Ever heard of VJing software such like Arkaos, Resolume, or Jitter? Welcome to AudioVisual, a developing multimedia art form in which performers not only produce live music, but live visual realizations as well. The technology allows composers to access video clips, images and texts and manipulate them in similar ways that they use audio samples and synthesizers to create music, all in real time, and also using the same MIDI controller. As far as media culture goes, so far we've had music that is written TO visuals (film, TV, commercials), we've also had visuals that were shot and edited TO music (music videos, "Fantasia"), but AudioVisual provides us with a medium that allows for a simultaneous creation of both film and sound; one no longer dominates over the other or vice versa.
Check out this clip of Yuichiro Kotani messing around with one of his compositions at home:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?gl=JP&hl=ja&v=Nt1qpbAOu7E
When I saw Yuichiro and Seiya Matsumiya perform about a year ago, I was amazed with what I thought to be an unprecedented integration of performed sound and video, and then even more surprised to find out that the technology used to create art like theirs has been around for a while. Other great artists that utilize the technology in similar ways are Alva Noto and Ryuichi Sakamoto, who teamed up with visual artist Dienstelle (Karl Kliem); another is Ryoji Ikeda.
While I have found a new love in the innovative works of these talented people, what excites me most about AudioVisual is not what's being done now, but the potential avenues the present technology could travel in the near future. Imagine a live orchestral performance of pieces like "Fantasia" that aren't restricted by a prerecorded video that a conductor has to meticulously pay attention to in order to keep the players in time, or maybe a coupling of technology between the motion sensor capture used to create Golum from Lord of the Rings as an input device to replace the MIDI controllers altogether? Some software already can take changes in light through the focus of a camera lens and transfer that information to trigger audio samples, but imagine a performance of free-moving dancers who's gestures trigger audio as well as video? It would be a medium integration one step above AudioVisual, and that's not even close to how far I predict this technology could go. If holographic technology becomes practical, that opens up even more possibilities and opportunities for multimedia artists or teams of specialized artists to come together and create what could be the most exciting experiences audience members will witness in the history of performance art.
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
The Sixth Sense
The Sixth Sense is afordable ($350) and will be available as soon as 2007-2010. It integrates the physical world with the virtual one. Painting the physical world with digital information.
Of course you can browse and compute on any surface but its much more than that. Any accessible information you could find on your computer is available. If you need the time then draw a watch on your hand. Want to snap a photo without your camera, then use a simple gesture. Watch live footage of the news on the newspaper. It reads and understands any surface in front of it. It will show your bank balance on your credit card. Able to read your airplane ticket and tell you if your flight has been delayed. Etc.Etc.
I should also mention any I-phone application is usable.
‘SixthSense’ frees information from its confines by seamlessly integrating it with reality, and thus making the entire world your computer"
The YouTube Phenomenon
Yes, it's true, I have chosen to do my New Media Presentation on YouTube.
The most successful of its kind, YouTube is a website geared toward the sharing, watching and uploading of videos.
With a multitude of functions, the open ability to upload anything at all has truly influenced our current society.
A prominent example are those individuals who have being "YouTube celebrities" almost overnight.
Here is an example of someone who catapulted their career through the usage of YouTube:
Esmee Denters is a 21 year old girl from the Netherlands. Discovered in 2008 by Justin Timberlake himself, she was the first signed to his new record label "Tennman" in association with Interscope. This video was posted on YouTube on November 9th, 2006.
New Media Presentation: Future of "Digital" Music
Even in this terrifying age of technology, composing, recording and performing music still takes up a very large portion of what constitutes as "media" in Western society.
So is the future of music or rather musicianship, at stake? Will digital technology actually out do human endeavour? Can machines really produce greater beauty than men?
In light of these questions, I will discuss my ideas on musical robots & the future of the music industry, for my "New Media Presentation".
So is the future of music or rather musicianship, at stake? Will digital technology actually out do human endeavour? Can machines really produce greater beauty than men?
In light of these questions, I will discuss my ideas on musical robots & the future of the music industry, for my "New Media Presentation".
Motion Comics
New Media Project: Motion Comics
For my new media project I chose to focus on Motion Comics being that we are all somewhat familiar with it from earlier in the semester. Here is a link to the motion comics available from Marvel Comics' website.
http://marvel.com/motion_comics
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
TED
http://www.ted.com/talks/rory_sutherland_life_lessons_from_an_ad_man.html
Products and perception
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