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Kyma International Sound Symposium in ViennaWiener Klangwerkstatt and Symbolic Sound invite you to submit a proposal to the Second Kyma International Sound Symposium (KISS 2010): http://www.tonsalon.at. Scheduled for 24-26 September 2010 in the newly renovated Casino Baumgarten in Vienna Austria (http://www.tonsalon.at/venue.html), the preliminary program includes master classes presented by the creators of Kyma, papers and demos presented by Kyma practitioners, and a program of concerts and other performances featuring Kyma. This year's theme is 'symbolic sound': Can non-speech sound convey meaning? Can sounds function as symbols? We will be addressing these questions using words, sound, music and image. Deadline for submission of proposals is April 11, 2010. For full details, see http://www.tonsalon.atMigration in 5.1 Surround SoundIn Migration, Hamilton Sterling and Jimmy Haslip, take us on a journey that begins in Senegal and ends up on another planet. Using Kyma timbre-scapes and live performances on bass and percussion, Haslip and Sterling create an immersive soundtrack tracing humankind's restless and inevitable journey out of Africa and outward to the stars. Inevitable in part due to what Huntington Ellsworth calls human kind's "innate migratory tendency" and partly due to "Nature's stern urgency" (COP15?). The best listening is in surround-sound with the lights dimmed: Side 1 (white band) of the DVD is a 5.1 Dolby Digital version and a 2 channel PCM 24-bit 48 kHz version. Side 2 (red band) is a 5.1 24 bit 48 kHz DVD-Audio 5.1 version; this is definitely a 'hi fi', 'audiophile' type experience. It's a soundtrack that creates its own visuals inside your head. Listen to a preview and order your own copy from Helikon Sound (http://www.helikonsound.com/music/music.html), CDBaby, or Amazon. For a more detailed description of the music, see http://bit.ly/agaflXUpcoming Kyma Master Class in MinnesotaCurious to learn more about Kyma? Carla Scaletti will present a full-day Kyma master class on Wednesday April 7 2010, in conjunction with the Society for Electro-Acoustic Music in the US (SEAMUS) national conference in St. Cloud, Minnesota (http://seamus2010.stcloudstate.edu/). The course is free with conference registration: http://www.seamusonline.org/?page_id=149. If you'd like to participate in the master class and are unable to attend the conference itself, please contact Symbolic Sound to reserve a place (mailto:info-kyma@symbolicsound.com). The SEAMUS conference is 3 solid days and nights of electronic music concerts and presentations (including several live Kyma/Paca(rana) performances): http://seamus2010.stcloudstate.edu/schedule.htmlAnimating Architecture in TorontoComposer Edmund Eagan (http://www.twelfthroot.com) was commissioned to do the sound track for "E", a large scale video projection conceived and directed by Alain Couture for the 2009 Canadian National Exhibition (http://www.theex.com/site.php?menu=06:01). Each night of the CNE (August 21st to September 7th, 2009), the exterior of the southeast entrance to the Direct Energy Centre was transformed into a giant canvas onto which fantastic building-sized images were projected. The animation was created using 3D software rendered against a 3D model of the actual building. The result was amazing optical illusions, creating the impression that the interior of the building was on fire, or that the building had transformed itself into a huge aquarium, a Mayan temple, or a Gothic cathedral, or that faces were extruding out from the stone and smiling down at the people below. The sound track, rich Kyma-based sound generation controlled by the Haken Continuum, Space Navigator, and Wiimote, was delivered through a quadraphonic sound reinforcement system.E Promo 1 (http://www.twelfthroot.com/live/E1.html) gives a sped up synopsis of some of the images from the original 30 minute presentation. The soundtrack for this excerpt is a section of the E score featuring a Continuum Fingerboard performance of a Mellotron flute sound designed and realized in Kyma. You might almost believe entire thing is a video animation until you notice people opening the doors and leaving the building. In this hilarious excerpt, http://www.twelfthroot.com/live/E2.html, Eagan turns the Direct Energy Center into a giant game of Pong, complete with an ersatz Kraftwerk parody sound track (featuring Edmund's voice processed through Kyma). All buildings should look and sound like this whenever the sun goes down!Imaginary Films in Tel AvivAvi Benjamin and Michael Vaisburd presented their new collaboration project, 'AVI Channel' (http://avi-channel.com), on September 25, 2009 in Tel Aviv. Envisioned as 'sound tracks from imaginary films', AVI Channel embodies the artistic partners' energetic embrace of all music and sound genres, from classical to rock to jazz to electronic, to opera, to world music, live voice-processing, and even cuckoo clocks. "Beethoven" is a trope on a Beethoven piano sonata evoking Berio's Sinfonia in the logic and richness of its overlays of textures and styles. "Did you ever have the feeling?" is at various points, lively, humorous, wild, and zen. Seated in a cabaret setting, the audience is treated to an energetic spectacle including a full-sized Continuum controlling Pacarana aggregate and additive synthesis, a couple of electronic keyboards, a grand piano, 'virtual' performers appearing iChat-like on laptop screens and a trumpet player placed in the audience. Benjamin and Vaisburd are, respectively, musical director and sound designer for the Gesher theatre (http://www.gesher-theatre.co.il), and their sense for staging and drama, along with Benjamin's training as a classical pianist and composer are very much in evidence. The audience responded enthusiastically and is now primed and ready for the next installment in this ongoing project.Lighting the Fourth Fire of AnishnabeTangLed LYSerGic PuddLEs oN CeLEstiAL thReads (aka Adam Sobel) can be seen using his Kyma/Pacarana system in his live set at Anishnabe Festival http://sacredcycles.ca/ in Ottawa Canada: http://viewmorepics.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=viewImage&friendID=312639020&albumID=259134&imageID=12263401Cygne NoirSwiss television presented a 28 minute HD documentary on choreographer Gille Jobin's new dance work, Black Swan, with particular emphasis on his collaboration with composer Cristian Vogel: http://www.tsr.ch/tsr/index.html?siteSect=500000&vid=11265067#vid=11265067. The documentary illustrates the ways in which choreographer, composer, and dancers collaborate throughout the development of the work (and includes some close-up shots of Cristian's Virtual Control Surface as well as excerpts from the dance from initial explorations, to rehearsals, to the premiere performance).Bourges WinnerScott Miller's (http://www.scottlmiller.net) 'Nebe na Zemi' was selected for the 36th Bourges International Competitions Electroacoustic Music and Electronic Art 2009 Competition in the Quadrivium - 6th category: work for installation or environment (http://www.imeb.asso.fr/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1116&Itemid=330). According to Miller "I quite literally couldn't have done it without Kyma!" Miller is working with long-time collaborator Pat O'Keefe preparing to record a new CD later this month featuring works for clarinet, bass clarinet, interactive electronics, and improvisation.Music from the FutureRichard Devine utilized Kyma processing on his track for Music for Our Future, a compilation of music inspired by the world of SyFy's Caprica (http://www.syfy.com/caprica/) curated by XLR8R, Pitchfork and Create Digital Music. Processing sound sources ranging from water and leaves to giant turkeys and pigs' breathing, Devine layered spectral analysis, morphing, granular processing, and FM synthesis to create a "roller-coaster ride of audio frequency dynamics". For more details and photos, see: http://createdigitalmusic.com/2010/01/06/a-free-futuristic-music-compilation-for-syfys-caprica-stories-behind-the-tracks/. Devine also mentions his Kyma set up in his video with Electronic Musician (EM): http://emusician.com/videos/interviews/richard_devine/index.htmlSound Cloaking DeviceJose Sanchez-Dehesa at the Polytechnic University of Valencia is researching the design of materials that can deflect sound waves around an object, acting as an "acoustic cloak". Crystals consisting of arrays of tiny cylinders might achieve this result. Simulations showed that 200 layers of this material could act as a noise shield. Thinner stacks could be tuned to specific frequencies by varying the thickness of the stack. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7450321.stmBeautiful Catastrophes in DallasAustin-based composer William H. Meadows utilized OSCulator (http://osculator.net) to connect multiple Nintendo Wiimotes to Kyma for a 15 January 2010 performance of The Butterfly Effect and Other Beautiful Catastrophes at the Center for Creative Connections at the Dallas Museum of Art (http://dallasmuseumofart.org). Meadows, in collaboration with choreographer Kerry Kreiman and members of the CD/FW dance company, used the Wiimotes to transform dancers' movements into controllers for sounds being generated live in Kyma to highlight the interplay between the physical and virtual worlds. Each performance of the piece is unique, the structure being based on concepts from chaos and catastrophe theory. A reviewer for the Fort Worth Star Telegram described the premiere: ...a fascinating kaleidoscope of sound and movement... It was a strange and wonderful scene. For more details: http://www.pegasusnews.com/events/2010/jan/15/168679/?refscroll=446Kyma Sound Design/Sculpting Course in RomeEach semester, Federico Placidi teaches a 20-hour module on Sound Design Sculpting in Kyma as part of the Electronic Music course (http://www.iitm.it/content/view/96/173/) at the Istituto Italiano per le Tecnologie Musicale (http://www.iitm.it/) in Rome.Computer music chronologyPaul Doornbusch has created a fascinating chronology of computer music placing musical and technological developments in computer music along side contemporaneous technological breakthroughs in other fields: http://www.doornbusch.net/chronology/Hear a herd of Paca(rana)sIn August 2009, Symbolic Sound expanded the real-time sound-computing power of the Paca(rana) sound engine by making it possible for Kyma sound designers to chain two or more multiprocessor Paca(rana)s together via the built-in A/B Expansion ports. To the Kyma software, a network of Paca(rana)s appears as a single sound computation engine with multiple processors. Kyma automatically detects the number of available processors and schedules the execution of DSP-intensive signal processing and synthesis algorithms across multiple processors. http://www.symbolicsound.com/cgi-bin/bin/view/Company/ExpansionDream TeamPrism Audio's well-regarded Orpheus audio converter (http://www.prismsound.com/music_recording/products_subs/orpheus/orpheus_home.php) is now working with the Paca(rana). For a full list of supported audio converters, please visit: http://www.symbolicsound.com/Learn/SupportedConvertersThe Raven FactionSascha Dikiciyan (http://www.sonicmayhem.com) has just released the soundtrack for the Raven Faction in the Sony game called "MAG"; he used Kyma to treat the theme remix.Check for updates...Did you know that you can check for free Kyma software updates any time you like by selecting Check for updates... from the Help menu in Kyma? Make sure you are benefiting from all the latest features and improvements. Here are just a few highlights from recent releases:* Replicator, Prefixer, and Timelines now transfer the properties of the replicated widgets to the new, numbered copies of those widgets!* SampleCloud now accepts stereo samples* Annotation now includes options to display text as fly-by help (to save precious Virtual Control Surface real estate) and to automatically include controller mappings as part of the the annotation (helpful reminders during a live performance)* There is a new CapyTalk message: countTriggersReset:+ Added a new Smalltalk message: varTimesRepeat: (allows you to repeat a block of code a variable number of times.* And on the Paca(rana):-Added support for Prism Sound Orpheus, MOTU 828 mk3 and MOTU Traveler mk3-Smoothed the Scale parameter of AR and ADSR envelopes so you can use a controller to smoothly modulate the amplitude of a note (tremolo) while it is playing-New CapyTalk expression for providing a seed to any expression containing one or more random generator(s)* And many more (see the tweaky for full details)Zen in AtlantaThe Hassler-Robinson duo (Don Hassler and Dick Robinson) performed a live, free electronic improvisation on September 25 2009 from 7-8 PM at the Atlanta Soto Zen Center in Atlanta Georgia (http://www.aszc.org/). Hassler performed on the Buchla 200-E modular electronic music instrument, and Robinson's instrument was the Kyma/Pacarana. The concert was part of a month-long fundraising Arts Festival at the Zen Center, including a performance by the Hallucination Sextet (Dick Robinson, Jerry Cullum, and four virtual performers): http://shokai.blogspot.com/2009/09/important-announcement.htmlNew York to YorkTaylor Deupree (http://taylordeupree.com) was invited to do a residency with the New Aesthetics in Computer Music research project at York University. Taylor was invited to create a new piece for Kyma-processed gamelan and to hold interviews and discussions on his role in the emergence of the microsound movement. http://music.york.ac.uk/mrc/na-cm/index.php?n=Main.NewsRecombinant in BarcelonaThanks to all who participated in the First Kyma International Sound Symposium in Barcelona presented by Station 55 and Symbolic Sound at Niu Espai Artistic Contemporani. Master classes, paper presentations, and concerts were augmented by lively discussions and friendly exchanges over meals and culminating with a night of dancing at the Moog to Cristian Vogel's Never Engine on the Pacarana. USO Project (Matteo Milani & Federico Placidi) posted a synopsis (with photos and tweets tagged with #KISS09) on the USO Project blog (http://usoproject.blogspot.com/2009/10/focus-on-kyma-international-sound.html). Video of selected sessions is forthcoming!Tip of the dayTo copy the full path name of a file in order to paste it somewhere else: In the Sound Browser, locate and select the file. In the small info window at the bottom of the Sound Browser, use Ctrl+L to make the window large. Select and copy the full path name (or any other information about the file). Now you're ready to paste!Music Hall of FameOn October 20, 2009, composer Scott Miller (http://www.scottlmiller.net) was inducted into the Music Hall of Fame and received an alumni achievement award from his undergraduate alma mater, SUNY-Oneonta (http://www.thedailystar.com/local/local_story_293040011.html). On the first evening, Miller presented a concert of Kyma-based interactive music (composed and structured improvisations) with clarinetist Calvin Falwell and trumpeter Ben Aldridge and, on the second night, he participated in a concert with atom3, an electroacoustic improv group. He also presented lectures at SUNY-Oneonta and Hartwick College on his music--including a lecture entitled 'Collaboration as Concept'. According to Scott, now that he has a Paca, this was the first time he was able to bring his Kyma rig as carry-on luggage. Everything, including his laptop, fit in a Hardigg Storm iM2500 case.Shall the TWAIN meet?Cristian Vogel provided interactive sound for the October 7 2009 opening of Used Abused and Amused by Santiago Taccetti (http://www.taccetti.com/) and Natalia Ibanez Lario (http://www.nataliaibanezlario.com/) at the TWAIN (totally without an interesting name) gallery in Barcelona (http://www.AntiguaCasaHaiku.org). Vogel placed contact mics on black-painted papier-mâché balls suspended from orange cables in the gallery such that, when gallery visitors hit the sculpture, it triggered a grain cloud explosion in Kyma. In this video (http://www.tendencias.tv/twain), you can see enthusiastic gallery visitors happily kicking, punching, and swinging the ersatz piñatas to be showered with chalk, glitter, and glass beads (and in the background you can catch glimpses of Cristian Vogel, Kyma, Kurt Hebel, and Carla Scaletti who were in Barcelona for the Kyma symposium which started later that week).Di Scipio in ComoComposer Agostino Di Scipio presented a 3-day workshop in Como Italy (near the Swiss border) with students and professors from the local conservatory. During the final concert, they performed Audible Ecosystemics n.2a (Feedback Study) and n.3a (Background Noise Study), Texture/Multiple (with 5 instruments & electronics), and 6 Studi (for piano & electronics).Placidi premiere in TorinoComposer Federico Placidi's piece for clarinet, cello and Kyma was premiered in Torino in November 2009. Placidi performed the live processing and Matteo Milani did the sound diffusion using a Jazz Mutant Lemur tablet.---Opportunities---SIGGRAPH Nexus of Art and ScienceSubmit presentation proposals for computer animation, visual effects, video games, scientific visualizations, real-time applications, very short clips showcasing specific work (such as a model, a shader, or an animation), interactive demos or installations, new and interesting methods for other people to create things: http://www.siggraph.org/s2010/Workshops on US Law for ArtistsVolunteer Lawyers for the Arts (VLA) offers free workshops for musicians and pro bono advice for artists: http://www.vlany.org/Ton aus Strom Composers WorkshopComposer Bruno Liberda leads small groups in creating new musical compositions (and in examining how the process of composing can be applied to other aspects of their lives): http://www.brunoliberda.com/Prize for Digital Musics & Sound ArtThe Deadline is March 15 2010: http://www.aec.at/prix_categories_en.php?cat=Digital%20MusicsFour new faculty positions at LSU AVATARAVATAR (Arts, Visualization, Advanced Technologies and Research) at Louisiana State University is a university-wide program focusing on the intersections among art, technology and computation, creating new research areas in virtual environments, digital art, electroacoustic music, animation, video game design, scientific visualization and more. There are four faculty openings. For more information, visit: http://avatar.lsu.edu/employment.html3rd European competition for live-electronic music projects.The organizers of this competition are looking for project proposals that demonstrate in an innovative way new possibilities for the combination of instruments and live-electronics as well as innovative use of live-electronics with the composer as a performer: http://www.ecpnm.com/3competition.htmlThe 2010 Salvatore Martirano Memorial Composition AwardEligibility: Any composer, regardless of age or nationality. First Prize cash award of $1000 and second prize cash award of $500 plus performances by the University of Illinois New Music Ensemble in November of 2010 at the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts in Champaign Illinois. Additional awards and performances may be given at the discretion of the judges. Deadline: March 15, 2010: http://camil.music.uiuc.edu/CompTheory/Awards/Martirano.htmlEMPAC Artist & Scholar/Researcher in Residence ProgramsEMPAC is pleased to announce that it is accepting applications for both its Artist in Residence and its Scholar and Researcher in Residence programs.http://www.empac.rpi.edu/residencies/
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Live Streaming of Transmediale Lectures

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Wed Feb 3
Price and Value of Cultural Work
11:00 - 13:00 // Info:englishdeutsch
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Aeolia cello garment shown at TEI 2010

Last week we presented our cello garment to the Tangible & Embedded crowd at MIT's Media Lab. The garment incorporates knitted stretch sensing being developd by Martha Glazzard to feed gestural data back into the performance in real time. The shirt was fitted for Peter Gregson, who does a lot of work with digital music, especially for New Media Scotland's 10th anniversary event last year, and has recently evolved from a proof of concept to a more exciting stage, where we can see the potential for integrated performance and production of new music. Yann Seznec was responsible for the sound design, and also created this video of the work in rehearsal.

Martha recently embarked on her MA at Nottingham Trent University, exploring further the potential functionality and technical issues inherent in knitted structures for wearable circuits (sample above), and we hope to continue the work through movement and choreography.More information on the project can be found on my website website.
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Screendance Touring Public Places

For anybody interested, I am organising a group of works that will be touring public spaces in the UK this summer. The project may not be for everyone, as the works will not always be screened on a large screen and with a silent attentive audience. The works will always be screened with sound - in shops, bars, outdoor public spaces etc.If you are interested in the project and would like your work to have the chance to be shown to a wide public audience I'd love to receive your work. email circuitsoup@gmail.com or go to http://www.circuitsoup.com for more details.
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Is this real life?

I am frankly overwhelmed by the fact that I have am just entering the world of dance and technology.The possibilities at the intersection of movement- something so organic, and video- purely technological, are explosive. I was going to write this post about a video on Movement Research:http://www.dance-tech.net/video/movement-research-theResearch that is "process-oriented rather than product oriented" and public engagement in this process fascinates me. The more I surfed around dance-tech.net, the deeper I swam through crazy editing, choreography and some delicious music. Here's a quick shout-out to Carol Hess for bringing us to this website; thank you! I am now addicted.Tonight I was hooked on Cari Ann Shim Sham's work.Check out her videos at:http://www.dance-tech.net/profile/CariAnnShimShamand "Are you for real?" and "January" at:http://www.cariannshimsham.com/"Are you for real?" struck me most. Time management is an all too familiar struggle among, well, everyone. I personally have a very hard time deciding where and who to give more doses of my time and energy. This causes me to often feel like I have multiple identities, which can tire a mind faster than actually working hard on a single thing. The visual of a body covered in post its explains this feeling, a feeling of only being able to show certain parts of yourself because other parts are occupied by commitments and thus hidden, so simply. The "I know that feels!" light bulb in my head instantly went off when I saw this.
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Back in October I spoke with Thomas Dumke about CYNETart Festival and performative arts in the context of new media art. Our conversation was possible thanks to Sonja Lebos from UIII.org, Association for Interdisciplinary and Intercultural Research, based in Zagreb. Sonja's organization is deeply rooted in architecture, urbanism and new media art.

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Thomas Dumke with the background by Monolake Live Surround Taken from ds-x.org

Thomas then gave a lecture in the net club Mama about the history of Festspiel Haus Hellerau, Trans-Media-Akademie Dresden and the festival.Thomad Dumke studied history and sociology from 1997–2002 at TU Dresden, postgraduate in culture & management. Since 1999 Thomas Dumke is part of the international festival for computer based arts CYNETart in Dresden, in 2000 he initiated together with DS-X.org the »microscope session«, an event for audio-visual concerts, founding member of TMA Hellerau in 2001, from 2006 he has been the director of the CYNETart festival. He is a member of the artist collaborative DS-X.org.

Let’s start with the concept of your festival CYNETart… I find it very interesting and slightly different in comparison with other media art festivals, because you didn’t give up from the body…TD: The Trans-Media-Akademie organizes annually the CYNETart Festival and we understand media art more as a research approach and within this we are focused more on the changes of our perception and self image of our movement or our body feeling in relation to ongoing mediation and mediazation processes.We are interested even in our relation with the human environment. This is somehow our, lets say, scheme or issue. If we have this scheme for body and space relation or our body environment relation, the question is how we can use media technology to make us aware of this relation? There are also somehow rational aspects, because we are using objects with technology. It’s not esoteric, para-psychological or whatever.


Jacob Korn and his Harmony Universe (c) Taken from ds-x.org

It’s cybernetics! It means that everything is provable. But we think that we can use technology to make things experienceable or sensible, what in normal case is not experienceable. We are trying to establish with our CYNETart Festival a platform to present a different kind of performative installation works or even stage performances. We have also workshops and club events for the younger audience.So, it’s also a community oriented festival, because it seems that you want a reaction by the audience?TD: Yes! This is also very important. We don’t want to be hermetically closed for the audience. That’s what we are really trying to achieve within Tele-Plateus project where we would like to establish virtual environments, interactive environments in the public space.Tele-Plateus should function in that way with a public stage, or even something like a star gate for other cities. Virtual environments should be connected to each other, to give the citizens of these cities the possibility to interact with audio, sound and visual elements. Somehow, this is an abstract way, nothing like Skype connection or so. Today, you can make face to face connections like on TV.


Photo: mb21 backup taken from t-m-a

We are really trying to stay at some abstract level, because we know from previous experiences that when you hear and focus on one point, then you are able to activate your potential imagination. I mean, literally I don’t know you, but I have got the feeling of you…If I have a contact with your shape or with your sound, maybe I don’t know you, but your are on remote and I have a contact with your generated sound. And you are interacting with my sound, too. This is this point, we meet each other on the sound level and the task for the audience or the composer is to give a set up of one environment, which should be easy going or just easy approachable to have this kind of experience.Experience in which I am with somebody, but for instance three people with me projected in one space, of course this is hyperspace and it’s only in mind. It’s not for real, because all scales and environments are on different places and in that particular time, if you are active with each other, we are sharing one space, and this is sound space and the space in your head.


Mortal Engine by Chunky Move (c)

I’m glad that you mentioned just now this important aspect of hyperspace in the context of perception or mental space, lets say colloquially ‘in the head’…TD: Yeah, yeah. Even the whole process that is going on at the moment, if we really observe the internet natives, these new generations that are going up… My experience was like this, if you met somebody offline. Let's say it in terms of online and offline reality. There are totally different intentions in real life, a totally different way of perceiving things. That’s sometimes funny for me, but it does not have to be funny for other person.


Ballettikka Internettikka (c)

Even if you are in the relationship with somebody who is not online, she or he can’t understand what you are doing all the time. This is a thing in our cognition process, what Marshal McLuhan have postulated in the 60’s. This global village metaphor which is now happening… From the mental point of view, the fact that we are all coming together is based on television, online life and social media thing. This got somehow real, this webness and activities…Of course, and this urge to be connected… and the feeling when you are offline that something important is happening online, and you are not there to see it or try it… sometimes it’s haunting… How do people react to you concepts?TD: We have got mostly positive responses to what we do. I think, it’s always a decision of their own, if they got it right, if they understood this abstract level of sound and visual aspect. Somehow, we are all conditioned by Hollywood and totally illusionary media worlds that have to be colourful and more real then real in details. What we are doing is totally opposite. We use the senses with sound with an aim to make an impact, but a real one. Also, it gives you a chance to put there your own stuff according to things you actually perceive and receive.


Jacob Korn Live AV with hypecycle (c), taken from ds-x.org

For instance The 'Schlamp' installation by Frieder Weiss and Emily Fernandez has opened pretty interesting discussion on computer games, does it make a difference if I’m shooting on a real person or 'real character' that looks more like a real body? Or maybe I’m only shooting on black square or an abstract thing. I think that in a psychological way or mentally it makes no difference. Our neurons and brain have the same neuro-electric processes whether we are shooting digitally or for real.We had interesting experiences while presenting installations where people were projected on the street or on the floor. After some time passers would start to jump or trying to hit digitally projected people. They just kicked them out and showed that they don’t have respect for the virtual re-presentation because it’s not real. I think, this case shows the current issues even if you look to finance market. It’s raising up on the virtualization of the world.


Chunky Move (c)

Why the market has collapsed? Because there is no relationship to the real world. Like in the past we had the relation to the material world, like gold used to be in the past. It was like a never ending game. How we are dealing with this virtual reality thing? Is it a quite similar world? For instance, we are jumping faster but in the music industry, actually everything is the same, there are terms like sharing, copy right and so… The question is what is this virtual world? Why we are sharing so simple, because we can digitally re-produce things quite simple. We do not care about copyright anymore.


Photo: tma (c) taken from bodynavigation

I’m still buying vinyl, because I are really like music, but I can’t share or copy this vinyl. So, it’s something that has this aura thing which I think is increasingly present lately, to experience things in our real environment. A good aspect of virtual environment is that you can’t reproduce a video, a record or a CD, but you have to experience it by yourself.In the same category we can discuss on watching interactive dance, because dancer can experience this interaction but the audience not. Dancer is inside and the audience is not. This is one quality aspect and it has some kind of aura. This self experience can be in local virtual environment or in networked virtual environment. This is new, it could be development and comprehend.


Photo: Zeitgeist by Hjørdis Kurås

But the whole story is pretty much based on performative aspects, dance...TD: It’s based on performance. Actually, we don’t like to work with dancers, we have a local school in Dresden and there are lots of dancers. The thing with dancers is that they are educated somehow in the direction of the quality of movements, release techniques, different dancing techniques and so. You know, it looks like Forsythe or it looks like something else. Of course, there are different types of new students coming to the new repertoire and they would like to test generated sound and visuals.Usually, they are coming with all the movements they have learned in school and they don’t listen to the sound or just react to this base, which is a mistake. But, what is happening during this processes? If you have a feedback effect or closed circles you are inside this instrument, and inside this environment you have to react to each other.


Do androgyns dream of electric sheep by An Kaler, dancer: Gregory Holt

Sure, it's not important what dance technique you're using, but the way you comprehend movement as it is...TD: It doesn’t make sense if you make a ‘William Forsythe movement’ because the instrument and your environment don't know that. Hence, it doesn’t recognize that. The instrument recognizes your movements, intensity or something like jumping. But, it doesn’t recognize the special quality of typical dance forms. I don’t like to work with professional dancers because you have to push away this conditioned way of how to move through space.There is no sense to do some technique in such environment. This is our approach. You have to experience by yourself and you have to use it like an instrument. Even piano players use different interpretations, especially in comparison with Jimmy Hendrix and the way how he used electric guitar.


Photo by: Matthias Härtig/TMA Hellerau taken from flickr

It’s different and at the other hand it’s the same in performing arts and in fields where you have to think on how to move. Even sometimes children or common people are much better for that, because they are free minded to do it. They don't think something like Oh, I'm not doing this right or I don’t act like this! But, because they do spontaneous things and even then, slowly and by listening, step by step they can get the felling on how to move or to figure out the environment. It’s very important to get the feeling how it is inside. What is happening when I move and what's the feedback I got. ‘When I’m shouting in the wood it always come back to me’ principle is similar to electronic interactivity.You mentioned before William Forsyth… He is very connected with the city of Dresden…TD: Since 2006 he has his residency in Dresden. Something like a special cultural policy contract among the cities of Frankfurt and Dresden with the states of Hessen and Saxony. These four partners finance the Forsythe Company. Three or four times per year he comes to Hellerau in order to work with dancers.


Synchronous Objects by William Forsyth

What do you think about his data visualization project Synchronous Objects? I was really surprised when I saw it...TD: Oh, you mean his improvisation project… His method is more about archiving. His technology DVD is more about how the Forsyth method is working. He chose one of his performances One Flat Thing to show it on the internet. It’s totally complex documentation, notation and interpretation of his choreography and performance. It’s amazing, but it’s archiving.The other aspect that I haven't experienced yet is the use of technology in his stage work. I mean, I saw what he was doing with the sound manipulations. He was influenced by neuro-science and he took the idea of what is going on in neuro science to re-adapt it into his dance pieces.


Cynetart 2009, Automatic Clubbing taken from flickr

Where do you see CYNETart festival in comparison with the similar European festivals and what kind of opportunities artists can have within your framework?TD: I would say that we are really unique because we are really focused on this concept of performing arts combined with new technologies. We are not doing only exhibitions and public events like workshops, screenings and so. We are interested in the working processes not only in single, produced and ready for the market art piece.We want our guests to demonstrate their working processes and stuff like that, but at the same time to get in contact with the audience.This is really important. We like when these sides, artists and the audience exchange their position. That means, that we really like this participatory approach in installations, as well as the younger audience within our clubbing programme. OK, we have this unique location, die Festspiel Haus Hellerau where we can use these big halls for dance pieces or bigger installations. There are also small stages and smaller halls where we usually organize meetings, smaller exhibitions and so...


Johannes Birringer (c)

Our Call for Proposals is internationally recognized, it usually starts in December right after the festival is over, and what is also unique is our scholarship for new media art with an amount of 6.000 Euros. We also have a big grant project supported by the Ministry of Art and Science with an amount of 10.000 Euros. Of course, for our contests and awards we have a grant of 5.000 Euros. So, that means that we have a lot of money to spend, and we want to spend it on a quality programme. I mean, in comparison with the mayor media art festivals in Germany and Europe, like Transmediale, these sums are not so big...


Cynetart 2009, Automatic Clubbing taken from flickr

What do you think about low budget technologies, DIY technologies in the context of media art?TD: When you compare different motion sensing systems, you can find among them many really low budget projects, especially compared to motion capturing system which is really expensive and needs very sophisticated equipment. You can work with an average computer, the only thing that you need of those special equipments is a TV card or an observation cam, but if you spend maybe 5000 Euros, you can have it by your own.This is somehow the middle level, this DIY level and it will be used more and more, because technology is getting smarter and cheaper. We will have a generation that will be capable to do everything by their own. I think this will be the future!


Language Game by Kobakant (c)

Even in the context of Internet, the so-called digital culture or internet natives... I think there would be more and more projects specially designed for this kind of audience, also taking place only on the internet which would know to differ real present activity in the future. Then E-tribal art, and of course this RFID thing...I know that Johannes Birringer from Tirier University is doing infrared sensitive clothes. This is quite interesting from sevelar aspects, one thing is this possibility of connecting everything, but then the author must ask himself, what can we do with this multiple connectivity?Thanks a lot, Thomas!This interview was previously published on Personal Cyber Botanica blog
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Agecif et formation aux Arts Numériques

Face au manque criant de formation dans le domaine des arts et spectacles numériques, hors pratiques et techniques artistiques, l'AGECIF lance trois formations spécialisées notamment en partenariat avec le Zinc à Marseille : Médiation des Arts Numériques, Production des arts numérique et Communication des arts numériques. On pourra télécharger au bas de ce post les présentations de ces formations.L’AGECIF se place au service du secteur culturel, des entreprises, institutions et organisations qui le structurent et des personnes qui le font vivre. La formation professionnelle continue pour renforcer les compétences, et faciliter l’engagement d’artistes ou de techniciens. Elle intervient sur l’ensemble du territoire et en particulier à Lyon, Marseille, Bordeaux, Montpellier, Clermont-Ferrand, Tours, Orléans, mais aussi en Normandie, ainsi qu’à La Réunion, en Guadeloupe et en Martinique. Elle s’inscrit dans une pensée européenne. Elle est membre fondateur du réseau européen des organismes de formation sur les questions de gestion culturelle, l’ENCATC. Enfin, pour compléter son offre, l’AGECIF vient de créer une filiale, une société d’expertise comptable inscrite à l’Ordre des experts-comptables, spécialisée dans le secteur culturel et artistique : AGECIF Conseil.Informations : formation@agecif.comWeb : http://agecif-culture.com/Télécharger :Médiation des Arts Numériques : 1@ MEDIATION DES ARTS NUMERIQUES-10-01-25.pdfCommunication des Arts Numériques : 2@ COMMUNICATION DES ARTS NUMERIQUES-10-01-25.pdfProduction des Arts Numériques : 3@ PRODUCTION DES ARTS NUMERIQUES-10-01-25.pdf
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Over the past 10 months we have been creating a dance theatre work which strives to take the bboying dance form into new territory. "White Caps", a live and film performance for the Bristol Old Vic in England, aims to explore the full expressive depth that the bboying technique holds, following the journey of two young men as they embark on an epic adventure in a compassionate, exhilarating search for completeness.We documented the process we went though to create this work, which i would like to share with you. Here are links to an episode of our production podcast and the latest teaser trail we have for the work.Hope this is of interest to you.Podcast Episode 3:http://www.vimeo.com/7805344Trail:http://www.vimeo.com/8910088Thank youWilkie Branson
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SEEN[EMPTY]SCENE project of [EMPTY]FILM

1|11|2005: The site named 'videodance' that is part of emptyfilm website is launched as a beta version, including 5 videodance films with overall title '5 Paths'. These films were co-produced by the Greek State School of Dance and the British Council as part of a workshop taught by the filmmaker Margaret Williams. It contains the history of videodance, from 1880 to 2002, theory and reviews on this hybrid form of art that combines dance and film, bibliography and links.Since 2005 the production of videodance films increased in number. More festivals were created, symposia were organised and manifestos were written.In January 2010 the videodance site became part of a bigger project called 'seen[empty]scene' and is still part of the emptyfilm project, curated by Demitri Delinikolas, that is a research project on the application of internet in the production and distribution of digital cinema. The 'seen[empty]scene' project contains three sub-projects. The first one explores the art of videodance whilst the second one is dedicated in performance art, and the third one is dedicated in dancetheatre.'Seen[empty]scene' is curated by Eleni Karozi.All three websites are under construction but will be launched soon.www.emptyfilm.com
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DUBLIN FRINGE FESTIVAL 2010

Dublin, 11-26 September 2010 Dublin Fringe Festival16th Dublin Fringe Festivalinvitation for submissions for its culture jamming line-up of contemporary artswww.fringefest.com/2010Dublin Fringe Festival is delighted to welcome submissions for the 2010 edition of ABSOLUT Fringe. For two weeks in September Dublin will be captivated by theatre, dance, music, visual art, live art and street performance from Ireland and around the globe. We invite you to join us in making it happen.Dublin Fringe Festival has always been the natural home of artists who are ambitious, adventurous, innovative and fearless, and who make work in all kinds of places and spaces around Dublin city. This year, a continued emphasis will be placed on new work that reclaims more of our city's empty spaces and experiments with performance and experiential arts on a grand and minute scale.In 2010 the festival will have a particular focus on works that engage with the theme of community, to be interpreted as liberally and imaginatively as possible by the artists we work with. Too often 'community' becomes a byword for disadvantage and exclusion where the myriad possibilities of community, both on and offline are ignored.Dublin Fringe Festival would like to re-imagine the idea of community in 2010. To do this, we need you, artists and thinkers, to make it happen. We want to hear your ideas whether you work in theatre, music, dance, visual art, street-art, film, multi-media or beyond.Contact:Dublin Fringe FestivalRóise Goan, DirectorSackville House, Sackville Place, Dublin 1Irelandtel: +353 1 817 1677fax: +353 1 817 1678info@fringefest.comwww.fringefest.com
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call for entries

Hi everybody,since some years we are organizing the project series called "media motion". It is dedicated to artists in the field of dance and multimedia. The performances take place at m.a. studio, a studio near Zürich, Switzerland. We are looking for interesting projects to be scheduled for 2011.For more information, check www.susannebraun.ch and/or contact us through our website.
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Alastair Macaulay is a bored man. The New York Times chief dance critic, an import from London, has been holding down a position of outsized power that he never merited. When he first got here, I thought he'd bring a voice of passion, which I value. But, for the most part, I stopped reading his work when it became clear that his experience and sympathies mainly run to elite choreographers—Balanchine, Cunningham, Paul Taylor, Mark Morris--and a handful of other artists he deems masters of the craft. Ask Macaulay to stray beyond his comfy zone, and he loses it. Read the rest of this post here
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Pier Luigi Capucci [This paper was originally presented at the International Conference “Consciousness Reframed 10 – experiencing [design] – behaving [media]”, Munich, MHMK, University of Applied Sciences, November 19 – 21, 2009] The idea of “simulation” is a very intriguing, multifaceted and complex issue. Words like “verisimilitude”, “emulation”, “imitation”, “copy”, “reproduction”, “clone”, “replica”... are commonly used. In our everyday life we imagine situations, events, projects and decline them to the future: we simulate possible worlds and test them in a sort of permanent “what if” which is continuously reworked and modified. This process has been methodologically formalized in the sciences, where we build models, simulations, which try to describe facts, events and phenomena. Models and simulations have a very important cognitive role in knowing and understanding the world we live in. Simulation is also at the basis of human communication and it has been often theoretically discussed in the media field [1]. In 1991 Gianfranco Bettetini, a semiologist mainly working in the mass media field, wrote that “... every language, whatever the materiality of the signs is which structure it, gives birth to operations which can’t find a more appropriate term to be defined than ‘simulation’. Whatever may be their style or genre, the writer, the painter, the photographer, the cinema and television author, the computer graphic artist... simulate.” [2] But, in a wider, general view, every device humans design, build and use has at least to simulate how it can be grasped by our perceptual system, by the senses, by the mind, or work with the body: which means that it has to simulate some of the body’s operations, structures, functions, behaviours... So oral language, written works, television, press, Internet, simulate because they tell us stories which try to represent or describe something factual or invented related with the world we are in. In this “diegetic simulation” the signified communicates something more or less familiar and shareable, although not necessarily true or existent. Simulation and representation But simulation also concerns the nature of the signifier. Computer technologies refer to simulation, although they add specific possibilities (i.e. the copy&paste action). The visual interfaces of the computer’s most popular operative systems simulate some visual properties of the desktop in order to be more intuitive.

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