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Scott Sona Snibbe: Interactive Art

Scott Sona Snibbe: Interactive Art
Related:  Art numérique

EPILOG est une valse avec les ténèbres Il y a quelque chose de profondément flippant dans le fait de voir son ombre danser autour de soi alors que l'on se tient parfaitement immobile. C'est comme si volait en éclat cette valse trop bien orchestrée entre notre projection et le reste, plus tangible, de notre corps. Lorsque la source de lumière elle même se met à tanguer et déforme alors les contours bien proprets de nos silhouettes. EPILOG est une installation interactive qui investie un pièce du dhdm de Dresden en Allemagne en la remplissant d'ombres contre lesquelles vous devrez vous défendre afin d'évoluer. L'installation consiste en 25 minutes d'un univers en constante mutation qui passe de la lumière à l'obscurité en fonctions des mouvements des personnes présentes. Les ombres, changeantes, semblent parfois ressembler à de fugaces poissons où encore à une force obscure toute droit tirée d'un Miyazaki, qui, tous, viendront buter contre le champs de force que les ombres portent à nos pieds.

Nicholas Alan Cope Photography Manabe | Artist, Designer, Programmer, DJ, VJ, Composer "SKIN" Transforms Your Emotions Into Sound And Color Through Sweat Data This week, Harvest Works gallery in New York exhibited an installation by audiovisual artist, Claudia Robles, that gets under your skin... literally. SKIN is a project that measures gallery visitors' skin moisture using a GSR (Galvanic Skin Response) interface and transforms that data into sound and images. Psychological states such as stress, nervousness, and even arousal become observable, external information. Be careful who you test it out around. "I'm interested in making the human body visual and audible," Robles told The Creators Project. The artist originally premiered a similar installation in 2012, but Harvest Works contacted her and said they had a new audio system with eight channels and three video projectors, prompting her to upgrade the project. SKIN implements a commercial interface called GSR 2 that's usually used as a biofeedback interface that helps anxious people learn to calm down. Images courtesy of the artist. Related: @zachsokol

Rafael Lozano-Hemmer Sharing Faces - Seeing yourself reflected in the image of others / by @kcimc Created by Kyle McDonald, “Sharing Faces” uses a megapixel surveillance camera and custom software to match the face locations of the persons looking at the screen. As the person moves, new images are pulled from the database matching the new location and create a mirror-like image of yourself using the images of others. The project is the longest running project Kyle has worked on. Starting with the initial idea in 2007, and using the working title “Sabine”, the project was inspired by the story from the history of Rome in which the Roman men stole women from neighbouring Sabine families to make their wives. Decades later, the two tribes went to war with each other, with the battle only coming to an end when the Sabine women ran onto the battlefield pleading with everyone, reminding them that they are all literally brothers. Initially the piece was meant to match your full-body pose. Reference projects: SeoNang, People on PoP, Face2Face and The Telectroscope Project Page | Kyle McDonald

LNP: Chaos and Order "A triumphant marriage of mathematics, art, and music!" "It's a multi-disciplinary tour de force!" "A must-see for mathematicians of all ages!" Does mathematics have a color? Does it have a sound? Media artist Rocco Helmchen and composer Johannes Kraas answer these questions in their latest educational/entertainment fulldome show: Chaos and Order - A Mathematic Symphony. Chaos and Order takes audiences on a spectacular journey through a fascinating world of sensuous, ever-evolving images, magnificently choreographed to symphonic electronic music. Structured into four movements — from geometric forms, algorithms, simulations of chaos theory — the show explores breathtaking animated visuals of unprecedented beauty. Experience the fundamental connection between reality and mathematics, as science and art fuse together in this immersive celebration of the one common language of the universe: mathematics. Turn your dome into a math visualization laboratory — with Chaos and Order!

[Video] Jim Campbell's Sculptural LED Light Installations Even the Lumiére Brothers would glow over the work of artist and light engineer, Jim Campbell. The prolific pioneer of patchwork bulb-wiring's career spans three decades, and his work keeps on getting better—the artist's newest works have been called "consummate" and "transformative" by Art Daily after their debut this month at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery. It goes without saying that the mastery of his specific genre of low resolution re-imagings, communicated through programmed bulbs and LEDs, is a practice thirty years in the making. Good thing he's got a retrospective show coming up. Campbell's installation at San Diego Airport. Campbell's career began at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, when, after garnering a BS in electrical engineering and mathematics in 1978, Campbell decided to focus his efforts on generating the technology that would allow him to turn 2D videos into 3D light sculptures. Says Campbell, "Light is a meta-thing. A Still of 'Home Movies' (2014).

Cargo - Gallery Digital Artist Giuseppe Randazzo Creates Elaborate Arrays of 3D-Printed Stones Stone Field 00 / exp00 – simple attractor exponential field. Digital rendering. Stone Field 05 / three attractors field. Stone Field 04 / field based on vert dist from horizontal axis. StoneFields 02 / polar 2d Perlin field. 3D-printed sculpture. Stone Field 00 / exp00 – simple attractor exponential field. 3D-printed sculpture. Stone Field 07 /simple 1d linear polar field. 3D-printed sculpture. Stone Field 07 /simple 1d linear polar field. 3D-printed sculpture, detail. Back in 2009, Italian designer Giuseppe Randazzo of Novastructura released a series of generative digital “sculptures” that depicted carefully organized pebbles and rocks on a flat plane. Fast forward to 2014, and technology has finally caught up with Randazzo’s original vision. Starting from 2009 project “Stone Fields”, some 3dmodels were produced from the original meshes. Watch the video above to see the sculptures up close, and you can see a few more photos over on Randazzo’s project site.

designers interactifs  ›  Actualités  ›  Actu  ›  Les 28 agences françaises de design d’interaction Depuis quelques années, *designers interactifs* recense les acteurs français qui développent l’offre de design dans le champ du numérique. En 2010 et 2011, l’association a successivement publié deux guides, l’un dédié aux agences interactives et l’autre dédié plus spécifiquement aux agences de design d’interaction et aux studios de création. En attendant la publication d’un panorama plus complet du design d’interaction français en 2015, l’association a dressé une cartographie de ce champ nouveau, qui se structure peu à peu, dans le sillage des usages proposés par les objets connectés. Notre objectif ici est de contribuer à valoriser le savoir-faire français en design d’interaction, au-delà des initiatives généralistes qui se sont développées en France depuis ces trois dernières années. Si votre structure ne figure pas dans cette liste et que vous pensez qu’elle y a sa place, contactez Benoît Drouillat (bd@designersinteractifs.org). 1. 2. 2Roqs 3. 4. 5. 6. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.

Marco Donnarumma | new media art, live media performance, sound design Mirrored Light Sculpture Probes The Cosmic Mysteries Of Geometry Images courtesy of the artist When it comes to sculpture, Gaspar Battha thinks big. His artworks address concepts including the limitations of the mind (envisioned as a physics-defying robotic bird), and humankind's relationship with tools (realized through custom-made screws and screwdrivers). Patterns of Harmony, his Master-project at UdK Berlin, takes this line of inquiry one step further, using a projection-mapped light box to explore the geometric nature of the universe. A series of angled two-way mirrors forms the bulk of the lightbox, which Battha calls a "fractal of cubes." In fact, the stated purpose underlying Patterns of Harmony is even more ambitious than the search for a 4th dimension: Battha questions the "complexity of all of nature's components circulating in a never ending metamorphosis," and its parallel reflection of "the human mind interpreting information through the senses." Below, examine moments from Patterns of Harmony: Related:

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