augmented structures
Labels: interactive architecture, projection mapping, sound
vibrating walls
Labels: installation, sound, sound art
ant ballet
Labels: ants, art, interactive
play big
"In a project for HP promoting their TouchSmart PCs, interactive artists ceded that control to participants. Instead of the computers being in the hands of the performers, they’re touchable by anyone, for an open, collaborative experience of the work." peter kirn, http://createdigitalmotion.com/2012/04/mapping-av-to-architecture-a-touchscreen-project-puts-participants-in-control-in-chicago-video/
spectropia
"What if film, rather than being projected from start to finish and proceeding in a straight line, could be reconstructed and performed? Every live visual performance involving video has more or less asked that question. But not every performance tries to convey a narrative in the process. Toni Dove’s Spectropia, coming this weekend to the storied Mixology Festival at New York City’s Roulette, does just that, interweaving a sci-fi storyline across imagined future and past through gesture-controlled, computer-vision activated remix." peter kern via http://createdigitalmotion.com/2012/05/if-movies-didnt-play-forward-toni-dove-r-luke-dubois-make-gestural-live-cinema/
Labels: expanded cinema, interactive cinema, theater, toni dove, video art
far
Labels: dance, interactive art, light
russian pavilion
"Every surface inside the top floor of the Russian Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale is covered in QR codes, which visitors decode using tablet computers to explore ideas for a new Russian city dedicated to science." via dezeen http://www.dezeen.com/2012/08/29/russian-pavilion-at-venice-architeture-biennale-2012/
Labels: interactive architecture, ipad, qr codes
living architecture
Labels: interactive architecture
wind traces
Labels: sound art, soundscapes, wind
escale numerique
Labels: france, urban informatics, urbanism, wifi
be open
v motion
via http://www.custom-logic.com/blog/v-motion-project-the-instrument/
peter jellitsch
Labels: art, electronic signals, landscape, urban informatics, urbanism
patterned by nature
Labels: advertising, ambient, interactive art
branching morphogenesis
Labels: architecture, exhibit
tea party
Labels: architecture, event, exhibit
refract
Labels: installation, interactive architecture
listening room
"The 20 foot shipping container was filled with CNC-cut layers of corrugated fiberboard and compressed-polyester foam panels, which cut out noise and vibration from the outside while the occupant listened to classical music. Fifteen speakers were oriented towards the visitor’s seat in order to create what the designers hoped would be a “spatial sensation that is in-between the notion of the concert hall and the I-pod headphone.” via deezeen
Labels: audio, installation, sound art
modii
"modii is a parametrically designed interactive installation by students of Delft University of Technology. modii's goal as an interactive environment is to create a balance in the number of people between the two sides of the installation." via http://www.projectmodii.com/
Labels: installation, interactive art, sound
douglas irving
"Slowscan Soundwave (III) continues exploring the idea of making difficult to perceive phenomena a little more perceivable, while attempting to preserve some of the the subtlety and beauty that make the phenomena compelling in the first place." columbia.edu music, douglas irving
Labels: ambient music, installation, sound art
david tudor
"David Tudor is one of the premier figures in the performance of new music since the middle of this century. As a pianist, Tudor gave highly acclaimed first performances of works by contemporary composers Pierre Boulez, Earle Brown, Sylvano Bussotti, John Cage, Morton Feldman, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Christian Wolff, Stephan Wolpe, and La Monte Young, among others. As a composer, Tudor chose specific electronic components and their interconnections to define both composition and performance drawing upon resources that were both flexible and complex." DavidTudor.com, John Adams
olga diego
"This exhibit, Aire (Air), a few months back at the Mustang Art Gallery, is an installation by Spanish artist Olga Diego. Working with plastic, both translucent and transparent, and plastic bags, along with electronic circuits that inflated and deflated each structure, Diego filled the gallery with six separate inflatable works that interact with each other and with those who viewed the show in its space." via colla cubed
Labels: inflatable, interactive art, tentative architecture
walk the edit
"‘Walking the Edit’ enables you to ‘walk a movie’ based on the shared audiovisual pieces that are virtually existing around us." walk the edit website, via nearfuturelaboratory
Labels: expanded cinema, locative media
you are listening
"You are Listening To is a website that mixes live streams of police radio chatter from New York, Los Angeles and other North American cities with SoundCloud ambient radio, creating a chilling score to accompany images of nighttime cityscapes." via architzer blog
Labels: architecture, locative media, sound
amorphic robot works
"The Inflatable Architectural Body.... attempts to further develop the Inflatables technology while creating a new dialogue between man, machine, and architecture. In this work, I am modeling nature on a microscopic, fractal level. It comprises a system of plug-and-play, inflatable, musculoskeletal modules which allow me to design a series of transformative organic structures influenced by the exhibition space." Chico MacMurtie, ARW website
Labels: architecture, inflatable, interactive art, robot