creatives communities of Brooklyn, Manhattan and beyond.

3rd Ward
195 Morgan Ave
Brooklyn, NY 11237
(718) 715-4961
www.3rdwardbrooklyn.org
www.3rdwardbrooklyn.imeem.com

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Tuesday, June 05, 2007

NYC EVENT: Eyebeam - SimpleTEXT: June 5th

SimpleTEXT lets you submit text messages from your phone or other mobile device and the audience controls the audiovisual performance...

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THIS EVENT IS FREE TO ALL

About SimpleTEXT:
SimpleTEXT is a collaborative audio/visual public performance that relies on audience participation through input from mobile devices such as phones, PDAs or laptops. SimpleTEXT focuses on dynamic input from participants as essential to the overall output. The performance creates a dialogue between participants who submit text messages which control the audiovisual output of the installation. These messages are first parsed according to a code that dictates how the music is created, and then rhythmically drive a speech synthesizer and a picture synthesizer in order to create a compelling, collaborative audiovisual performance.

To date, SimpleTEXT has been shown 13 times in 9 countries across Europe and North America.

SimpleTEXT focuses on mobile devices and the web as a bridge between networked interfaces and public space. As mobile devices become more prolific, they also become separated by increased emphasis on individual use. The SimpleTEXT project looks beyond the screen and isolated usage of mobile devices to encourage collaborative use of input devices to both drive the visuals and audio output, inform each participant of each other's interaction, and allows people to actively participate in the performance while it happens.Our purpose with the performance is to create the possibility of large-scale interaction through anonymous collaboration, with immediate audio and visual feedback. SimpleTEXT encourages users to respond to one another's ideas and build upon the unexpected chains of ideas that may develop from their input..

SimpleTEXT is an example of an interactive piece that works well in crowded public spaces such as social and unruly atmospheres where heckling, irony, criticism, and sarcasm are common modes of communication. The project is a large-scale piece in terms of scale of audience interaction, where the communication between audience members is tangible and direct.

Support/Sponsors:
SimpleTEXT is created by Family Filter, a collaboration between Jonah Brucker-Cohen, Tim Redfern, and Duncan Murphy. It was originally funded by a commission from Low-Fi, an new media arts organization based in London, UK. This event is sponsored and hosted by EYEBEAM and The UpGrade.

Eyebeam: http://www.eyebeam.org
The Upgrade: http://www.theupgrade.net

LINKS:
About SimpleTEXT including video documentation: http://www.simpletext.info
SimpleTEXT video on YouTube: http://tinyurl.com/kd9yw

Jonah Brucker-Cohen - http://www.coin-operated.com
Tim Redfern - http://www.eclectronics.org

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My friend Jonah sent me this info, seems to me that there's so much fun stuff going on in NYC now that I've left. *sigh*

* Below is information about the next SimpleTEXT peformance on Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 @ Eyebeam Center for Art and Technology (http://www.eyebeam.org)

This event is in conjunction with the Upgrade NYC http://www.eyebeam.org/upgrade/

Please forward to those who might be interested in attending the performance!

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SimpleTEXT
*a cell phone enabled interactive performance* by Family Filter
URL: http://www.simpletext.info

When:
Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 (7:30 pm) - Beginning with a talk by Jonah Brucker-Cohen, Performance at 8pm)

Bring your Cell phone and/or Wireless Laptop to contribute to the performance!

Where:
EYEBEAM
540 W. 21st Street, (between 10th and 11th Avenues)
New York, NY 10011
Web Site: http://www.oboro.net
Map Link: http://tinyurl.com/2qb28h

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Tuesday, May 29, 2007

LOTS OF COOL PROGRAMS AT NY ELECTRONIC ARTS FESTIVAL AND NIME: NYC Event


NIME stands for New Interfaces for Musical Expression.

Lots of amazing stuff going on this year! LEMUR at the 3 Legged Dog space! R. Luke Dubois here and there spinning wacky Jitter magic! Foetus! Morton Subotnic! They Might Be Giants!

you can't miss it.

here are some ITP-like events:
http://itp.nyu.edu/nime/2007/program.php

AND HERE IS THE OTHER STUFF:
http://www.nyeaf.org/cms/index.php

so cool...I heart NY! If you are in the city and do not represent, you shall be scorned.

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Thursday, April 26, 2007

Electronic Music Events, NYC

LEMUR presents
Robosonic Eclectic: Live Music by Robots and Humans
LEMUR's First Annual Commissioned Works Concert
May 31, June 1st & June 2nd, 2007
3-Legged Dog Art and Technology Center
Featuring Pop Musicians They Might Be Giants,
Punk cum New Music Composer JG Thirlwell (Foetus),
Electronic Music Pioneer Morton Subotnick and
Jazz Trombonist and MacArthur Fellow George Lewis,
Performing Live with LEMUR's Robots

Plus Solo Works for LEMUR Robots by
R. Luke DuBois and J. Brendan Adamson


LEMUR: League of Electronic Musical Urban Robots presents its first concert series consisting entirely of works commissioned for LEMUR's musical robots. The program, Robosonic Eclectic: Live Music by Robots and Humans, will be performed during a three-night run, from Thursday, May 31 through Saturday, June 2, 2007, at 8 pm each night. The series will take place at the Mainstage Theatre at the new 3-Legged Dog Art and Technology Center (http://3ldnyc.org/). Robosonic Eclectic is presented as part of the New York Electronic Art Festival (NYEAF), a month-long celebration of cutting-edge electronic music performed at various venues from May 12 through June 10, 2007.

Four commissioned works, each with a live performance component, serve as the backbone of the evening, alternating with works that the robots will perform solo. Composer/performers for the live pieces are John Flansburgh and John Linnell (They Might Be Giants), JG Thirlwell (Foetus), Morton Subotnick and George Lewis. These works will feature live performances by the composer(s) of the piece, plus special guests. Pieces for solo robots by R. Luke DuBois and J. Brendan Adamson will also be performed by the robot ensemble.

Tickets are $20 and available online now from Brown Paper Tickets at http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/14405



LEMUR: League of Electronic Musical Urban Robots
LEMUR is a Brooklyn-based group of artists and technologists developing robotic musical instruments. Founded in 2000 by musician and engineer Eric Singer, LEMUR creates exotic, sculptural musical instruments which integrate robotic technology. LEMUR's philosophy is to build robots that are instruments as opposed to robots that play existing instruments.

LEMUR's growing ensemble includes over 50 robotic instruments. GuitarBot, an electric stringed instrument, is comprised of several independently controllable stringed units which can pick and slide extremely rapidly. ModBots are a large collection of modular percussion robots in a variety of styles and functions, including beaters, singing bells, and shakers. The Ill-Tempered Clangier is a robotic xylophone-like tubular bell instrument which clangs percussive melodies on forty-four tuned metal pipes. ForestBot is comprised of a forest of egg-shaped rattles sprouting from long rods that quiver and sway over onlookers. TibetBot is designed around three Tibetan singing bowls struck by robotic arms to produce a range of timbres. Visit LEMUR's website at www.lemurbots.org.

They Might Be Giants (John Flansburgh and John Linnell)
Combining a knack for infectious melodies with a quirky, bizarre sense of humor and a vaguely avant-garde aesthetic borrowed from the New York post-punk underground, They Might Be Giants became one of the most unlikely alternative success stories of the late '80s and early '90s. Musically, the duo of John Flansburgh and John Linnell borrowed from everywhere, but their freewheeling eclecticism was enhanced by their arcane, geeky sense of humor. They Might Be Giants released their eponymous debut in 1986, and the album became a college radio hit. Two years later they released Lincoln, which expanded their following considerably. Their third album, Flood, worked its way to gold status. They celebrated their 20th anniversary in summer 2002 with the release of their first children's album, No! Early in 2005, Here Come the ABCs and its accompanying DVD were the band's first releases for Disney Sound.

JG Thirlwell
The inscrutable JG Thirlwell was dropped on this planet some time ago to bestow sonic majesty, chaos, violence & beauty and cunning linguistics on an unsuspecting earth. A Brooklyn-based Australian ex-pat, Thirlwell has used many names for his many visions: Foetus (and its many name variations), Steroid Maximus, Clint Ruin, Wiseblood, DJ OTEFSU, Manorexia and Baby Zizanie. His multitude of influential recordings under the name FOETUS and variations thereof, has amassed a rabid world-wide cult following. Over the course of more than a dozen albums he has stretched from yearning orchestral soundscapes, meticulously organized chaos, electronic swathes, blistering big band pastiche, crunching hard rock and even inventing stupefying collisions of genres and forms with a raw emotion and irresistible musicality. More recently JG has also branched out into audio installations (the freq_out project curated by CM Von Hausswolf, with whom he also conducted an audio workshop at the Stadelschule in Frankfurt), DJ-ing (as DJ Otefsu), has appeared in an opera (Der Kastanienball in Munich in 2004, directed by Stefan Winter), has scored a cartoon series for The Cartoon Network in the USA (The Venture Brothers), and recently completed a commission for Bang On A Can. In 2005, he wrote his first commission for Kronos Quartet, which premiered in 2006.

Morton Subotnick
Known as a grandfather of electronic music, Morton Subotnick is one of the pioneers in the development of electronic music and an innovator in works involving instruments and other media, including interactive computer music systems. Most of his music calls for a computer part, or live electronic processing; his oeuvre utilizes many of the important technological breakthroughs in the history of the genre. In addition to music in the electronic medium, Subotnick has written for symphony orchestra, chamber ensembles, theater and multimedia productions. Currently, Subotnick holds the Mel Powell Chair in Music at the California Institute of the Arts. He tours extensively throughout the U.S. and Europe as a lecturer and composer/performer.

George Lewis
MacArthur Fellow George Lewis is currently Edwin H. Case Professor of Music at Columbia, having previously taught at UC San Diego, Mills College, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and Simon Fraser University's Contemporary Arts Summer Institute. He has served as music curator for the Kitchen in New York, and has collaborated in the "Interarts Inquiry" and "Integrative Studies Roundtable" at the Center for Black Music Research (Chicago). A member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) since 1971, Lewis studied composition with Muhal Richard Abrams at the AACM School of Music, and trombone with Dean Hey. An active composer, improvisor, performer and computer/installation artist, Lewis has explored electronic and computer music, computer-based multimedia installations, text-sound works, and notated forms. His artistic work is documented in over 120 recordings and has been awarded by a 2002 MacArthur Fellowship, 1999 Cal Arts/Alpert Award in the Arts, and numerous fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts.

R. Luke DuBois
R. Luke DuBois is a composer, performer, video artist, and programmer living in New York City. He holds a doctorate in music composition from Columbia University and teaches interactive sound and video performance at Columbia's Computer Music Center and at the Interactive Telecommunications Program at New York University. He has collaborated on interactive performance, installation, and music production work with many artists and organizations including Toni Dove, Matthew Ritchie, Todd Reynolds, Michael Joaquin Grey, Elliott Sharp, Michael Gordon, Bang on a Can, Engine27, Harvestworks, and LEMUR, and is the director of the Princeton Laptop Orchestra for its 2007 season. He is a co-author of Jitter, a software suite developed by Cycling'74 for real-time manipulation of matrix data. His music (with or without his band, the Freight Elevator Quartet), is available on Caipirinha/Sire, Cycling'74, and Cantaloupe music, and his artwork is represented by bitforms gallery in New York City.

J. Brendan Adamson
Brendan Adamson's compositions and interactive works are informed by the superhuman performance requirements of works by Conlon Nancarrow and others, but employ recently developed capabilities of such robotic instruments as modern self-playing pianos, recent automated organs, and musical robots created by LEMUR. As an undergraduate student, Brendan presented his "impressive compositions" (The New York Times) at Juilliard's first ever all-robot-performed concert, RoboRecital. In addition to numerous performances in the United States, his music has been performed by robots at international festivals around the world, including those in Belgium, Poland, Lithuania, Mexico, and Japan. Brendan holds a Bachelor's degree in music composition from the Juilliard School. A native of West Palm Beach, Florida, past teachers include Nils Vigeland, Christopher Rouse, Mari Kimura, and Milton Babbitt.

Robosonic Eclectic is presented in collaboration with Harvestworks Digital Media Arts Center (http://harvestworks.org). Works by George Lewis and Morton Subotnick are commissioned by LEMUR and Harvestworks with support from the Rockefeller Foundation Multi-Arts Production (MAP) Fund.

LEMUR is supported by generous grants from the Rockefeller Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA), the Greenwall Foundation, the Jerome Foundation and Arts International. See http://lemurbots.org for more information.

For more information, contact info@lemurbots.org. For press information, contact Gayle Snible at gayle@lemurbots.org.


ALSO DON'T FORGET!
TRANZDUCER.004
Friday, April 27th
8-11 pm

This month's acts
* R. Luke DuBois and friend(s): Local new media celeb + >= 1 special guest(s)
* Marek Choloniewski: Krazy sensor music from Krakow
* Ellis & Aguilar Duo: Bass, percussion and electronics
LEMURplex
461 3rd Avenue, Brooklyn
Between 9th & 10th Sts.
$5

TRANZDUCER is LEMUR's music, art and performance series hosted by Eric Singer, Jamie Allen and Tristan Perich. See http://tranzducer.com and http://lemurbots.org for more details.

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Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Make Furniture for Kids Who Really Need it!!



The Adaptive Design Association /ADA makes adaptive equipment and
furniture for children with disabilities out of readily available
materials, like cardboard.

They're having a volunteer night, this Monday, April 23rd, from 6-8:30
p.m. in New York City.

Marianne says:

Volunteer nights are a lot of fun. We'll have a cardboard
fabrication and edging station (if you want to build some chairs out
of cardboard), a priming station (if you feel like painting but are
too tired to think) and a painting section if you feel like making
the furniture look beautiful.

ADA is located at 313 West 36th Street (between 8th and 9th avenues,
north side of the street)
phone 212.904.1200

If you're interested in coming, please contact Marianne (click the link below)
She needs to keep a headcount.

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http://www.mariannepetit.com ... it's all there ...
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Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Panel on Social Responsibility

This sounds so cool, wish i could go:

Product Development and Management Association Presents A Panel Discussion on Social Entrepreneurship


New York, NY (March 30, 2007)—The New York / New Jersey chapter of the Product Development and Management Association (PDMA) invite you to attend the next event in our ongoing Product Management Experience Series. The topic of this thought-provoking panel discussion is “Social Responsibility Doesn’t Mean Not for Profit: Doing Good and Making Money”. The event will be held on May 9, 2007.

An increasing number of companies are being founded on the belief that a social mission is not incompatible with a for-profit business model. These companies look for ways to “do well by doing good”. Our panel will include market leaders from a variety of mission-driven companies, including:

* Josh Dorfman, Founder and CEO, Vivavi
* Shayne McQuade, CEO/Founder, Voltaic Systems
* David Satterwaite, President and CEO Prisma Microfinance

The panel discussion will center on the particularities of running a social enterprise and developing socially advantageous products. We will cover topics such as:

* What are advantages or disadvantages do socially responsible ventures have?
* How do success metrics differ from those used in conventional enterprises?
* What factors are involved with product development in a social venture?
* How does the relationship with investors differ?
* What marketing strategies are most successful in promoting such ventures and products?

Event Logistics

Date : Wednesday, May 9th, 2007

Time : 6:30 - 9:30PM

Location: Group 1066

443 Park Ave. South

New York, NY 10016

Dinner : Deli Buffet

Format: Networking / Presentation / Networking

Cost : $30 - PDMA, $40 - Non-Member, $15 - Student

Early-Bird (until May 2nd): $25 - PDMA, $35 - Non-Member, $10 Student


More info: www.productinnovators.com/nynj/

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