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QUANTUM WORLD TOUR 14-15 Cie Gilles Jobin

Here the dates of QUANTUM world tour. The piece will visit many countries and stay tuned for complementary programs of conferences and talks with Gilles Jobin and scientists. Meet  Julius Von BIsmarck, Carla Scaletti and Giles Jobin at BAM in  New York for the US première of QUANTUM. Gilles Jobin, CERN phycist Nicolas Chanon and visual artist Julius Von Bismarck  will meet the audience in San Francisco. In Rio de Janeiro and Belo Horizonte  Brazilian  phycicist from CERN, Claudio Lenz Cesar will have public interactions with Gilles Jobin. Stay tuned via www.gillesjobin.com. Join our newsletter or follow the company on facebook. You can also get more info through >Gilles Jobin's blog gillescollides

QUANTUM - Teaser from Cie Gilles Jobin on Vimeo.

QUANTUM  WORLD TOUR  2013-15

-Première 23 september 2013  Théâtre Forum Meyrin Geneva @ CMS Experiment-Cessy France

QUANTUM world tour is part of events celebrating the 60th anniversary of CERN in 2014

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NORTH AMERICA

2-3-4th october  QUANTUM BAM/New York Next Wave Festival + Crossing The Lines Festival - New Settings Fondation Entreprise Hermes/USA

12-13th october QUANTUM @ ODC/San Francisco / USA + lecture about Cern residency with Cern physicist Nicolas Chanon. With the support of Swissnex San Francisco

16-17-18th october  QUANTUM @ TDC/Vancouver / CANADA

 

SOUTH AMERICA

21 october QUANTUM @ Festival Danzalborde/Matucana Theatre/Santiago de Chile/ CHILE

23 october  QUANTUM @ Festival Danzalborde/Valparaiso/ CHILE

26 october QUANTUM @ Bienal do Dança Do Ceara/Fortaleza/BRAZIL

29-30 october QUANTUM @ Festival Internacional Dança Belo Horizonte-FID/ BRAZIL  + conference CERN physicist with the support of Swissnex Brazil

2 november   QUANTUM @ Panorama Festival Rio de Janeiro/ BRAZIL + conference CERN physicist + Masterclass avec le soutien de Swissnex Brazil

EUROPE

6-7-8-9th november  QUANTUM @ ARSENIC/Lausanne SWITZERLAND

12-13-14th november   A+B=X @  ARSENIC/Lausanne SWITZERLAND (1997 creation rebuilt)

SOUTH AMERICA

21-22 november    QUANTUM @ FAEL Lima/PERU

2015 

27th February QUANTUM @ Mercat de La Flores / IDN Festival/Barcelona/SPAIN

November      QUANTUM @ Saarbrucken/GERMANY

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Interview with Itamar Serussi

Itamar Serussi was selected for the modul-dance project after being proposed by Danshuis Station Zuid Tilburg. During the modul-dance conference that took place in October 2012 in Tilburg, Serussi talked with us about Mono, the piece developed under the project and inspired while buying a pram for his newly born twins. The advertisement said "In three clicks from mono to duo". In effect, mono is about several effects, directions, decisions and happenings coming together, and thus creating something new. Things that somehow "click" in place as well. As his own life does right now with the birth of his two kids, the international acclaim he experiences and this first chance to make a full-length dance piece for the theater.

More modul-dance videos on Numeridanse.tv.

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Modul-dance experience. By Jasmina Križaj

In May 2011, the Slovenian artist Jasmina Križaj wrote the following article for a modul-dance newsletter regarding her experience in the framework of the project.
Jasmina Krizaj_The very delicious piece © Sasa Huzjak (4)Working period: from 04/04/2011 - 15/04/2011
Where: in Poznan, Poland - Art Stations Foundation
Who: Anja Bornsek, Cristina Planas Leitao, Jasmina Križaj and Tarras Some

Into the Out

Being in Poland was the first time for all of us. Have to admit I didn't know what to expect. There was a chance that it will feel like home and there is also very strong and in my opinion still somehow "fresh" historical memory. In some way it did feel like home.

After a long time I didn't feel like stranger while walking through the streets of another country.

We spend most of our time in the studio, which by the way, felt like a big privilege. It is a great theater/studio space, with beautiful made of red bricks back wall for great photos or video. The fact that the studio is in a shopping mall, gave us kind of perverse feeling. We are used to work far from so called normal human life, especially commercial one. But it is special when at and consumerism meet. I like the fact that somebody who doesn't reach so after art words but prefers commercial entertainment suddenly has both in one space. Maybe that changes people's perception about art. That it is not something just for privileged, that it is not something separated from our daily life, but it is actually like itself.

I was also giving technique classes of Flying Low. Have to say that I was very surprised by the speed and precision of working of Polish dancers. Really appreciate I could share my knowledge with them.

The work we did was very simple. But as they say "Less is more" was valuable also this time. The simplicity of the approach to the topic of Nervous System opened so many new chapters. Going deeper and deeper on physical, mental, philosophical and even emotional and spiritual level enrich and reveled many new possibilities but of course in the same time raised many new doubts and question. But I have to say those first two weeks of research were very productive and a good starting point and also a good take off for future research.

In the end I would just like to mention the generosity of the Art Stations Foundation team. Thank you very much!

Text written after an hour of shaking:

I feel like Leonardo DiCaprio in What's eating Gilbert Grape. With restless body. Swallowed back muscles like a puffy dove. Lying on the floor I feel the big mass of my heart. The weight of my heart. Its greatness and also whole its heaviness. I started fearing I could break the muscles/fibers that are attaching it to the sternum, if I continue shaking. I feared I would break my heart.

Wish to experience a slow motion fall. Maybe my legs don't shake, cause I believe that shaky legs represent weakness? So many tiny habits just in the fingers and those. Jazz took me. Then left me. Then allowed me to compose an e-mail. I sorted my mind. It eased my anger and have. Left leg and kidneys stayed as they are-exhausted, sucked, lonely, uncooperative.

Constant thought, every recognition has to be understood, constant trying to do, to try, to experience. Trying not to try. How are we spending our thoughts? Do we move because of discomfort, because of the pleasure that follows after releasing this discomfort?

Picture: © Saša Kuzjak

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PROTOBODY 1.0 WORK IN PROGRESS EXPOSITION

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PROTOBODY 1.0 by Brisa MP , develops international residency HANGAR from June to July with the support of  “Ventanilla abierta”  FONDART (National Fund for Culture and Arts, from the Chilean Government.

The residence offers two parallel lines of research; theoretical and practical. The theorical residence it is to continue the C + T MAP project, where she has mapped dance and technology artists and works in Latin America. This time she records the Catalan and Spanish artists working process.

At the practical phase, the project is researching and developing an autonomous reagent device for dialogue with the human body and produce specific gesture, recognizing the possible ranges of motion in the human-machine interaction. Explores new methodologies in the field of BT (BodyTechnology) production, from the combination of technical, scientific and artistic languages. In this context is to decipher the procedures of creation in BT that allow problematize the traditional structures of production stage work, where, as matter-body-art technology contaminate each other in the process of creating and learning; and expose the artistic research processes as exercises work.

Thus, PROTOBODY 1.0 continues her previous projects, carrying out research on human- device, focused on the moving body relationship, the modulation of body from technological devices, resulting interaction generate specific gestuality organized by the crossing of organic and artificial actuators. This project is part of thesis from Master Technology and Aesthetics of Electronic Arts, she developed at the Tres de Febrero National University (Buenos Aires, Argentina).

Work in progress PROTOBODY 1.0 : http://cuerpoytecnologia.blogspot.com.es/ ;

HANGAR BCN

SSept. 20 / 12: 00 to 14:00 

Protobody presentation [ project development and handmade robotic object  JMP.TC Model 1. DIY , open hardware ] 

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Angie Hiesl & Roland Kaiser_ID-clash_Cologne 2013_© Roland Kaiser

I Description

The performance is in the form of a circuit situated in a horticultural nursery on the outskirts of Cologne. The circuit consists of three buildings whose interiors are divided and semanticised during the course of the performance: a big, brick-walled greenhouse, a small glass greenhouse and a hothouse with a solid sliding door and side sheets. These buildings are at right angles to one another, with the small glass greenhouse, about 2x3m, at the intersection.

The performance begins at the front of the large brick greenhouse. The five female performers – all “experts in everyday life” – plant flowerpots lined on a trolley, each bearing a sign. On each pot is a label for different gender identities, key concepts of gender studies, names from queer culture, general expressions of uncertainty, symbols and lettering in Bengali. Each of the small flowerpots is planted together with a colourful piece of candy: “Take a goody – take a fixation”, the installation seems to say, “Both are sweet – and neither are natural”.

After the flowerpots are planted, the five performers move to their respective positions, among which the audience can move freely and decide for themselves where and when to enter and leave the on-going performances (I also jumped from one place to the next, meaning that the following cannot be a full representation of what was going on).

Annonya and Katha stay at the large greenhouse. They are both hijra, representatives and activists of the “third gender” in Bangladesh, and trained dancers. They begin by presenting the hijra culture from its ritual colourful side. Flanked by two canvases showing films from their everyday lives and urban and rural street life, along with familiar religious moments, they erect a ritual space with silver vase-like vessels and colourful gift boxes, lining it with Bengali lettering in flower potting soil. Here they dress in traditional garments, speak and sing into microphones, thereby illustrating the traditional role of the third gender of blessing families at weddings, house-warming celebrations and births of children. There is something double-edged about the processes throughout; the performers seem ironically distanced and at some point a shifting occurs that is unavoidable if the hijra are not to be idealised but realistically portrayed: the pictorial Bengali façade breaks. The performers move towards the audience, clapping. “Hey, hey, hey, we’re hijra. We’re poor, give us some money”. They leave the ritual space. In a monotone green-planted part of the greenhouse, Katha erects upside-down hammers, sheathing the stems with condoms. She plants the colourful Bengali condom packaging amid the green monoculture. Poverty and forced prostitution: the dark side of the otherwise colourful third gender, which in modern secularised Bengali culture has no alternative income. Katha is instructed in her sheathing of the hammers by Annonya, who (we learn from the performer biography in the programme) also works as an activist and sex worker consultant in Bangladesh.

At the end of their multi-faceted performances and stories, the two dancers move into a tent located in front of the large greenhouse, where they prepare food on gas stoves and eat until the end of the event: a working day consisting of conversation, feast, charity, education and paid sex reaches its humble end.

In the second position, the small greenhouse, there is a red sofa. Here, Cuban native Melissa Marie García Noriega tells the story of her life – sometimes face-to-face, sometimes simply lost in her own thoughts. A carefree childhood, in which no one was bothered by the boy behaving girlishly; then a rape, the knowledge that the girl in her had been abused; a lack of family acceptance of her feminine demeanour at puberty, the grotesque urge to become a Cuban macho, then, finally, deliverance. Art studies, psychotherapy, the birth of a son, the possibilities of a new self-determination in living with a man and eventually her sex change to become the woman she had already been. Melissa still lives with the same partner; the audience is caught up in the sweet relief of a happy ending. During all these stories, which may have given rise to either concern among the audience or, even worse, the feeling of psychotherapeutic authority, the dancer and choreographer succeeds in remaining dominant throughout. The red couch is not a Freudian spot for self-exposure, but an arena in which Melissa moves through gloom, aggression, ironic poses, excitement and truly refreshing directness. The amiability that she arouses in doing so, the self-confidence that she exudes, catches the audience and turns it into a close friend – and if there were not the other “stages” yet to visit, one would stay to listen to her much longer.

Melissa’s story alternates between her experiences in Cuba and Germany, the greenhouse serving as an intercultural intersection which connects the Bengali scenery in the large greenhouse with that in the hothouse opposite. The latter are dedicated to gender approaches in Western culture. Initially, the sliding door of the hothouse is open and we see earth grooves in the fore room, jackets on hangers above. In perspective, the “asparagus field” – masculine connotation attended – stretches out into a monoculture of pansies. The trained mathematician and physicist Michelle Niwicho begins to label the sliding doors with the milestones of her life. Then she closes the door from the inside and it takes a while before the audience discovers that they are not locked out, but can observe the interior through the rolled-up sheets at the side. At first, one feels forced to a voyeurism, but the inner actions soon clarify that the opposite is the case. There is a need for the construction of this interior, or rather, this inner life, in order that messages may be sent out of this mentality of security.

Michelle constructs her workplace: desktop, laptop, mouse. Here (as in real life) she writes a blog that can be read both on the PC screen, and on the canvas located at the inner side of the sliding door. The text is about the decision to live as a transgender woman, about the problems arising from the fact of being a father of three when she finally came out, of the bureaucratic difficulties of being recognised as a third gender in Germany; but also about acceptance in one’s own family, managing one’s career, rising assertiveness and wonderfully grotesque moments of everyday life. Following Michelle’s words as she writes, her correction of spelling errors, the search for the right phrases, produces a similar emotional closeness as to the life story told by Melissa in her greenhouse.

While she writes, Michelle gets up and with a pair of pliers cuts the wires holding the jackets one by one, letting them fall to the ground. Every time a male garment is removed, she pulls a cord, and female clothes grow from the asparagus beds... like Spartoi springing from dragon’s teeth: the ancient warriors of Thebes – the modern struggle of the transgender woman.

At the back, in a field of yellow blooming pansies (also cropped with high heels), the Brazilian performer Greta Pimenta removes her female clothing and puts it on hangers, much like the jackets at the front. She showers naked for almost the entire performance and presents her female body with male genitals. She remains silent throughout. As always when an audience is confronted with nudity, there is irritation, and the mixture of sexual markers certainly intensifies this. But the fact that the performer is naked for over an hour, in which she never gives the impression of being watched or feeling embarrassed, alters the perception of her bi-gender body to a normality: it belongs – to both the performance and the utopia of a free society.

As a whole, the two areas of the hothouse function as the union of two aspects of transgenderness: Michelle’s intellectual approach, which does not shy away from self-doubt, and Greta’s unquestionable confidence: two states of an inner life, intellect and body, which is presented to the audience with a permissiveness that annihilates the exploitative habit of voyeurism.

II Relation to spatial theory

The production convincingly works with the cultural semantisation of the physical structures: the “otherness” of the Bengali hijra in the large greenhouse, the link of interculturality in the smaller greenhouse, and one’s “own” culture in the hothouse, all logically connected on a circuit through which the audience is allowed to wander freely. The venue thereby becomes the representation of a larger circuit or (according to Foucault), a Heterotopia, which draws opposite and remote elements together in a microcosm representing the whole.

Another interpretation is provided through the performers’ biographies, which form one of the fundaments of the production. The individual nature of these prohibits any cultural generalization. There is a variety of body concepts depending on the individual performer and his cultural frame, reaching from the mythical connotations but social exclusion of third genderness, to hormone treatment and finding deliverance in the revised body, textural reflections of the gender shift and the self-confident presentation of both sexes in one body. All of this is presented to the audience not in a brash, but in a quiet, sensitive, humorous, thoughtful and very rich visual appearance. And with this, transsexualism proves itself to be far “more natural” than the dominant heteronormativity and sexual binarity of our society. This allows an intercultural and transgender discourse to be personally experienced, intellectually as well as emotionally. An experience like this makes it clear that talking merely about the third gender is not enough to achieve an acceptance that includes all aspects of sexual versatility.

The spatial semantics of the place itself, the municipal horticultural nursery, is an elementary constituent of this combination of interculturality and transsexuality: the greenhouse as the epitome of our “will to breed”, of the artificial and authoritarian compulsion to frantically produce normativity: a non-place in the pejorative sense, deindividualising and alienating (Augé); monocultures as symbols of a society that wraps a hostile tristesse around non-conforming bodies, compelling them to adapt. But in the end, these bodies look more natural in the eyes of the audience than the compulsive order of “asparagus vs. pansies”. Thus, the imagery of the performance generates an effect of great sustainability in the viewer’s mind, giving her/him a glimpse of utopia.

Also, the production cleverly points beyond the confines of the nursery, as it stands in the shadow of the phallus-like tower of Cologne-Poll’s Technical Control Centre (TÜV). This is not just a place for general (and in this case typical German) normalisation, but had also been the birthplace of the DIN standards for breast implants – a cradle of normalised gender features which the colourful activities of ID-Clash contrasts with the image of versatile self-determination. If one adds the sadness of the adjacent monotonous rows of graves of the Deutzer cemetery or even the nearby (and even more German) allotments with its garden gnomes (including pompously phallic jelly bag caps), it becomes clear that a better location can hardly be imagined for this performance.

In addition, it is worth noting that the 1st of November 2013 finally saw the “third gender” legally recognized in Germany: Hiesl and Kaiser’s performance, which is to run again in Dresden in 2015, can be seen as a celebration of this event. Or better still, an accompanying ritual, which converts the deindividualising place of monoculture and gender norms into an utopian space of intercultural and transgendered freedom.

Picture: Cologne 2013. © Roland Kaiser

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Ioannis Mandafounis & May Zahry_Pausing © Emmanuelle Bayart (5)

Developing our piece Pausing within the context of modul-dance has been a significant experience for us. As in our work, we are always interested in sharing voices through collaboration, we found this context of modul-dance somehow corresponding to this desire - a group of dance houses collaborating in order to bring forward an idea and allow creation to emerge.

Specifically for us, during the creation we went through the residencies in the Duncan Center in Athens and Graner in Barcelona- places which without the frame of modul-dance would be difficult to get to. The two houses were extremely inspiring and rich for the work - the space in Duncan center as well as its amazing surrounding and atmosphere which Penelope nurtures had an essential impact on the process. Also the possibility to meet other artists and share like our meeting with the other residents at that time - Marcos and Pablo has been super inspiring and simply joyful.

The time in May 2012 in Graner has been just before our premiere and we felt we had to "wrap up the piece". Time was short but exactly this constraint of time allowed a concentrated and focused time of radical decisions when the piece finally got its shape - it was the 4th version of the piece already- and its structure today remained the "Barcelona version" after a tour of around 20 shows by now.

In terms of coproduction, we were supported by Hellerau in Dresden which also hosted us for shows in October. Again a very different house allowed the piece to evolve and adjust itself to the beautiful space of Nancy Spero in the theater. Last April we were invited to show the piece in Toulouse, during a modul-dance reunion which has been interesting for us - for the directors of the dance houses to see the work finalized more than a year after the first encounter in Barcelona and many shows.

It has been an interesting experience to be a part of this frame of modul dance, a different feeling than the "regular one" of independent houses supporting the piece. Somehow this feeling of connection and network feels like a new way that should be explored further. There is great potential in this way as a mode of functioning, a mode that can support more the contemporary dance field as it is today, than the so called standard mode of function of theater/festival and artist.

Picture: © Emmanuelle Bayart

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Modul-dance experience. By Agata Mazskiewicz

Agata Maszkiewicz_Duel_© Peter Fiebig (5)

My first encounter with the modul-dance network was in November 2012 in Barcelona when I presented my work and the idea of the piece Duel. I was trumphally pregnant at that time so I new that if I want to create that show I would really need some support. My budget was ridicoulously small and on top I wished to check for the first time how it is to direct the others without being at the same time a performer (regarding my condition but as well in order to change the way I used to work). And thanks to the modul-dance network I managed.

After the mentionned above presentation it took me a year to finalize the piece. I was already after a first research period. All the working phases took places in the associated dance houses. Luckily three of them coproduced the show (one came "on board" after the meeting in Barcelona). Besides that and a help of the Polish Ministry of Culture (received by the Art Stations Foundation) I did not get any other support. So the budget stayed small but what had mainly changed was the fact that I could offer to the team very good conditions of work. The modular system helped me to get distance to the created material and to continue working in the "between periods". It gave me more time to prepare the studio rehearsals were the whole team would gather together. It was needed as in the same time I was taking care of the production matters. That why I apreciated the fact that we have met everybody personally in Barcelona. It helped the communication process to become smooth and direct without any burocractic nonsense or stiff protocols. It was honestly a great relief and this "humane" aspect of the whole production process I appreciate the most. I find it harder to establish an easy going relation with the programmer than with the other artist but within the modul-dance network it all happened in a relaxed way. I guess because the rules were very clear: it was all about matching. The artists were looking for the right house to get the right support for his/hers work, the curators were looking for the right artists to help him/her develop the right work. And whatever right means it was clear from the beginning that there is no need to come along with everybody.

So now its end of April 2014. My son Leon is 16 months old and the Duel had its premiere in November 2013. But... the show is not over . The original crew of the piece hapilly decided to spread in the world with their own babies so now it is my time to perform the piece. At the moment I'm working with another dancer on an adaptation of Duel which will be presented in Poznań in Art Stations Foundation the upcoming June and later on in CND Paris in November (were I was invited for a residency to rehearse the new version of the show). So luckily, even after the premiere I still get the chance to work on the piece following the idea that the "final presentation" does not have to be the end of creation.

Picture: © Peter Fiebig

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TECHNOLOGY, AN INVISIBLE TOOL FOR THE ART

Marlon Barrios asked me to post my thoughts on dance and technology in my work:

Here TEXT TO SPEECH (2008), a piece in which each dancer uses a PC with "text to speech" programs for the computers to read texts. A simple use of high end technology but in the context of the piece the manipulation of computer seems  taken out of a normal daily life and does not seem technological. Technicaly we could not have made this piece 15 years ago, and 20 years ago the portable computer was not yet avaialble for maintstream use. And dramaturgicaly neither would have it been possible, 20 years ago a portable computer would have looked like a science fiction piece! I needed the audience to relate to the piece as a contemporary problematic. A laptoop computer in 2008 is an ordinary daily life object.  When I was a kid a mobile phone was only to exists in Star Treck, now when you see an old movie you think "but why he does not use his mobile phone?". So the computer object has moved dramaturgicaly in less than 20 years from a  science fiction status  to a daily life item: We now live in this Blade Runner like world where technology is part of our life as objects, embeded in our life, our should we say that WE are embeded inside  technology.

We used computers in Text To Speech to be able read live "fake" news of war and conflicts. It was very useful in the creation process, very flexible, we could modify our texts ourselves without needing a technician.  We manipulated orignal press agency news about the war in Irak, and changed "Irak" by "Switzerland". With this little "mind" trick", we relocated distant events such as a bomb killing 20 people in a market in Bagdad by a bomb killing twenty poeple in a market in Geneva. Suddenly the "bodycount" became  real, the news became more real and  not anymore a distant lithany of  numbers of death but a reality "virtualy" located in your backyard... A brutal switch  of perpectives in the mond of the spectator. Te synthethic voice of the "text to speech" program, adds to the distanciation. Also, we were able to perform the pece in its original language, in japanase, german, french, english... This piece has been inspired by a story my uncle told me and also has to do with technology  and the impact of it into reality. When he was a young journalist in a news agency in Zurich, he received the telex with the news of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombing at the end of WW2. At this time, only him had the immediate info and the words were creeping out  of the telex machine physicaly into his hands. The strip of paper coming out of the machine was slowly revealing the horror of the distant disaster. It was the power of suggestions of the words and the empathy of the reader, not the technology in itself that was revealing the horror-the same machine was also "vomiting"  "banal" news . But without the technology, this "virtual experience of reality" would not have happenned to him and marked him for life.

QUANTUM (2013) Is a piece made out after my residency at CERN, the huge particle physic laboratory based in the Geneva area who famously revelead the existence of the Higgs bozon on the 4th of July 2012. I was at CERN on that day and the "virtual" emotion of finding something truly invisble was high. It was the technology who made us capable of tinking about this discovery that can not be seen. (see my residency blog). The piece QUANTUM came out after theree months residency inside this super high tech campus, the site of the bigger machine ever built by humans... I had this "creative collission"  with co resident  german visual artist Julius von Bismarck. Julis conceived a "kynetic light instalation" operated and constructed by his regular collaborator german engenier Martin Shied (he operates  the piece on tour). Based on the pendulum principle, the 4 industrial lamps are piloted by a complicated algorythm that send signal to 4 motors that makes possible the syncronisation and variations of the movement of the lamps. It is super flexible and adaptable we can create almost any pendulum movement.

The music has been composed by American composer Caral Scaletti on her powerfull sound design machine KYMA, (she is the maker of the software of the machine and husband Kurt Heibel conceived the hardware-Kyma is one of the most powerfull soudn design computer in the market). She used   real data taken from CERN LHC by a process of "data sonification". Collaborating with phycicist Lili Asquith she managed to use real data to produce amazing music  (listen to phycicist  Lili Asquith about LHC data sonification and datata driven Kyma sound project)

 

To me, technology is a tool, something that is not to necesarely be seen for itself but necessary only if it   gives more meanig to a piece.  My next project is a 3D dance film, I am very much interested by the volume of the space virtualy created inside our brain by the trick stereo images are playing inside on our heads...

12249568289?profile=original12249568488?profile=originalQUANTUM SET UP. THE LIGHT INSTALATION RIG////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

QUANTUM IS ON TOUR IN NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA IN OCTOBER AND NOVEMBER
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QUANTUM  WORLD TOUR  2013-15
-Première 23 september 2013  Théâtre Forum Meyrin Geneva @ CMS Experiment-Cessy France
QUANTUM world tour is part of events celebrating the 60th anniversary of CERN in 2014



NORTH AMERICA
2-3-4th october    QUANTUM @ BAM/New York Next Wave Festival + Crossing The Lines Festival - New Settings Fondation Entreprise Hermes/USA
12-13th october   QUANTUM @ ODC/San Francisco / USA + lecture about Cern residency with Cern physicist Nicolas Chanon. With the support of Swissnex San Francisco
16-17-18th october   QUANTUM @ TDC/Vancouver / CANADA

SOUTH AMERICA
21 october         QUANTUM @ Festival Danzalborde/Matucana Theatre/Santiago de Chile/ CHILE
23 october          QUANTUM @ Festival Danzalborde/Valparaiso/ CHILE
26 october           QUANTUM @ Bienal do Dança Do Ceara/Fortaleza/BRAZIL
29-30 october      QUANTUM @ Festival Internacional Dança Belo Horizonte/ BRAZIL  + conference CERN physicist avec le soutien de Swissnex Brazil
2 november          QUANTUM @ Panorama Festival Rio de Janeiro/ BRAZIL + conference CERN physicist + Masterclass avec le soutien de Swissnex Brazil
                        
                        EUROPE
6-7-8-9th november      QUANTUM @ ARSENIC/Lausanne SWITZERLAND
12-13-14th november   A+B=X       @     ARSENIC/Lausanne SWITZERLAND

SOUTH AMERICA
21-22 november     QUANTUM @ FAEL Lima/PERU                      

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LAND V.0 (WORK IN PROGRESS)


LAND V.0 is a project that investigates physical versus virtual space, and how time, space and presence are embodied via the internet towards the creation of a communicating relationship. A collaborative project between Lisa Parra, choreographer (USA) and Daniel Pinheiro, video/media artist (Portugal) for developing methods for artistic research using telecommunication technologies.
(...)
The project between Lisa Parra and Daniel Pinheiro started as a collaboration within the Minded Motion lab #MetaAcademy – realized during the Bates Dance Festival 2013 – organized by Marlon Barrios Solano, Rachel Boggia, Nancy Stark Smith and Josephine Dorado. An online lab dedicated to the exploration of embodiment activities and co-creation across the internet.

More info: http://daniel-pinheiro.tumblr.com/LAND

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Call for Design Films: ArcInTex SymposiumDesign Films: Embodied Interaction Research TechniquesDanielle Wilde & Oscar TomicoVideo has always been a great way to portray interactive products. The Design Films Track of the Eindhoven ArcInTex Symposium has been created to explore the impact of video in design, in particular in relation to embodied interaction research techniques. Over two days we will screen experimental videos, movies and fashion films, as well as design documentaries and advertising that relates to Architecture, Interaction Design and Textiles. The aim is to enable considered engagement with design practices and research techniques in process, as well as outcomes that foreground embodied interaction. Successful submissions will be shown alongside curated content. We expect a variety of submissions from researchers, students, companies, artists, and institutions.Key dates:Submissions: 19 September 2014Notification of acceptance: 26 September 201Camera-ready versions: 6 October 2014Screening: 15 & 16 October 2014Websites:ArcInTex Symposium: http://arcintex.hb.se/conferences-workshops/Design Films Track: http://dqi.id.tue.nl/sts/call-for-design-films/Call for Design Films:While embodied interaction continues to gain currency, reporting of methods and techniques used in embodied research generation remains a challenge. Conferences [20], special journal issues [13, 21], workshops [11] and doctoral theses [9, 12, 23] are increasingly devoted to the subject. Yet embodied methods are not readily communicated through the written or spoken word. When embodiment is integral to design research, communication of the techniques and methods used to undertake such research should also, arguably, be embodied. Yet such an approach is not practical.Embodied interaction plays out in many different ways, bringing together and bridging different disciplines and approaches. Some researchers use the body and movement as a material: melding performing arts and interaction design techniques [24]; using Mindfulness and Somaesthetics [17] to develop theories and practices around core mechanics and experiential artefacts [19]; using dance and phenomenology to develop improvisational methods [3, 7, 8], and bring focus to the knowing body [1, 15, 16]. Other researchers investigate relationships between creating, performing, and perceiving aesthetic embodied practices [18]; use the body as an instrument of cognition [6]; and aesthetic experience as a mechanism for design [14]. Yet others champion the need for the designer as movement expert [4], foregrounding the expressive power of gesture, stressing the importance of skilled action when designing interaction, bringing focus to the experience of use [2]. Designed representations of movement are also used to evaluate user experience, map interactions, and explore different sensing technologies [5, 10, 22], and in design schools, many students undertake wild experiments informed by embodied approaches, yet there seems to be little room in the research arena for deep consideration of how their experiments might inform mature practices. Because of this breadth and diversity of practice, a major challenge remains: coherency of communication.The Embodied Interaction Research Techniques Design Film series is part of an ongoing inquiry into effective methods for knowledge transfer of embodied research techniques. We are calling for contributions from concerned participants, interested in sharing research methods, and exploring the role film and video might play in supporting effective knowledge transfer.Submission Info:We invite interested parties to submit a video of any length in a style that best communicates their embodied research, making use of narrative, poem, graphic story, images intertwined with text, flipbook animation etc. Films and Videos should be HD, formatted for viewing 16:9 and in MP4 format using the H.264 codec. We do encourage succinctness, but longer format works will be considered equally. Importantly, videos must be accompanied by an Annotated Pictorial submission (min. 2 pages), using the DIS Pictorials template to provide a lens through which to consider and understand the intentions of the video. The screening will take place at de Zwarte Doos Cinema, in Eindhoven, The Netherlands, during the ArcInTex Symposium. Annotated Pictorials and videos should be submitted by means of a downloadable link in an e-mail to: o.tomico@tue.nl & d@daniellewilde.com.We encourage submissions from diverse backgrounds including (but not limited to): interaction design, embodied design research, smart textiles, fashion and wearable technologies, product, systems and experience design, industry and non-profit organizations. Submissions will be selected based on originality, quality, and potential for extending the discussion around the dissemination of embodied interaction research techniques. Films and Videos will be disseminated online, through ArcInTex, after the symposium screening and selected submissions will be invited to contribute to a special issue of a research journal.References:[1] Corness, G. & Schiphorst, T. (2013). Performing with a system’s intention: embodied cues in performer-system interaction. In: Proceedings of the Creativity & Cognition Conference, Sydney, Australia(pp156-164). NY: ACM Press.[2] Djajadiningrat, T., Matthews, B., and Stienstra, M. (2007) Easy doesn’t do it: skill and expression in tangible aesthetics. Personal and Ubiquitous Computing, 11(8). (pp.657-676).[3] Hansen, L.K. & Kozel, S. (2007) Embodied imagination: a hybrid method of designing for intimacy. Digital Creativity, 18(4), (pp. 207-220).[4] Hummels, C., Overbeeke, C. J. & Klooster, S. (2007). Move to get moved: a search for methods, tools and knowledge to design for expressive and rich movement-based interaction. In Personal and Ubiquitous Computing, 11(8), (pp. 677-690).[5] Jeon, E. (2011) ‘Enriched Aesthetic Interaction’ through sense from haptic visuality. In: Proceedings of the International Design Alliance (IDA) Congress Education Conference (pp. 28-35). Taipei, Taiwan.[6] Kirsh, D. (2010). Thinking with the Body. In: Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 2864-2869). Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society.[7] Kozel, S. Closer: Performance, Technologies, Phenomenology. (2008) Cambridge: MIT Press.[8] Kozel, S. (2010). The virtual and the physical: A phenomenological approach to performance research. In M. Biggs and H. Karlsson (Eds.) The Routledge Companion in Research in the Arts. London: Routledge.[9] Loke, Lian (2009). Moving and Making Strange: A Design Methodology for Movement-based Interactive Technologies. PhD diss., University of Technology, Sydney.[10] Loke, L., Robertson, T. (2013) Moving and making strange. ToCHI Transactions on Computer Human Interaction 20(1), Article 7[11] MOCO (2013) International workshop on movement and computing http://moco.ircam.fr/[12] Moen, J. (2006) Kinaesthetic Movement Interaction. PhD diss., KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden[13] Personal & Ubiquitous Computing (2007) Special issue on movement-based interaction 11(8), London: Springer-Verlag[14] Ross, P., & Wensveen, S. (2010). Designing aesthetics of behavior in interaction: Using aesthetic experience as a mechanism for design. International Journal of Design, 4(2), (pp. 3-13).[15] Schiphorst, T. & Andersen, K. (2004). Between bodies: Using experience modeling to create gestural protocols for physiological data transfer. In: Proceedings of the Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI’04) Fringe Papers. New York: ACM Press.[16] Schiphorst, T., Sheppard, R., Loke, L., Lin, C. (2013) Beautiful Dance Moves. In Proceedings of the Creativity and Cognition Conference, Sydney. New York: ACM Press.[17] Shusterman, R. (2008) Body Consciousness: A Philosophy of Mindfulness and Somaesthetics. Cambridge University Press.[18] Stjernholm, J. (2011). Moving through the virtual: A dramaturgy of choreographic practice and perception. Dance Dramaturgy: Catalyst, Perspective and Memory. In Proceedings of the Society of Dance History Scholars Conference, Toronto. Toronto University: SDSH.[19] Sundström, P., Vaara, E., Solsona, J., Wirström, N., Lundén, M., Laaksolhati, J., Waern, A., Höök, K. (2011) Experiential Artifacts as a Design Method for Somaesthetic Service Development. Proc. ACM symposium on The role of design in UbiComp research & practice. (pp33-36) Ubiquitous Computing 2011. Beijing, China. New York: ACM Press[20] TEI Tangible, Embedded and Embodied Interaction Conference http://tei-conf.org[21] ToCHI Transactions on Computer Human Interaction (2013) Special issue on the theory and practice of embodied interaction 20(1)[22] Uğur, S. Wearing (2013) Embodied Emotions, A Practice Based Design Research on Wearable Technology. Milan: Springer.[23] Wilde, D. (2012) Swing That Thing : Moving to move. PhD Diss., Monash University & CSIRO, Australia.[24] Wilde, D. Schiphorst, T. Klooster, S. (2011) Move to Design • Design to Move: a conversation about designing for the body Interactions 18(4) July+August 2011Call as pdf: https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/7732820/DesignFilms.pdf
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