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INVISIBILITY OF THE PRESENT - TRANSMEDIALE 2010

The speed of our times is accelerating, day by day the rhythm grows faster. We are doing more and more things at the same time. Our digitalized lives are virtually (social-)networked. Digital technologies and information last only for very short time. A computer is outdated within less than 5 years time, news are updated in a 5 second frequency and thus outdated within a couple of hours. Thanks to micro-blogs, messages get shorter and shorter, provide us with life search to keep up with the pace.

The huge amount of digital data processed per day makes it difficult to keep track of them. This also occurs to digital art projects, whose creators or buyers stand before the problem on how to archive them in a reliable way. Everything we do and use is more temporary than ever before. The present seems to get shorter and shorter. To be able to project towards the future, we'd need to be able to define presence more thoroughly. To know what the present is. BUT: The importance of thinking of the future helps us to give meaning to the present. A viscous circle then?

Contemporary visions and imagination of future have a big identity problem.

Future is no longer what it had been. Present is no longer what it had been. And the present is not yesterday's future... tm10 (Transmediale Festival 10, 2 - 7 February 2010) was dedicated to this contemporary identity crisis of the future. With its great varieties of installations, performances, conferences, workshops , etc., we had wonderful, very versatile and contrary discussions and approaches, not so much to tackle the problem of the future's identity crisis, but to name it and think about it, to raise new questions, to explore solutions for not being part of a disappearing past.

After an inaugural speech that shows us images of the moon landing (yes the original 1969 event), the tm10 opens officially with a flashback to "modern" vision of future. Charlemagne Palestine, modern composer, musician, bell expert (& whiskey lover), gives us a half hour concert, ringing bells of the Tiergarten's bell tower…. With this image of an ancient means of communication, the bell tower, we are prepared to travel towards a nearer past, the 1980s: At the same time Yvette Mattern's7-colored rainbow laser-beam was projected from Berlin's hkw, (with its' stunning 1950s architecture in shape of an oyster shell) to the 1960s architectural gem Fernsehturm at Alexanderplatz.

© Photographer: Frank Paul
hkw © Photographer: Frank Paul

© ANBerlin
Fernsehturm Alexanderplatz © ANBerlin

Two symbolic architectonic cold war signs of the former east and the former west part Berlin. A sign for the reunification of Berlin, she states. To me it seems rather a time travel to a period when two superpowers were competing to own the future. The whole opening ceremony was visually, sonically and conceptually a collective time travel towards a moment when
utopia and future vision were still intact.

Let's jump to more present times: tm10 invited — amongst many others - Bruce Sterling (placing him next to an overhead projector he unfortunately didn't use). Sterling, sci-fi novelist and a central figure in utopia and visions of future, gives us an entertaining but dark-visioned speech about atemporality [1], to place ourselves in the present, questioning the relations and concepts of past, present and future. His talk, full of pleonasms and contradictions gets confusing, as he seems to mix up art-historic terms. The difference in postmodernism and network culture/atemporality is, that the latter doesn't define the problem, gets overloaded by irrelevant information and stays completely disorganized. That's why we cannot define history or present.

He appeals to "creative artists" to refuse being driven by technology, refuse reverence to the past in order to move forwards; to become the vision of the future ourselves in order to be convincing with our art. To give a ••• about what others think of us and personify our utopia(s).[2] His visions will give you a chill….

THE EXPOSITION

At Future Obscura, the festivals exhibition at hkw, the presented artworks are using language of the past to talk about the present situation. About a present that might have been future in the past. A nostalgic and historical presence. The artworks use any historic image making techniques (rather than THE state of the art) from photography, film-making and robotics to "create a collisions between the past, the present and future" [3], whereas I found future visions were lacking completely .

The artworks thematize already existing technologies, putting them in context with contemporary everyday life. They translate common digital situations and phenomena into the visual, sonic, into the artistic field. The little Paparazzi-Bot, a robot that recognizes movement and (if you're not too quick), shoots a photo of you, that is transmitted via a noisily disturbed wifi connection to a small flatscreen just behind it. The images shot by the robot will be uploaded to the webpage manually by human beings. Quite a 1970s manual work for nowadays…

Paparazzi-Bot © Jonathan Gröge
Paparazzi-Bot © Jonathan Gröge

The most impressive work at the exhibition was Gebhard Sengmüller's A Parallel Image. An electronic Camera Obscura, the installation uses 2500 copper cables connecting a photo sensor unit with a display unit, consisting of 2500 light bulbs. It illustrates how the composition of a digital image would look like if serial data transmission had never come to existence. The installation sends all pixel data in parallel. A very poetic way of reflecting the present, assuming past events didn't happen and offering a "new" solution to an old, already solved problem: how to live-project moving image.

A Parallell Image - © Gebhard SengmüllerA
Parallell Image - © Gebhard Sengmüller

A Parallell Image - © Jonathan GrögeA
Parallell Image - © Jonathan Gröge


SATELLITE EXPOSITIONS

[The User], with Coincidence Engines One & Two: Universal People's Republic Time translates the "atemporality" problem by using the time machine itself as part of his installations. The two-part installation, takes the clock out of context and uses it as a sound and light making machine. Coincidence Engine One is a tower of unsynchronized analogue alarm clocks whose tickings build up to a beautiful sonic environment. The second part is a wall of synchronized clocks, that are equipped with an external control, so each clock ticks only in response to instructions issued by the artists. Patterns of light and sound events move rhythmically across the vertical plane. Coincidence Engines is an actual reflection about the present, about time and atemporality with thoughts and play behind it.

the_user_part01_karla



One of the few women present(ed) at tm10, AgnesMeyer-Brandis surprises amusingly with an unimaginable imaginative piece of work: The installation Cloud-Core-Scanner – Inside the Tropospheric Laboratory [4] exhibited at Schering Stiftung. Agnes Meyer-Brandis explores the experimental edge between art, science and technology and borders between facts and fiction, which
you definitely will discover when looking at the installation. My first impression left me confused. You really have to confront yourself with the piece to dive into it's surreal narrative.

The installation Inside the Tropospheric Laboratory gives insights into material that Agnes Meyer-Brandis generated under conditions of extraterrestrial realities: it was developed in micro-gravity on a scientific flight in corporation with the German space agency. The oversized test tube construction consisting of a variety of elements that, one after another get into action at a certain point, has something theatrical, scenic about it.

A laser printer and a lit candle produce CO2 particles which are captured into a glass balloon. The number of particles are measured. At a certain amount, a noisy sound coming from a vacuum pump (that leaves the bowl in vacuum as you can imagine), announces the creation of a little cloud. This triggers (or seems to at least) subsequent events: a disc filled with objects is rotating. A video of one randomly selected object filmed in microgravity is projected on the wall and on a thick piece of plastic. At the same time a stone who seemingly lives in zero gravity, is being measured by a constantly moving aluminum bar.

Far away from artistic romanticism she wants to scan the cores of the clouds. To get into the heart of the object of investigation. As artistic science the results are images rather than formulas. Images and relations. A very poetic research-experimentation on how the future of art could look like.

She was also participant at tm10 salon talk: Destination Moon, where she made the listeners dive into her surreal scientific dreamlike narratives.[5]

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ROUND UP

A big trend in the exposed artworks at tm10 was the visualization of the invisible. In his audio visual performance Test Pattern, Ryoji Ikeda, pictures the invisible: Data-streams we are exposed to continuously are transformed into a stroboscopic optic attack of black and white barcode patters, flittering flickering and flashing in an almost unbearable speed (100s of frames per second), synchronized perfectly to aggressively electronic sounds that remind of an overlay of dozens of digitalized morse codes, morphing towards some very heavy beats. The system of Test Pattern is converting any kind of data (such as texts, sounds, images, videos….) into barcode patterns. A visualization of the immaterial in the most minimalistic and direct form.


Another approach to the data visualization: the Panoramic Wifi Camera by Adam Somlai-Fischer, Usman Haque, Bengt Sjölénvon, who illustrate the wifi-nets as colorful clouds and their physical behavior;

http://mediastore.freshmilk.de/media/mediastore/2131/web.flv","autoPlay":false},"screen":{"width":700,"height":393,"left":0,"top":0},"canvas":{"backgroundImage":"url(http://mediastore.freshmilk.de/media/mediastore/2131/preview.jpg)"},"logo":{"url":"http://www.freshmilk.tv/site-media/themes/freshmilk/embed-logo.png","fullscreenOnly":false}}">
Julius von Bismarck visualizes the camera movement of movies in his The Space Beyond Me [6], Agnes Meyer-Brandis with her Cloud-Core-Scanner the consistence of a cloud, Ken Rinaldo's Paparazzi-Bots the users that interact with it, Alice Miceli's Chernobyl Project the invisible radioactive contamination in Chernobyl…

On the contrary, the Artvertiser project un-visualises the visible by replacing (visual) data we usually consume on a daily basis. Julian Olivier and Clara Boj, Diego Diaz and Damian Stewart have developed a little binocular which, walking through the city, distresses our overcharged visual senses. Ads are detected by the machine and replaced by artworks of your choice (still images, video, animation…).


AWARDS

The aspects of Bruce Sterlings "atemporality" idea, the shallowness and disorder of contemporary (or atemporally) art are mirrored not only in this year'snominations, but also in the awarded work by Michelle Teran, "Buscando al Sr. Goodbar". Connecting the virtual and "real life," Teran uses geo tagged youtube videos in the city of Murcia, Spain, that automatically get displayed on GoogleEarth. The "participatory performance" offered a bus tour to explore the city's the geo-tagged places. The tour took simultaneously place on Google Earth and YouTube. With this (voyeuristic) work she wants to question the reason behind publishing intimate data with the exact geographic location. Her answers are not really convincing, seemingly shallow she states "people seem to have the urge to reveal and display their private lives." The award jury's statement didn't help to convince either. [7]

Connecting the (social) web and the physical space is in not so much a novelty and has been done in more interesting ways before.[8]

It seemed not to have undergone the filter of the artists' perception/opinion, world and future view, seems rather the ingredients for an uncooked meal. Take a youtube, take a google earth, travel to the place of investigation and invite some viewers to travel the map….

Should transmediale's future-barometer be the only truths, we'd face a mixture of a quite stressful, chaotic and indigestible digital era of consumption without time and space for reflection…. And a time of wild creation of new visual forms of anything you'd never known about…. It was definitely a very communicative, networked and entertaining event, and a big petty I couldn't stay for the whole event.

__________

[1] Atemporality is a "modern (I think he means contemporary) phenomenon… a problem in the philosophy of history. His definition is well worth checking out: The full transcript of the speech can be read on Sterling's blog

[2] The whole conference can be seen in video here. An interview with Bruce Sterling in german at de-bug

[3] Comment by Honor Harger, the curator of the exhibition in an interview with freshmilk.tv

[4]Agnes Meyer-Brandis' installation Inside the Tropospheric Laboratory looks for an answer to the question: "what are clouds made of"? By moving towards the clouds, on a micro-gravity flight with a German Space Agency plane, she leaves terrestrial realities behind, gets close to her subject of studies, trying to grasp it with her hands.

[5] here she was presenting various of her projects: the one I liked most was meteorites… a project in a siberian she organized public meteorite-crash-onto-earth-viewing event together with the museum.

[6] Old school film camera with a light source to convert it into projector. A software analyses the camera movement and makes the projection move accordingly. It is a mechanical version of a process that happens in the brain when watching a film with camera movement.

[7] Jury Statement:“Buscando al Sr Goodbar by Michelle Teran is a timely and considered exploration of synergies between online social space and physical urban spaces. Her work asks us to consider the hidden pockets of virtuosity that take place all around us. In her hands, online tools become not only a platform for display, but a method of discovery and reconnection to other people. She combines old methods (bus tours)and new (online tools) to create a work that is a complex commentary on our present moment, but also points the way to future layering of our digital and physical selves."

[8] Looking at works like Goldberg's 'The Robot in the Garden'[ link], and at [link], the builders association, Blast Theory, you will find a relevant use of the connection between the virtual and the "real"
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Dance Video Screenings

Screenings of dance videos made 2008-2009


Karohano - 26 Feb DesArts Aften Gallopperiet, Christiania, Cph, DK

Sanctum II & Karohano - 18 Mar, Screen Moves, DanseHallerne, Cph, DK

CoNCrEte – 21-25 April moves10:Framing Motion, Liverpool UK

Sanctum I & II, CoNCrEte and Karohano - 29 April, Dansens Dag, Cinematheque,

Danish Film Institute, Cph, DK

Sanctum I – in May for South African Cinema at the BFI South Bank, London, UK


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What is dance-tech.net

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
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DANCE/IMPROVISATION/NEW MEDIA/COGNITION

SAMPLES OF MY WORK


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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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COLLABORATIVE BROADCASTING/LINEAR...BROADCASTING...VIDEO ON DEMAND
CURATED

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SIBLING NETWORKS

MOVIMIENTO.ORG (SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE) 3000 members

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
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DIY
DIWO
DISTRIBUTED
CONVERSATIONS/DIALOGUE
EVERYTHING NEXT TO EVERYTHING

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MATCHING
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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

FOOD FOR THOUGHT



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RADIO HEALER














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LIVE
PROCESS
PRODUCT
ART
RESEARCH
KNOWLEDGE
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SYNCHRONOUS/ ASYNCHRONOUS
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GENEVA DANCE TRAINING
profesional contemporary dance training In Geneva

Gvadancetraining is proud to announce that we have now 250 members! And still growing!
Which makes our network the most important network of professional dancers in Switzerland, and maybe abroad.

Since January 2008 STUDIOS 44 offer professional training for prodancers. Other Geneva and Lausanne companies now participate in thisproject. You can join this social network and participate to the life of theprofessional scene o the Geneva region anouncing events, publishing blog posts, add videos,photos... It is free, open to the world, Use it! It is the web 2.0 revolution!!!!

New open professional training are offered in spring 2010, check out the agenda. In Geneva more than one hundred professional training available for professional dancers from february to June!

Visit GENEVA DANCE TRAINING at: http://gvadancetraining.ning.com/?xg_source=msg_mes_network

a network created by Gilles Jobin
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In 2007, the centre des arts in Enghien-les-Bains, a venue for the promotion of digital creation subsidised by the French Ministry of Culture and Communication, launched a project to create a network of artistic, scientific and industrial research, production, distribution and training organisations working in the area of digital creation in France and internationally. The Digital Art Network (RAN in French) offers a unique platform where art, science and industry converge, removing the barriers between these sectors and opening up a pioneering space for creation and innovation where experts from various professional fields can come together. The RAN seeks to develop a collaborative approach aimed at fostering exchange, reflection and co-production between artistic, scientific and industrial organisations. It promotes the synergy of cross-disciplinary expertise and helps bolster national and international co-operation.

Web : http://ran-dan.net/english.html

Download RAN's presentation : pochette ran(2).pdf
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View our new uploaded video of Featured Choreographer, Larry Keigwin, who shares his Success Story Promoting Dance with Video. Share your comments with us! Stay tuned for more success stories from the panelists from this Information Session at the 2010 APAP conference in NYC. http://youtube.com/user/FilmingDance4web.
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White Caps

Over the last year I have followed an interesting dance company called White Caps based in Bristol in there process of making this video dance:White Caps - A New Paradigm For BBoying in Dance and FilmOver the past 10 months they have been creating a dance theatre work which strives to take the bboying dance form into new territory. "White Caps", a live and film performance for the Bristol Old Vic in England, aims to explore the full expressive depth that the bboying technique holds, following the journey of two young men as they embark on an epic adventure in a compassionate, exhilarating search for completeness.They documented the process they went though to create this work, which i would like to share with you. Here are links to an episode of their production podcast and the latest teaser trail they have for the work.Hope this is of interest to you.Podcast Episode 5:http://www.vimeo.com/9428476
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Time: February 19, 2010 from 11am to 5pm
Location: Dansens Hus small stage
Street: Barnhusgatan 14
City/Town: City/Town: Stockholm, Sweden
Website or Map: http://maps.google.com/maps?f…
Phone: 0046(0)737207121
Event Type: action
Organized By: Sara Gebran



Event Description

Together we will create a wished world on a 3D scale, a model of the world you wish to live in. We will build, photograph, film and create a sound scape on the full floor of Dansens Hus small stage.Bring a picture that has an important meaning for you!

We will start with a guided tour of Dansens Hus behind the stage and interact with the playful maps of Stockholm & Botkyrka: Try out your triangle!

Coffee and tea will be served, bring your own lunch.

Age: Youth groups and upwards

Spaces are limited so book now on vertical.exile.andrea@gmail.com or contact us on 0046(0)737207121

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“Made of Paper,” a contemporary modern, uninterrupted 45-minute dance production, premiered at the Cambridge Dance Complex in Cambridge, MA on February 7, 2010, performed by Kelley Donovan & Dancers. Its choreography, pivoting from constricted, frenetic and jagged pulsations to elongated, spaciously lush layouts (on releve), was disquieting, matching the asymmetric and indeterminate nature of its supporting music. From its opening, morphing figures melted atop exquisitely chiseled calves and demi-pointed feet that upheld the melting forms, bending all the way to the ground. Weighted bodies seemed nothing and everything, as circular spirals (upwards, mostly) abruptly transitioned into writhing, downward plunges into and across the ground, only to rise up, out and through the entanglement of twisted limbs to hover open and wide - flattened against some imaginary backdrop.

“Lion’s Share,” the first piece, featuring Cori Marquis, choreographer and soloist, showcased technically infeasible movements, yet the spirals, flexions, dips, turns and suspensions were perfectly executed on many levels and in varying spaces of the stage, conveying personal intimacies of the dancer, as hands tore across vulnerable chest, and legs slapped open and closed, hard against the floor. Her breath and heart rhythm was the only music in such segments of the dance – a familiar solo-ness that accentuated the dance’s beautiful, if haunting, elocution. Especially intriguing towards the end of this piece was the repetition of frenzied jumps, asymmetric and angular, juxtaposed against rounded, frog-like gaming on the floor, which eventually flattened against the black, stark wall.

Within and amongst all dancers, elements of space, line, energy, synergy, timing, rhythm, balance, weight-shift and transition were all pushed to the outer limits of modern dance choreography. While at times movements spiraled upward, ending in rock-solid adductor-tightening sous-sus fifth position demi-pointes, at others, any arm might thrust forward, palm outward turned, closing suddenly, unpredictably, pulling the torso around with dizzying energy. Combined with a Twyla Tharp-ish dorsi-flexion that wrapped around and contorted an increasingly unstable standing leg, spontaneous upper torso under and over-curves assisted difficult transitions from balanced to imbalanced positions.

Adam Sonnenberg’s broader, slower, masculine presence provided some natural grounding, while his uncompromised agility and obvious ballet/modern mix training catapulted him squarely into the mix of formidable females - his most distinguishing moment being a playful pelvis thrust at the audience – just prior to a round of perfectly completed pirouettes and attitude turns, all corners of the stage. Kelly Donovan’s unique circular and organic energy was often in contrast to the other dancers, as it flowed effortlessly above, below, and against her curved physique, leaving beautiful ‘hand trails’ between her various points of travel. At times, she would emphasize a phrase with ‘finger flutters,’ then seamlessly execute a 180 degree body position change, rounded and smooth – morphing from one shape to the next with weighted, swooping lines.

Jun Lee’s concomitant audience-directed, intensely searing eye contact, and the culmination of lines of dancers feeding from all angles – their alternating contractions of hips, legs and pelvis’ grinding into the earth – with shoulders curled back and entire bodies expiring momentarily into the Marley floors – only to awaken through bursts of unbridled energy exploding at will exemplifies this groups’ electrifying unpredictability.

“Made of Paper” demonstrates important elements of early Modern Dance, such as fall/recovery (Doris Humphrey), sharp and jagged movements of contraction and release (Martha Graham), which express emotional intensity and contemporary subjects, exposing human emotions while symbolizing tensions between the known and familiar. Woven into their complex tapestry are also elements of “chance choreography” (Merce Cunningham), as spontaneous movements ignite the stage, keeping the audience happily disquieted. Everything about the production being sparse – six lights, one iPod (for music outlet), two speakers, no props, minimal costuming (and one errant cell phone), allows for total immersion in the energy and synergy of dancers. Accompanying music is as conceptually complex as the dance, such that an intoxicating Japanese wooden flute is juxtaposed against the repeated annoyance of a lifeless cell phone’s banal voice message: “thanks for calling.”

I get from these compositions that (neither) the dancers (nor the musicians) want to be recognized for recurring themes; thus ‘being’ experimentally in the moment, continually evolving, along with all of life and art’s positive and destructive elements, is essential to their creations. This is a great production for any modern/contemporary dance (or music) enthusiast; hopefully there will be added choreographies, and a longer show, for future performances.

photo by Larry Osgood; www.boston.com

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AUDITION


Audition for new creation by Juraj Korec

For his new dance creation for Tanzplan Dresden at semper kleine szene (studio theatre of Semperoper) in Dresden Slovakian choreographer Juraj Korec is looking for two male versatile dance performers with a strong contemporary dance technique, improvisation skills and creativity. The audition will be held at Palucca Schule Dresden - Hochschule für Tanz on February 20th, 2010. Registration necessary.

Production and performance period: April 27th until June 19th, 2010.

Deadline for application is February 18th, 2010.

Application: Email with CV and picture to Juraj Korec at: habitat2010@gmail.com

For further information please check our homepage: http://http://www.tanzplan-dresden.de/v2/aktuelles.html

 

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Dance Research NRW/Germany - apply now!

Dance Research NRW/Germany - apply now!
In the context of Dance Research NRW the NRW KULTURsekretariat is offering again a grant for several months with the purpose of pursuing researchon dance subjects in co-operation with persons, institutions andcommunities in North Rhine- Westphalia (Germany). The host city for thecurrent fifth period is Bonn with its cultural centre Brotfabrik.

Who can apply?
This offer is aimed at performing artists in the area of dance,performance and choreography. Single persons or two persons workingtogether with good knowledge in either German or English may apply.

Offer:
Free accomodation will be made available, as well as personal supportboth locally and throughout the Land by the KULTURsekretariat.Furthermore up to € 7,500 at maximum will be allocated. At the end ofthe grant period the candidates will make a public presentation of theresults of their research. The KULTURsekretariat will arrange andmanage for the stipends contacts to cultural institutions and artistsas well as to other possible contacts in the state. TheKULTURsekretariat will give further support to the stipends duringtheir stay. The period for the stay will be between September andNovember 2010.

Beside of this the KULTURsekretariat intends to support any performances in NRW that may eventually result from this research.

The selection committee consists of Thomas Lehmen, Bettina Masuch and VA Wölfl.

Applications must be made before the April 15th 2010 (stamp date) and should include the following:
- Application form filled out completely with details of research to be undertaken (can be downloaded here)
- A DVD with up to 3 work samples (only 1 DVD with a total length up to a maximum of 15 minutes)
- CV with photograph
- References (e.g. press cuttings)

Please send to:
NRW KULTURsekretariat
Friedrich-Engels-Allee 85
D-42285 Wuppertal
E-Mail: mouw@nrw-kultur.de

Attention: Only applications on the application form provided will be accepted.

The successful candidates will be announced by beginning of June 2010.

Further information on Dance Research NRW can be found under
www.nrw-kultur.de.
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Kyma newsletter

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

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Wed Feb 3
Price and Value of Cultural Work
11:00 - 13:00 // Info:englishdeutsch
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