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Blumenzimmer

Dance film BLUMENZIMMER meaning 'Flower Room' in German, depicts a contemporary adult fairytale about a dancer confined to live in a box. In a dilapidated house there lives a small troll-like man that cherishes the moments he opens his box of amber light to reveal the dancer living within the confines of a flower papered box. The protagonist is interrupted by a tall handsome man who arrives to the house to take the box for himself. The handsome man remains in the house while the defeated troll looks on with sadness. From here the relationship evolves between the confined dancer and the handsome man from coy flirtation to animalistic rapture. Here the objectives turn muddled though intrigue remains continuous. With an array of aesthetics BLUMENZIMMER has many artistic and cinematic moments of mastery including the first time we see the troll sitting and cautiously detecting his solidarity carefully opens the glowing box for the first time revealing the golden glow of a rag doll dancer with a glimmering eye of seduction.A film by Sarah Derendinger, choreographed by Teresa Rotemberg BLUMENZIMMER is described as: Maria a tiny woman is guarded by Hermann like a jewel in a decoration box. But Maria dances only at night if it Herman wants. Opening the flower box begins an intimate pas de deux. Tom pleads Maria to jump out of the flower room. Trying to escape the two men Maria is pushed back into her miniature world. But Maria notices the fact that she can walk now simply from the room and can live her new found luck.By Kathryn LuckstoneDance Films Assn.
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Black Swan is going to Chile and Brazil

Black Swan is going to Chile and Brazil/Black Swan se va para Chile y Brazil.27 et 28 octobre : Forum Internacional de Dança - Belo Horizonte - Brésil; 31 octobre : Festival Danzalborde - Valparaiso - Chili; 4 novembre : Bienal de Dança de Santos - Santos - Brésil; 7 novembre : Festival Panorama de Dança- Rio de Janeiro - BrésilChoreography Gilles JobinDance Susana Panadès Diaz, Hildur Ottarsdottir, Gilles Jobin, Gabor VargaMusic Cristian VogelTour datesto se a video extract

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Prepared by Marlon Barrios Solano for the event: "Emergent Global Corporealities: Dance Technologies and Circulations of the Social" Yale University, New Haven, CC Using the most advanced social software platforms and rich multimedia internet applications, dance-tech.net provides movement and new media artists, theorist, thinkers and technologists an on-line space for accessing and sharing ideas, work, research and collaborative projects. Barrios Solano introduces dance-tech.net and dance-techTV as a sustainable model of production and exchange of knowledge within a community of movement and mew media artits, theorists, technologists and organizations. The new internet or Web 2.0 architectures helps us to see Networks as the materialization of social dynamics, as sites of action, translocal presence and social innovation and sampling. They have become the most important emergent repositories of social and cognitive capital of a given community. dance-tech.net registers conversations, dialogues, performances, ideas and lives using the WWW as a site for a relational intervention on the boundaries of bodies, countries, disciplines and organizations. TRACES: DANCE/IMPROVISATION/NEW MEDIA/COGNITION BATESON QUESTION? WHAT IS A HAND? RESEARCH COMPOSITION/BODY/EMBODIMENT/COGNITION/REAL-TIME/SYSTEMS/DESIGN/INTERACTIONS/DISTRIBUTED/ECOLOGICAL/NETWORK EMERGENCE BOTTOM-UP 1.-COMMUNITY DANCE AND TECHNOLOGY FROM A LIST SERV TO A SOCIAL NETWORK WEB 2.0 OPEN PLATFORM DANCE-TECH.NET FROM DANCE AND TECHNOLOGY TO DANCE TO MOVEMENT TO MOTION: INTERNATIONAL/TRANS-LOCAL TRANS-DISCIPLINARY GROUNDED ON THE DYNAMICS OF PEOPLE AND ORGANIZATIONS KNOWLEDGE SHARING STRATEGIES/SHARING ALL RESOURCES. COLLABORATIONS, PARTNERSHIPS AND BARTERING: INDIVIDUALS VENUES DTW, Eyebeam, Dance New Amsterdam, STEIM, TMA The Hellerau, Reverso,THE WAAG) TANGIBLE BENEFITS?? DANCE THEATHER WORKSHOP HARDWARE: LEMURPLEX/MIDITRON SOFTWARE: CYCLING74 2.-KNOWLEDGE What is dance anyway? RELEVANCE DANCE IS RELEVANT INNOVATION??? HOW WE IDENTIFY IT SUPPORT IT RE-FRAME IT KNOWLEDGE BACKBONE/ENGAGEMENT: MODELING SUSTAINABLE PRODUCTION OF INTERVIEWS > 100 YES YOU CAN... INTERVIEWS: KNOWLEDGE BACKBONE... AS KNOWLEDGE AND AS A SUBJECT ETHNOGRAPHY/ BOTTOM-UP PROCESSPPROCESSPROCESS.... GIDEON OBARZANEK IVANA MULLER BEBE MILLER LISA NELSON/TUNNING SCORES ALVA NOE/PHILOSOPHY OF MIND IVANA MULLER/CONCEPTUAL DANCE European Tele-Plateaus Phase 2/Madrid ANDREW SCHNEIDER/PERFORMANCE AND WEARABLE interfaces JOSEPHINE DORADO/MIXED REALITY PERFORMANCES ANGELO VERMEULEN/BIO ARTS SABINE SEYMOUR/WEARABLE FASHION TRISTAN PERICH/NOISE AND CIRCUIT BENDING PERFORMER Knowledge Lineages? AN EXAMPLE...
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SYNDICATION/ VIRAL DISTRIBUTION PARTICIPATORY CREATION OF KNOWLEDGE: loose network of correspondents INTERVIEWS/NEWS REPORTAGE PARTICIPATORY JOURNALISM EXAMPLES OF COLLABORATION: WITH CRITICAL CORRESPONDENCE (NYC)
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SABINE KLAUS (SCOTLAND)

CODA KEDJA Opening Event Oslo Norway from Creation Editor on Vimeo.

DEBORAH HUSTIC (CROATIA) USE OF INTERNET NATIVE TECHNOLOGY EMBEDDED IN FESTIVALS/OPEN LAB IN FESTIVALS WORLD GRID LAB
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3.-DANCE-TECHTV COLLABORATIVE BROADCASTING/LINEAR...BROADCASTING...VIDEO ON DEMAND CURATED LIVE:Turkey, London, Venezuela, Switzerland, NYC. Content donated by more than forty artist: all continents Academia and independent broadcasters ASSOCIATE PRODUCERS (any member of the networks) LIVE BROADCASTING/LECTURES, PERFORMANCES, art projects (Movement Research Festival and Broadcasting station/workshops GRID LAB/Lebanon, France and Geneva) INTERACTIVE BROADCASTING... VIRAL DISTRIBUTION SPONSORED SPACE MORE: SIBLING NETWORKS MOVIMIENTO.ORG (SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE) USE IN CLASSROOMS: Wesleyan University University of Utah Allow students a dialogue with the community/experts and novices PEERS NEW WWW AFFORDS: LEAN FORWARD APPROACH PRODUCTION OF SPACES FOR KNOWLEDGE GENERATION AND OPEN ACCESS INTERVENTION OF THE INTERNET WITH KNOWLEDGE NETWORKS CREATIVE ENGAGEMENT AS EXCHANGE/GENEROSITY DIY DIWO DISTRIBUTED CONVERSATIONS/DIALOGUE EVERYTHING NEXT TO EVERYTHING COMMUNICATION IS NOT A BOND THE BOND IS CREATED BY DOING IT TOGETHER PARTICIPATION MAKES THE SITE CREATION OF AN INFRASTRUCTURE OF TRUST AND TRUST IN THE INFRASTRUCTURE SOCIAL COMMUNITIES=COMMONS=ECOLOGICAL REFLECT THE LOGIC OF THE SOCIAL LIFE CULTURE IS SOCIAL CONTESTING BOUNDARIES: BODIES, DANCE, DISCIPLINES, MINDS, INFORMATION, KNOWLEDGE, ORGANIZATIONS, COUNTRIES, MACHINES, LEARNING ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ LIVE PROCESS PRODUCT ART RESEARCH KNOWLEDGE COLLABORATION CREATIVITY ORGANIZATION COMPLEXITY RELATIONAL CONNECTION PRESENCE ECOLOGICAL MOBILITY REAL-TIME SOCIAL NETWORKS COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION DEMOCRACY NEW INTERNET: CONVERGENCE API____APPLICATION PROGRAM INTERFACE: CONNECTIONS BETWEEN APPLICATIONS RSS____FLOW OF CONTENT .... MASSIVE DATA BASES/DB DRIVEN SITES ON-LINE VIDEO OPEN PLATFORMS BOTTOM-UP ARCHITECTURES GENEROSITY PRINCIPLES (PROSUMER/ LEAN FORWARD) UGC COLLABORATIVE CREATIVITY EMERGENT CLUSTERS OF KNOWLEDGE SYNCHRONOUS/ ASYNCHRONOUS
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During this year's edition of Eurokaz - The International Festival of New Theatre I had an opportunity to interview artistic director of CIE 111 Company, Aurelien Bory...

Aurélien Bory in Zagreb, photo taken from SEEbiz (c)

CIE 111 performed the 'Seven Boards of Skill' which was really great chance to talk with Bory on his aesthetics, directing methods, usage of new technologies in art and the trilogy itself...Aurélien Bory studied film, then acoustic architecture before turning to theatre. He has been heavily inspired by circus and juggling since he was a teenager.The Company says about the trilogy: 'Since its creation, CIE 111 has been aiming to the development of a poetic writing, using juggling, acrobatics and music and exploring scenic language as a whole.

With this point of view, the matter of space appeared obvious, on one hand because juggling and acrobatics are tightly linked to it and obey perfectly to its regulating laws and on the other hand because theatre is considered here like the art of space as defined by Oskar Schlemmer himself.Therefore, the concept of a trilogy about space is imagined declining its dimensions. Three-dimensional space (the volume), two-dimension space (the plane), one-dimension space (the line) become the themes of the three respective episodes IJK, Plan B and More or less infinity.That way, the fact is to question the relationship between man and space, from its more daily form until its conquest. Imagined as a poem in which the addition of simple forms produces, by layers, a complex structure, the trilogy suggests to the spectator’s imagination to proceed with ideas associations, recognition or projections of their own references and experience of today’s world. This flow of sensations becomes movement of thought. The elsewhere is in the core of our relation to space whose quest is endless, in loop, vain. Trilogy seems to be this: three dimensions, three elsewhere and three impossibilities.’

Photo by Mihail Novakov taken from flickr (c)

Your stage work is always designed as a sort of puzzle, there is always some kind of construction we have to build in our imagination… you’ve studied cinema and physics and there are so many elements included in your performances… we have to solve something at the end of the performance…AB: Yeah, you’re right (laughs). I like very much this idea. I didn’t put it that way before, but I like it now, doing this puzzle. Like in this show. It’s right what you just said. I’ve always done puzzles (laughs).You were also inspired by Bauhaus, Oscar Schlemmer and all these geometrical constructions. … but it’s not only about the geometry…AB: Yeah. You know, I wanted to make theatre with everything. I think everything could be theatre. Everything that fits on the stage could be theatre. In the past, I worked a lot with different elements: slides to scenery, new technologies like video for example, which is not really NEW, but for theatre it’s new, you know (laughs). For example, I have done more then four performances with video. And for the show ‘Seven Boards of Skill’ I wanted to do a show without video, because it’s not a necessary tool. I wanted to come back to something more basic as blocs or architecture. Not to go in all directions, but to focus on one direction. But, it’s still, of course, a mix of things.I’m trying to find for each projects specificity. Not to be very specific, not to be too general or to do as I already did. I’m trying to do something new. As for my last performance, I’ve tried to do something with the architecture and the geometry. I wanted the show to be dead and it’s a change, because people on the stage are only doing architecture. They are trying to explore where could be their body in that architecture. So, the performance is questioning the place that we can build for ourselves in the world.

But in my last two performances, which are part of the trilogy inspired by Oskar Schlemmer, it’s difficult after that to say what is it exactly. If it is dance or circus… even in this show you can say that it is circus. There are very scary balances with architecture, it’s like these blocs are doing acrobatics by themselves, you know.So, it’s mixed and people usually ask, what is this? I answer them: It’s theatre! Of course, we can do theatre with dance. For example, the biggest choreographers like Pina Bausch, before everything she was an excellent director. For me, being a theatre director stands before being a choreographer. They are doing their work for stage. First of all, they are excellent stage directors. I follow these ideas – the idea of theatre, the idea that we can do everything with theatre, circus, architecture, music, images, shadows… like shadow puppetry, you know. When you really want it, you can do theatre with these things and the only important thing is to respect the rules of the stage. They are complex and each performance is an opportunity for me to get something new about those rules.It’s interesting that you have found inspiration in street art… basically, circus and jugglery are ancient forms of street art…AB: I wouldn’t say street art. Because I’m not very connected with street art, but I’m very interested in acrobatics, juggling and these kind of things. They interest me because they’re very connected with physical rules and gravity. Falling ball, the body… to do acrobatics is to define the gravity, to dance also means to define gravity. And at the same time to listen the gravity, to let it be in our body or in the object.So, because of all these I’m interested to be connected with the physical world. Theatre is the only place where gravity is for real. You know, it’s the only art, not the place, but the only art where gravity is the part of the game. If you write a book, or make a movie there isn’t gravity. You can lie with gravity… Gravity is a part of the space, part of what you are doing. That’s why all things that I have chosen are connected with this direction – the art of the space.This trilogy is about the space and this piece is simply an extension of it. In this performance I’ve applied all what I did in trilogy to make something different. It is a little bit more philosophical then the whole trilogy. There was also philosophy in the trilogy, but in a very specific way: form, subjects, volume, playing, laying. In the Chinese show there is more about the WORLD. I’m talking about the world in a sense of humanity.

Seven Boards of Skills, Cie 111 (c)

It’s very obvious that you tend to create a small microcosm, this time you have picked up a huge civilization. Chinese philosophy, art, theatre are massive and complex systems…AB: Yeah, I found very interesting the fact that China is the world itself. Basically, they had put the whole during years and years, being separated from the rest of the world. So, I didn’t want to say that in my performance, but I used this fact that it’s a world by itself. I wanted to put this on the stage: A WORLD. And the place of human beings in that world. Of course, I was very inspired by Chinese philosophy because it was very important to make some connection with that. It’s very important to respect the context of the performance. Chinese audience makes its connections, while Western audience makes other connections. It is not about China, I think it’s universal. It’s not about THE World, but A World. A construction of that, with some absurdity, with serious things, with humour, with poetry. Of course, poetry is something what I’m doing.It’s a stage poetry…AB: Yes, it’s stage poetry. As for poetry and myself, you know, I don’t have a message. Let the audience enters into this poetry and make its own message.Your are relaying on the audience… it’s a very opened structure… it’s about that what they see and how they perceive shapes and spaces…AB: Yeah, it’s an opened structure and if it works, the imagination is very active. If it works! If it doesn’t work, well, then you can get bored (laughs). In this kind of connection, I call it art. Art is not the object itself; art is relationship between you and whatever you are watching. That’s art. If it’s working that’s something incredible. You think that this painting, or film or performance have been made for you only. If it’s working really… It’s for me, it’s talking to me! (laughs). If it doesn’t work you don’t feel connection with that what you’re watching and it’s just boring.Can we go back to the human body, and the thing you’ve said previously that you are interested in these balances on the stage… Do you allow the actors to reveal themselves within your guidelines or you are directing them in which was they should be going? I don’t think in a sense of choreographing…AB: I’m trying to find all strategies to discover something that will surprise me. All strategies are good. Sometimes you don’t know what the exact strategy to find something is. I’m very interested to discover what I didn’t know before and it’s very difficult, because you don’t know how to get that. For example, I wanted to experiment with some kind of movement on these blocks. What I’m doing is that I’m trying all combinations. I’m interested to explore everything of this triangle, everything. OK, could you walk on it?! Could you climb on it?! Could you slide, jump or run?! What could you do?! What is the connection between you and this object? What is the connection between the bodies? What can you do with your body?It’s always a dialogue between the body and the space. This dialogue is infinite. I’m always trying to find little discoveries, you know. For this performance I needed that. Not discoveries that I already made in my paper book, while I was working prior going to rehearsals. I’m not looking for discoveries in that moment. I just make repetitions with the actors on the stage, then I’m searching to discover some new things. Something that I haven’t had thought about before. Sometimes nothing happen… Some days can happen something incredible by chance or something else…

Seven Boards of Skills, Cie 111 (c)

Let’s switch now a little bit to this element of sound, and the perception of sound in your work… after all these elements we had mentioned before, sound could be the last layer in your work…AB: Yeah, yeah… you know, light and sound… I’m trying to make them acting to provoke things. So, the sound goes parallel in real time with actions. I’ve asked a friend of mine who lives in Paris to make some sound with Chinese elements like gongs. I said to him: I need the sound of the Earth and the sound of the Sky! GO! (laughs). After that, I’m cutting it with the sound engineer and technicians in order to make it adaptable for the stage. Exactly the same is with the light… I really want the light to follow the action and to be part of the action. So, at the beginning I only thing about the action, what’s the action and what is part of the action? Is light a part of the action?! Yes / No?! Do we need sound?! Yes / No?! I like silence, too.Silence is also a sound…AB: Yeah, exactly. I don’t like when music is an obligation. I don’t like when people are using music in theatre to be decorative or to make it beautiful. I like the action on the stage, so if the music could be also a part of this dialogue on the stage, that’s good. We don’t need necessarily music. Sometimes silence is more powerful. When I’m saying that everything could be theatre that means action. Everything could be part of the action, not decorative. Not to make it beautiful. I’m not interesting in making things beautiful. What is action and what could be part of the action?Could you describe me a bit your working processes…AB: I’m trying to make the concept of the product. It takes about one year of work. During this year I’m trying to answer questions: What is it about and what for? On first question you have to answer very clearly, if you can’t that means that you don’t know. If you don’t know, it means that there is no project. What for means why? What’s interesting in that you want to do? Why do you want to do it now? Why do you want to try that now? You have to answer to these two questions. So, my concept is to have an idea, to have those two answers. For example, I decided to make a trilogy about the space, because theatre is space. Theatre is the art of space. You have three, two and one dimension in theatre. Zero dimension is not a space, not space that we now in our physical world.So, I wanted to work with the space because theatre is space and what is space actually? It is volume – plain, line. You know, theatre is not only about space, but also about life. Space is maybe the most important thing is our life. We follow space, we live in space. We are very sensitive to space. If we feel good in the room or not we know that immediately. Human beings are very space animal. And we are always looking for new spaces. Now, we have to go to the moon. So, this was very interesting subject and I wanted to make three performances about that. So, then when I realized and had answers to my questions, I decided to put space, plain and line on the stage.

From Erection, photo by Pierre Grosbois (c)

Taken from Sofia Dance Week

Then I’m trying to find the good scenery. I always work with the moving scenery. Now, it’s a part of my aesthetic. Scenery that you can move, not fixed scenery. Scenery that could be transformed. For example, if you remember Plab B performance, there were scenery and worlds designed completely vertical, not horizontal. But, it’s the same object. I work with object. Scenery is not a scenery that you are looking at, because scenery is part of the action and object. At the same time, the scenery itself is an object of the show. If it is a plain, I’m putting there a plain. Basically, if it is an tangram, I’m putting at the stage an tangram. It means, my work is very very basic. You know, the word tangram has been given to the game by Westerners, but the original translation from Chinese qi qiao ban would be the ‘Seven Boards of Skill’. I like working with that, which means that I believe in simplicity. But, I hope that after the whole process I would find not expected things. I want to create real surprises.Have there been other contemporary artists in particular that have had a strong influence on you, or whose work you admire?AB: I really believe in contemporary art today. Some artists are very inspiring. Of course, you have mentioned constructivism and Bauhaus… but I also like Op Art from the sixties, cinematic arts, then minimalism… But now, I’m also very interesting what is going on with photography, artists that cross the barriers of art. For example, I’m interested in contemporary artists which are doing now street art. I like artists which are combining architecture, street art and old monuments, statues, churches. Objects that have now different functions and meanings, and you feel like watching with new eyes. My question is: what is it about the art? Well, I think you have to give the eyes to the audience. For instance, there are a lots of photographers now, which are interested in bodies and dance…

Seven Boards of Skills, Cie 111 (c)

Oh, sure… you mean Denis Darzaq…AB: Yeah! Darzaq is doing something I would like to do. This is definitely my style. (laughter) Darzaq and other photographers are now crossing the fields of dance, acrobatics and photography. It’s now a mix. Today, you can see a kind of mix of things. The artists of today are like that, mixing different things. I think I belong to them, too. I want to try new things that provoke something and refreshing a little bit. But, at the other hand, it’s not necessarily inspiring, because I don’t want to make all these arts. I want to enjoy in it as being a part of the audience. In cinematography my favourite film maker is James Gray. It has nothing in common with my work. For me, James Gray is like Dostoevsky, you know. He is an incredible film maker.There are lots of ideas in the moment that I really like in contemporary art. Very good ideas…What do you thing about technology usage in theatre? Affordable technology is developing faster and faster… lots of people are trying to play with it, some good… some less good…AB: You know, I think technology is not a subject, it’s a tool. If you get to make technology as art, that’s OK. But, if you make only technology that’s bullshit. There are also many rubbish things by many people who are ‘amazed by technology’. There are also people who are doing real art with technology. I like the work by Daito Manabe. He is making the sound with impulses from his face. I saw his work at Youtube.He does a kind of dance of the faces. He is using four different faces, and the result is the same dance because he uses electronic impulse. So, this is a little piece of art for me and it’s interesting because you see very passive dance. No will, just moving about our body. It’s talking about the fact that we are passive in a way. We just let technology enter our body. This is very interesting to me. But there are also many artists that are doing interactive arts with very sophisticated technology. When somebody is amazed because he moved his arm and made some sound from a machine I don’t find it an art.Do you think that this could be described as tech mannerism or baroque?AB: Yes. It’s only technological. Yeah, you moved your arm, and there is a sound behind. So, it’s a technological curiosity. It is only a gadget. It could be the first step, but of course it is not enough at all. For me, interactivity need this answers: what is it about and what for?

Photo: Compaignie 111 – Sans Objet

Taken from Contemporary Performance Blog (c)

Do you desire to do something more with technology in theatre?AB: I’m in repetition now. I will have a new performance in October… It’s soon, yeah. It will be something with robots, old industrial robots. You know, robots that we use in car industry. I will stage this robot who has nothing to do and actors with their bodies. So, it’s a dialogue between them. It’s also based on sculptures. The subject is what is alive and what not? These barriers between alive and not alive. The relation between technology and body became so blur.Before, we knew robots were not alive, now it’s becoming a little bit blur. I’m talking about that. Also, it’s very inspired by Kleist’s philosophy. It’s inspired by Kleist’s thought’s on theatre and puppetry. So, it’s a kind of Kleist’s theatre of forms, because the robot is capable to take big objects, so I want him to take floor and build monoliths. This is a poem about inutility and useless activity, which is art and also a lot of things in human beings experience. Why do we need useless activities? And at the same time old robots are now useless. He built cars before, but now he’s is unusable. So, being useless is a little bit closer to human beings (laughs). So, I’m going to do that!Aurelien, Thank you very much!(This interview was originally published on Personal Cyber Botanica)
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Fórum Latino-Americano de Videodança

Fórum Latino-Americano de VídeodançaUm milhão de amigosO Fórum é o lugar que todos nós que trabalhamos com vídeodança gostaríamos de pertencer e... oh, surpresa, já pertencemos!Assim poderemos cantar mais alto. Ver imagens, ouvir sons e conversar com o vizinho, a dançar. E compartilhar um espaço que se constrói junto. Um espaço que se desenvolve e se projeta num intervalo, para o futuro.Com a alegria que nos faz pensar e partilhar este espaço-tempo da web, de bits e pixels, luz e som, de corpos e suor.Acontecerão atividades públicas e grupos de trabalhos específicos, mostras de vídeos da América Latina e conversas, nos intervalos curatoriais. Virão visitantes de outras partes do mundo interessados em conversar conosco. Muitas surpresas surgirão desse encontro, esperamos.Boas vindas a todos os amigos do México, Uruguai, Cuba, Paraguai, Chile, Brasil, Argentina, Colômbia, Equador, França, Portugal. O fórum é nosso!Silvina SzperlingCoordenadoraIII Fórum Latino-americano de Videodança13 a 17 de outubro de 2009 - Fortaleza, Ceará, BrasilEncontros e debates (13, 14, 15 e 16, às 9h)Apresentação dos grupos de trabalho em torno dos seguintes temas:• Difusão: plataformas tradicionais e inovadoras;• Formação;• Linguagem, curadoria e crítica;• Redes de colaboração;• Produção e financiamento.Mosaico Latino-Americano – Mostra Latino-Americana de Vídeodança (13,14 e 15, às 15 hs)Como naquelas “viagens musicais da infância”, onde personagens típicos nos levam a conhecer o mundo através de suas danças tradicionais, este mosaico recorre a um panorama da produção recente de vídeodança na América Latina, em seus diversos países. A seleção dos vídeos foi feita pelos organizadores de cada festival.Terça, dia 1315h – Colombia: Videomovimiento. Festival internacional de videodanza. Curadores: Soraya Vargas e Dixon Quitian.16hs - Chile: FIVC1.0. Festival Internacional de Videodanza de Chile. (42 min.) Curadora: Brisa Muñoz Parra.17hs. México: agite y sirva. festival itinerante de videodanza. Curadora: Ximena Monroy.Quarta, dia 1415hs. Bolivia: Cuerpo digital. Festival internacional de videodanza. Curadora: Sofía Orihuela.16hs. Uruguay: FIVU. Festival Internacional de Videodanza del Uruguay. Curador: Diego Carrera.17hs. Cuba: Festival Internacional de Video-danza de La Habana. Curadora: Roxana de los Ríos.Quinta, dia 1515hs. Paraguay: Crear en Libertad. Encuentro Internacional de Danza y Artes Contemporáneas de Asunción. Curadores: Javier Valdéz y Juana Miranda.16hs. Argentina: festival VideoDanzaBA. Curadora: Silvina Szperling.17hs. Brasil: Festival Dança em Foco (RJ) e Encontro Terceira margem (CE). Curadores: Paulo Caldas, Eduardo Bonito, Alexandre Veras.Mesa Redonda: Dança em novos formatos (quinta, 15, às 9h)Participantes: Ivani Santana (BA) e Alexandre Veras (CE)Painel de festivais e canais de TV (sexta, 16, às 9h):Lynette Kessler (Dance Camera West, Los Angeles, EUA); Alberto Magno (FRAME, Porto, Portugal); Bibiana Ricciardi (canal á, Buenos Aires, Argentina); Paulo Linhares (TV Povo, Fortaleza, Ceará, Brasil)Intervalos curatoriais (13, 14 e 15, às 19h)Conversa com curadores de três importantes festivais da Améria Latina, seguida de uma pequena mostra de trabalhos, escolhidos conforme o recorte curatorial proposto por cada convidado.O desafio lançado aos curadores nessa conversa é trabalhar a curadoria a partir da idéia de criação de um intervalo entre o vídeo e a dança. Para que exista relação entre dois termos é preciso haver um intervalo entre eles. O intervalo como condição e forma da relação. Intervalo como distância, como duração, como suspensão, como corte, como diferença, como continuidade, como descontinuidade. A forma como trabalhamos e pensamos o intervalo diz muito de nossas opções de composição e montagem. Pensar a vídeo-dança a partir do intervalo, é abrir a possibilidade de opções e desenhos curatoriais inusitados. Discutir o papel da curadoria hoje,é tensionar sua capacidade de construir sentidos, considerando a multiplicidade de trabalhos e linhas de pesquisa.Alexandre Veras Costa – Encontro Terceira Margem (CE)Videomaker e professor. Coordenador do Alpendre-Casa de Arte, Pesquisa e Produção, onde desenvolve atividades de coordenação e curadoria de mostras, seminários, cursos, exposições e outros. Desde 2000 vem desenvolvendo trabalhos em vídeo-dança, dentre eles: AnaRosaLinda, O tempo da delicadeza, Aquário, Clautros, San Pedro, Partida, Marahope 14/07 e O Regresso de Ulisses. Também realiza trabalhos com documentário (As Vilas Volantes- o verbo contra o vento, Máscara ou Pertença, Só Tenho um Norte, Cidade Anônima, O Gesto, A Voz, O Olho) e trabalha com formação em oficinas de história, teoria, linguagem e prática de vídeo-dança, vídeo-arte e documentário. É diretor artístico e curador do encontro Terceira Margem (que trabalha a relação corpo/imagem), realizado pela Bienal Internacional de Dança do Ceará.Silvina Szperling - Festival Internacional de Video-danza de Buenos AiresCoreógrafa, crítica de dança, realizadora e curadora de video-dança. Diretora do Festival Internacional de Video-danza de Buenos Aires. Coordenadora do Circuito Videodanza Mercosur e do Foro Latinoamericano de Videodanza. Membro da Comisión de Cultura del Consejo Consultivo de la Sociedad Civil para el Mercosur. Curadora e co-directora artística do festival Buenos Aires Danza Contemporánea 2008.Paulo Caldas – dança em foco – festival de video & dançaO coreógrafo e bailarino Paulo Caldas fundou a Staccato Dança Contemporânea em 1993. Desde então, suas obras vem sendo apresentadas em diversas cidades no Brasil e também nos EUA, Japão, Itália, Alemanha e França. Ministra oficinas de Técnica de Dança e Composição Coreográfica pelo Brasil e já foi professor convidado em diversas companhias nacionais. É professor dos cursos de graduação em dança da UniverCidade e da Faculdade Angel Vianna, onde criou e coordena o curso de pós-graduação “Estéticas do Movimento: Estudos em Dança, Videodança e Multimídia”. Idealizou e dirige o dança em foco – Festival Internacional de Vídeo & Dança, realizado desde 2003.Eduardo Bonito - dança em foco – festival de video & dançaO diretor Eduardo Bonito trabalha como curador e produtor. Atualmente é diretor artístico do Festival Panorama de Dança e consultor para várias companhias, festivais e instituições públicas relacionadas com a dança contemporânea no Brasil, Inglaterra, França, Espanha e Suíça, incluindo a Bienal de Dança do Ceará. Em 2006, foi jurado do Projeto Rumos Dança pelo Itaú Cultural e passou a integrar o Grupo de Recursos da Rede Latino-Americana de Dança e participou da fundação do Fórum Latino-Americano de Videodança. É diretor artístico do dança em foco desde 2005.Apoio: Centro Cultura de Espanha em São Paulo, Centro Cultural em Buenos Aires e dança em foco – Festival Internacional de Vídeo & DançaFestivais e iniciativas culturais participantes:Bienal Internacional de Dança do Ceará - EncontroTerceira Margem, Ceará (Brasil) http://www.bienaldedanca.comFestival internacional VideoDanzaBA, Buenos Aires (Argentina)http://VideoDanzaBA.com.arDança em foco – festival de video & dança, Rio de Janeiro (Brasil)http://www.dancaemfoco.com.brFestival internacional de video-danza de La Habana (Cuba)FIVU - Festival Internacional de Videodanza del Uruguay (Uruguay)http://www.fivu.orgFIVC 09 - Festival Internacional de Videodanza de Chilehttp://www.danzaeinterfacechile.comagite y sirva. festival itinerante de videodanza (México)http://www.agiteysirva.comCuerpo digital. Festival internacional de videodanza (Bolivia) http://videodanzabolivia.blogspot.comCrear en Libertad. Encuentro Internacional de Danza y Artes Contemporáneas de Asunción (Paraguay)http://www.crearenlibertad.blogspot.comPlay Rec, Pernambuco (Brasil)http://www.movimiento.org/profiles/blogs/play-rec-ii-festivalGPTD - Grupo de pesquisa poética tecnológica na dança, Salvador de Bahia, Brasil www.poeticatecnologica.ufba.brSESC Sao Paulo – SESC TV (Brasil)http://www.sesctv.org.brColetivo Difusão Digital de Manaus, Amazonia (Brasil)FUNARTE – Coordenação de Dança, Rio de Janeiro (Brasil) http://www.funarte.gov.br/novafunarte/funarte/danca/danca.phpItaú Cultural, Sao Paulo (Brasil)http://www.itaucultural.org.brIdança, Sao Paulo (Brasil)http://www.idanca.netVideomovimiento. Festival internacional de videodanza (Colombia) http://www.imagenenmovimiento.orgDance-tech TVhttp://www.dance-tech.netFRAME – festival internacional de Vídeo-dança, Porto (Portugal) http://www.fabricademovimentos.ptDance Camera West – Dance Film Festival, Los Angeles, California (Estados Unidos) http://www.dancecamerawest.org
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The end of dvds is near?

Will all exchange of digital materials soon be transacted on-line? It would seem that for all the entrants/producers of film festivals, soon only an address on-line will be necessary. The burning of dvds, mailing them, storing them may all be a thing of the past.
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Notes on Prismainterviews conducted by Alejandra Martorellfor Critical Correspondence (movementresearch.org/publishing) and dance-tech.netA series of short video interviews, Notes on Prisma tries to sketch the experience created in Mexico at the end of June and beginning of July, 2009 for those who were not there (which includes me). Immediately having access only to participating artists who are in New York, I'm learning about the event as I go from one conversation to another. Different artists, invited in different capacities and engaged in different ways talk about what they did, what impact the experience has had on them and what they think Prisma adds to the current practices of production and distribution of work, as well as the discourse and modes of collaboration that were been explored.minimum background information:Prisma Forum, coordinated by Monserrat Payró and Horacio Lecona, launched a sophisticated website/initiative calling for an encounter to take part in Mexico this past summer. Participants would come together for two consecutive weeks, first in Oaxaca then in Mexico City, to share their work and explore diverse modes of collaboration, exchange and discursive forms. Global in scope, Prisma was also experimenting with democratic politics in opening the Forum to anyone through online proposals.Interviewees: Nohemí Montzerrat Contreras (already up!), Jennifer Monson, DD Dorvillier, Thollem, Moriah Evans, Trajal Harrell, Martin Lanz Landázuri and more!
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Octubre 6 y 7 2009 Facilitado por Marlon Barrios Solano/Dance-tech Interactive LLC Octubre 6 y 7 2009 Ass. Companyies Dansa, Barcelona, Espana. Net / red Convidat Password : Cornella dance-tech.net dance-techTV Interviews movimiento.org (La Red Sudamericana de Danza) vida arte proceso producto investigacion conocimiento creatividad colaboration arte investigacion creacion collaborativa proceso creativo Plan, estrategia, accion Organizacion Cambios Generales Mundiales siglo 21 Economia Global/mercado Iniciativas transnacionales Movimientos sociales urbanos Nuevas tecnologias Interconecion Ecologica/Impacto Como estamos conectados? Conectividades? Contactos (mediacion) Movimientos (migraciones/mobilidad) gentes, lugares, ideas/intereses Introduccion/presentacion... Transporte y Comunicacion Mediacion en espacio y tiempo Sincronia y Asincronia Presencia?? Historia/s/storytelling Jonathan Harris: We feel Fine Transmision Registros/trazos Planes y estrategies/coexistencia: design top-down/bottom-up fracaso de sistemas prevalente?? Relaciones Vs Objeto Gregory Bateson Que es una red? Una forma de Organizacion Una forma de operar/protocolo de interaccion Un Proceso Generativo en si mismo Conecciones Procesos Cursos de accion intercambio entre todos estos aspectos Promete Flexibilidad! En red, la organizacion se convierte un fin en si mismo: es el contenido y el logro reflejan la logica de la vida social Plataformas de accion politica/intervencion de sistemas

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Pristina House Marjetica Potrc Ljubljana-based artist and architect. Produccion Colectiva Trabajo orientado el proceso Plataformas transversales de projectos Circulacion/Emergencia Uso y modificacion de redes existentes y creacion de nuevas Uso autodeterminado Geografia Movible/Fluida Exito o fracaso/para quien/ Laboratorio/investigacion... Legislacion Principio de Generosidad Infraestructuras de confianza Sistema Ejercicio automatizacion transmision organizacion/indexacion limites/boundary CAMBIOS ESTRUCTURALES Y FUNCIONALES TECNOLOGICOS: Infrestructura de Fibra optica Protocolos y estandares Convergencia Miniaturizacion Portabilidad Conectividad masiva dentro del disenio urbano Gran Capacidad de almacenamiento y rescate/llamada de datos en forma interactiva Data base driven websites (PHP/Mysql) Video/procesamiento de la images con Flash video/flash servers Ajax (procesamiento en el browser) Movimientos Sociales/culturales: Open source/free software Publicacion de API desarrollo collaborativo/inteligencia distribuida Nuevos modelos de produccion y atribucion de derechos de autoria Bajos Costos Acceso Cambio Funcional Arquitecturas Bottom-up permiten participacion de los usuarios en el desarrollo de contenido y organizacion de contenido. reflejan la logica de la vida social Sitios web de estaticos a dinamicos/ informacion es dinamica y cambiente creada por los ususarios EL NUEVO INTERNET Cambios FUNCIONALES: Forma y contenido estan separados!! XML XHTML CSS PHP MYSQL APACHE LINUX FLASH VIDEO Implicaciones para: publicacion, prensa, mercadeo, investigacion Industrias de reproduccion y distribucion de ideas y formas culturales. ENTONCES WEB2.0 Proceso/proceso/proceso Servicio no producto Participacion en el desarrollo del contenido (PROSUMER) Platafomas que cambian Esfuerzo colectivo muchos a muchos Transparencia Auto-organizacion reflejan la logica de la vida social Subir, bajar, lateral: transmision horizontal "sideloading" RSS

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API Application programing Interface AGREGADOR Generadores de Codigo de insertar (embedding) VIRAL Lista de Agregadores Projeto RSSificado Ejemplos... DanceBloggers BROOKLYN MUSEUM 1st Fans Dance Theater Workshop, NYC Project52

08: Marina from Caleb Custer on Vimeo.

Clytemnestra ReMash Challenge MULTIMEDIA: Blogging LIVE BLOGGING LIVE VLOGGING Microblogging 1st Fans Brooklyn Museum LIVE STREAMING DOCUMENTAL/entrevista Experimental/ Produccion en Nube/ conectado por etiquetas (TAGS), categorias y palabras clave Folksonomies Busquedas e indices Red Social Medios Sociales Presencia Distribuida textos/images/video/sonido SaaS Sofware como Servicio WEB BLOGS Site/Blog: cronologica/categorizada/etiquetada Wiki Wiki Wiki Abajo Internet Explorer!! FIREFOX/Mozila OPEN KNOWLEDGE: COMPARTE UN PP SLIDE SHOW? SLIDESHARE Comparte tus enlaces y direcciones: Social bookmarking Delicious MOVIMIENTOS COMPARTIDOS: VIDEO EN LA RED YOU TUBE visibilidad estadisticas captura en webcam video respuestas anotaciones enlaces traducciones You Tube Alta Definicion HD Vimeo VIDEO PODCAST Blip.tv Grabando Skype conversaciones: Todos los camimos conducen a Facebook? Broadcasting: LIVESTREAM camara cable conneccion computadora Crea tu canal.... PLAY LIST... video on-demand LOOP... synchronous broadcasting como TV En VIVO... Captura en TIEMPO REAL BROADCASTING INTERACTIVO/chat room DISTRIBUCION DEL CANAL/insertar en otras paginas ATENCION A: KALTURA Motionplex.org EXTRAS!!!! AUTORIA Y DERECHOS DERECHOS DE AUTOR: CREATIVE COMMONS Generador de Licencias Lawrence Lessig Cool stuff: We Media Unleashing Web 2.0: From Concepts to Creativity Clay Shirky: author of "Here Comes Everybody" The Wealth of Networks (pdf) Documentary on Networks (science) The Nature of Networks/Author: Felix Stalder Networked Cultures
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WATCH IN THE LIVESTREAM DANCE-TECHTV CHANNEL WATCH IN THE DANCE-TECHTV PAGE IN THIS SITE TO WATCH PROGRAMS FROM THE BEGINNING CLICK MENU IN THE RIGHT MIDDLE AREA OF THE PLAYER. Then click "Browse On-demand library", then CLICK "FEATURING NOW" author-film director Maite Bermudez choreography Emio Greco | PC This piece contains nudity Synopsis A film documentary based on two creative process; the acclaimed dance performance HELL created by dance company Emio Greco | PC in 2006 (Amsterdam, Holland) and the personal interpretation and inspiration through cinematography by film director and scriptwriter Maite Bermudez (Maracaibo, Venezuela). Inspiration, understanding, crashing and discovering what it is inside of a dance creative process. Imagining Hell, a tango of thoughts, dreams, images, sounds and fantasies reflecting and communicating possible representations of Hell. Filmography and Biography of the director Maite Bermúdez, script writer and film director since 2003, holds an MA in Audiovisual Communication from the Navarra University, a specialization in Script Writing for Cinema and Television from the Autonomous University of Barcelona and a title in History of Cinema specialized in documentary from the Autonomous University of Madrid. Presently she works as a script writer/analyst and as director of film documentaries and short movies. DOUBLE SKIN/DOUBLE MIND (2006- 56 min) LOS ESCRITORES DE LA CALLE (1997- 20 min) I LEFT LIVE PAST ME BY (1993- ?) TRAIN (1993- 5 min) Biography of the choreographer Emio Greco and Pieter C. Scholten have collaborated in their joint search for new dance forms since 1995 in Amsteradm Holland. They found a strong common interest in the possibility of a dance seen as the expression of a visionary body, with the theatrical space as the external influence on that body. In their performances, dance is regarded as autonomous, and capable of creating its own time and space. Their performances are internationally toured since 1995 and have received many different awards for their ouvre. Festival selections CINEDANS Amsterdam, NL 2008 FILMSTOCK Luton, UK 2008 2008|49 min |HD and DVCAM |stereo CREDITS Direction and Script Maite Bermúdez | Executive Producer Bertha Bermúdez| Associated Producer Maite Pascual | Cinematography Javier Allegue | Editing Virginia García del Pino | Sound Editor Michal Zasowski | B&W Dancers Photographs Laurent Ziegler HELL (Performance) Choreography - Emio Greco | Pieter C. Scholten , Lighting, Set and Sound Concept - Emio Greco | Pieter C. Scholten, Assistant to the choreographers - Bertha Bermudez Pascual, Lighting Design - Henk Danner, Costume Design - Clifford Portier, Dancers - Sawami Fukuoka, Vincent Colomes, Suzan Tunca, Nicola Monaco, Marie Sinnaeve, Ty Boomershine, Marta Lopez and Emio Greco Production: Emio Greco | PC Co-production: Théâtre de la Ville (Paris, F); Festival Montpellier Danse 2006 (Montpellier, F); Maison de la Culture Amiens (Amiens, F); barbicanbite07 (London, GB); Cankarjev Dom (Ljubliana, SLO), Julidans 2006 (Amsterdam, NL) With special thanks to: Maison de la Culture d’Amiens for hosting the creation residency; Multi Arts Projects and Production, New York; ATER, Modena. Premiere - 28-06-2006 Festival Montpellier Dance 2006. Emio Greco | PC receives funding from the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science. HELL is made possible by the Doris Duke Fund for Dance of the National Dance Project, a programme administered by the New England Foundation for the Arts with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, and the Ford Foundation. SPECIAL THANKS Maite Pascual, Xalba Martikorena, Patricia Campo, Igor Mendizabal, Marian Fernandez Pascal, Lola Salvador, Javier Gallego © LAS NEGRAS © 2008 , Ámsterdam-Spain Check out Schedule of Emio Greco | PC USA Tour Space sponsored by MAPP International Productions
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Post da propuesta para crear em companhia

Después del encuentro con la RSD eu fiqué muito en la onda de trabalhar en red, de conhecer y jugar más con los meios virtuales de relación, e de não perder contatcto. Así mesmo eu estoy procurando uma excusa para não deixar de falar portugés (portuñol), y de comenzar minha pesquiza respecto ao precesso creativo (o proceso de creação como objeto de investigación).Entonces pensé en hacer um trabalho a partir da propia ação de escribir, enviar y recibir mails entre amigas (por ahora todas mulheres) con las que eu quero estar contactada, y de la publicación de esta correspondencia, que es a la vez la publicação do processo creativo y de suas materias: as palabras (los gestos virtuales da gente) e suas informaçoes.Ainda no sé qual puede ser el resultado (sim vai ser uma pieza de danza o performance, um video, uma instalação virtual, etc), mas estoy muito curiosa de lo que ya está acontecendo.Obrigada a todas as amigas que estan querendo fazer parte de esta experimentación, y a todos los lectores y lectoras de su processo.z
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Dance-Controlled Music via MAX/MSP

After months of research, we've found a new direction for the future: motion controlled music!

When Cycling'74 discontinued VST support in favor of Ableton Live! integration, we realized we'd have to find a new avenue for development. We looked through thousands of sensor control systems. We were swamped. Then we were delighted to discover Yann Seznec, the Amazing Rolo, who has developed a Wii-based remote control for music looping. Here he is, showing the remote control unit:

Oh sure, there are lots of breadboard remote-control gizmos around for music synthesis. Very few make it to stage. They fall apart. They break. They are difficult to calibrate. They are not simple. They require geeky programming with computers. And often, all told, they cost many hundreds, or even thousands of dollars.

But the Wii remote control provides buttons and motion control in a standard consumer device costing $60. Programmers have developed demonstration interfaces for multiple Wii controllers working in tandem. A whole dance troop could control an orchestra, each moving in different ways to control different instruments!

Towards this end we are planning to integrate Yann's Wii-Looper software with my Husserl metasequencer. With Wii Husserl, dancers will be able to play music by motion! Here is a screenshot of Husserl's professional interface in its premiere version, Husserl Sapphire Edition:

Husserl is the most sophisticated, integrated step sequencer ever made. Not only does it step through loops, but also plays layers, and fugues multiple patterns, all of which can trigger and modulate each other. It supports up to 16 independent input channels and can play 512-note polyphony on up to 20 different instruments. It can filter, transpose, scale, invert, and flip rhythms and melodies. It can remap any note to any other note across all 16 channels, or separately for each channel.

Husserl has now been available from Heavens*onEarth (http://heavensonearth.com) for almost a year. Heavens*onEarth clients include professional musicians performing for bands such as Shpongle and Younger Brother, Movie Studios including Sony Classics, and TV serials including Kings and 30 Rock.

Now with the Amazing Rolo's contributions, it will also be possible to play Husserl when dancing! Yann has already created software for controlling sound loops. You can see Yann in a movie clip demonstrating the Wii Looper here:

http://heavensonearth.com/index.php?option=com_kunena&Itemid=238&func=view&catid=13&id=287

We are also looking towards some stage performances in Sacramento. Please let us know at Heavens*onEarth if you are a dancer interested in controlling music by your movements too.

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WATCH IN THE DANCE-TECTV LIVESTREAM CHANNEL PAGE AND IN FULL SCREEN WATCH IT IN THE DANCE-TECHTV PAGE TO WATCH THE DOCUMENTARY FROM THE BEGINNING CLICK MENU IN THE RIGHT MIDDLE AREA OF THE PLAYER. Then click "Browse On-demand library", then "CLICK FEATURING NOW" LEAVE COMMENTS DIRECTLY TO EMIO GRECO |PC, THEY RE DANCE-TECH.NET MEMBERS DOUBLE SKIN / DOUBLE MIND 2006 | 56mn author-film director Maite Bermudez choreography emio greco & pieter c. scholten SYNOPSIS Mind and body perceived and experienced by two, dancer and camera playing inside the ongoing duality of the human being SHORT DESCRIPTION The reference point for this documentary is Double Skin/ Double Mind a dance workshop created by choreographers Emio Greco and Pieter C. Scholten. Check out Schedule of Emio Greco | PC USA Tour Space sponsored by MAPP International Productions
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This week at the NYEAF: New Project Demos ZACHARY LEIBERMAN / LESLEY FLANIGAN / BRENDAN FERNANDES FRIDAY OCTOBER 2, 2009, 7PM FREE HARVESTWORKS DIGITAL MEDIA ARTS CENTER 596 Broadway #602 New York City (at Houston St) Subway: F/V Broadway/Lafayette, 6 Bleecker, W/R Prince As part of the New York Electronic Art Festival 2009, a month-long series of concerts, workshops, and exhibitions centered on the cutting-edge work being done at the intersection of art and technology, Harvestworks will present the first in a series of New Project Demos on Friday October 2nd with presentations by new media artists Zachary Leiberman, Lesley Flanigan and Brendan Fernandes. Zachary Lieberman will present recent and on-going works developed in the last year, including an eye tracker for a paralyzed graffiti writer who has ALS, a performance on the facade of a building, tools for new forms of magic, a 3d drawing tool, and the openframeworks toolkit, a framework for creative coding in c++. In addition, there will be presentation of an upcoming work the artist is developing in collaboration with Taeyoon Choi. Lesley Flanigan will share her work with custom-built Speaker Feedback Instruments, addressing the physicality of sound, amplification as a source of sound in and of itself, and the relationships between noise, speakers, and voice. Brendan Fernandes investigates the concept of authenticity, as an ideological construct that both dominant and subordinatecultures use to their own ends. It is a word that shapes cultural experience, and thus also shapes concepts and formation of identity. He uses the Safari-as-authentic-African-experience to provide an evocative metaphor for the inscription of culture onto his own sense of identities. In his lecture at Harvestworks he will discuss his practice and the new work that he created in his residency. -- Artist Talk CHRISTINE SUGRUE / JULIA HEYWARD / CELESTE BOURSIER-MOUGENOT SATURDAY OCTOBER 3, 2009 2PM FREE World Financial Center Courtyard Gallery 220 Vesey Street, NYC Subway: R/W City Hall, E World Trade Center, 1,2 or 3 Chambers St. In conjuction with the New York Electronic Art Festival Exhibition, Rate of Change - time and space in electronic art, Harvestworks in partnership with arts>World Financial Center present a talk with exhibition artists Christine Sugrue, Julia Heyward and Céleste Boursier-Mougenot. Rate of Change exhibits the wide range of electronic art and it’s transition from the 20th to the 21st Century. It presents the works of eight artists working in immersive video and audio installation, audience and environmentally responsive sculpture and experimental narrative. It is anchored by the newly restored digital media work “Hand-drawn Spaces” (1998), a virtual dance installation by Merce Cunningham, Paul Kaiser, and Shelley Eshkar that presents 3D hand-drawn figures performing intricate choreography in a virtual space. Additional exhibition artists include Céleste Boursier-Mougenot who recently received the 2009 Golden David Award, Hisao Ihara, Julia Heyward, Eunjung Hwang, Jessica Ann Peavy, Christine Sugrue and the CCRT Collaboration. Rate of Change - time and space in electronic art September 29 – October 24 Open Hours: Tuesday - Saturday, Noon - 4PM, FREE World Financial Center Courtyard Gallery, 220 Vesey Street, NYC Produced by Harvestworks and presented by arts>World Financial Center which is sponsored by American Express, Battery Park City Authority, Brookfield Properties, and Merrill Lynch. www.artsWorldFinancialCenter.com ABOUT NYEAF: The New York Electronic Art Festival was created to provide a responsive public context for the appreciation of cutting-edge electronic artwork through concerts, panels, workshops, and exhibitions of the highest quality across the arts and technology spectrum. Attendees will get an overview of how technology is being used in various artistic disciplines, and have the opportunity to take part in a discussion about how these technologies will continue to shape contemporary art practice. This year’s festival will be a showcase of exciting interdisciplinary work and serve as a catalyst for discussions and collaborations between artists, technology, and the public. The NYEAF will plug into a national and international network of electronic art festivals, bringing significant contemporary art and music to the city. NYEAF is produced by Harvestworks, an international digital media arts center with 30 years of experience helping artists to get ”inside the electronics” and to develop a hands-on, experimental and explorative approach to making art with technology. Produced by Harvestworks in partnership with arts>World Financial Center, Roulette and New York University with funds provided by the National Endowment for the Arts as part of American Masterpieces: Three Centuries of Artistic Genius, the New York State Council on the Arts, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, mediaThefoundation, Etant donnés: The French-American Fund for Contemporary Art, the Québec Government Office in New York, Electronic Music Foundation, the Experimental TV Center Presentation Funds and the Institute for Electronic Art and the Paula Cooper Gallery. Corporate sponsorship is provided by Tekserve: the Apple Specialists, Newmark Knight Frank, Original Sin and Cycling74. ABOUT HARVESTWORKS: Founded in 1977, Harvestworks offers an environment where artists can make work inspired and achieved by electronic media. Harvestworks helps the community at large to understand, assimilate, and make creative use of new and evolving technologies. Harvestworks creates a context for the appreciation of new work, advances both the art community and the public's agenda for the use of technology in art; and brings together innovative practitioners from all branches of the arts by fostering collaborations across electronic media. For more info: www.nyeaf.org www.harvestworks.org -- Harvestworks is a non-profit arts center in Lower Manhattan. Private funding for our programs has been provided by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the Jerome Foundation, New York Community Trust, the Carnegie Corporation, the Aaron Copland Fund, the Greenwall Foundation, the Edwards Foundation Arts Fund, the Trust for Mutual Understanding, Materials for the Arts, the Experimental TV Center and mediaThe foundation Inc. Public Support is provided by New York State Council on the Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts and the NYC Dept. of Cultural Affairs. Thanks to our Friends Circle, Cycling74, Digidesign, Inc. and NHT Pro.
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I have been waiting for more than five hours at the Frankfurt Airport in a stop from Dresden and will leave in two. Hopefully! See some video stills from the European Tele-plateaus Phase 3 that took place at the TMA Lab in Dresden.
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I am on my way to Novi Sad, Serbia, to attend the Balkan Platform of Dance 2009, a three days event that aims to "present the best selection of contemporary dance productions...made by established authors and emerging dance artists in previous two years in the Balkans."

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More from their website: BDP 2009 will present the latest production of BADco (Croatia), Rosana Hribar & Gregor Luštek (Slovenia), Madalina Dan (Romania), Dragana Bulut, Gillie Kleiman & Lígia Soares (Serbia), Griffon dance co. (Greece), Kinesthetic Project (Bulgaria) and Aleksandar Georgiev (Macedonia). BDP 2009 will display the best achievements in artistic, conceptual and production senses as well as the specificities of artistic, cultural and material conditions and contexts of this moment in the Balkans." I am very excited to meet the artists and to have this exceptional opportunity to see their work. I am curious to see if the so called Balkanization have affected their work and process... I was able to interview artist/activist Sasa Ascentic and dramaturg/researcher Ana Vujanovic when they were in NYC in March this year presenting My Private Bio-politics. Watch interview here edited by Ragnar Chacin
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I thank Saša Asentić, Director of the festival for this invitation to do "field work" for dance-tech.net interviews and DTW for supporting this adventure. Now the formal language: This project is made possible by a grant of Dance Theater Workshop, with Major support from the Trust of Mutual Understanding
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What: dorkbot-nyc meeting When: 7-9pm, 07 Oct 2009 Where: Location One, 20 Green Street, north of Canal $$$: $$$FREE$$$ ******* The 35.453th dorkbot-nyc meeting will take place at 7pm on Wednesday, October 7th, 2009 at Location One in SoHo. The meeting is free and open to the public. Please bring snacks to share. YUMM. We're always looking for (and playing) more dorkbot theme songs! Bring or email one and we'll play it at the meeting. ******* Featuring the pale green and salt-forming: Torino:Margolis: Action Potential Torino:Margolis is a performance art team that crosses physical and psychological barriers, using invasive electronics and biomedical tools. They explore the idea that the self is transient, elusive and modular by playing with the notion of control and free will. In their new media/dance piece, Action Potential, they harvest a dancer's neuronal impulses using electromyography machines. Using Arduino and XBees, the signals are sent wirelessly to Pure Data open source software, which transforms the signals into sound. Sound/programming by Lee Azzarello and choreography by Dana Kotler. http://www.torinomargolis.com Stefani Bardin: Chemical Proust: Remembrance of Things Pastiche I'm a media maker interested in the intersections of food, technology and science. By examining industrial food production alongside the media rich stylized presentation of food and using such tools as artificial smells (that "flavor" our food supply) and gastroenterology technology I look at food as both a mediating agent and phenomenological reference point within our society and how its role has changed through the modern influences of technology and corporate culture. http://www.petrifiedunrest.net

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Lee von Kraus: cyborgs and cybernetics I will discuss the roborat, roboroach, and other cybernetics stuff I'm working on. The roborat is a rat that is trained to move in directions specified by electronic signals sent to its brain via electrodes. The roboroach is a cockroach that is tricked into moving in specified directions by using mechanically actuated antenna stimulation. The 'other cybernetics stuff' refers to a goal of augmenting brains via induction of new circuit formation. http://leevonk.com ........................................................................ .........dorkbot: people doing strange things with electricity.......... ......................... http://dorkbot.org ........................... ........................................................................
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Manuales / Manuals

Manuales / ManualsInteractive performance in real timeBased on the text of Sergio Valenzuela “Manual 1”Performance and development of software: Brisa MPAssistant: Jose Luis SatocuatoPlatform: Max/Msp/JitterMatucana 100. 24 sept. Santiago of Chile 2009Thanks : Sergio Valenzuela and Leonardo Gamboa.
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