Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #7

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #7


My seventh example of contemporary new media art is titled, “Watercouleur Park” and was created by a French group of artists known as Qubo Gas. Their individual names are Laura Henno, Jean-François Ablézot and Morgan Dimnet. They have been working together as a group since 2000. “Watercouleur Park” is an interactive graphic work made of layers of random drawings. The vegetation contained in each of the landscapes is also a random element. There are fourteen landscapes in total and drawn from a database of drawings. The project allows users to explore a virtual archive of collage work. They have the ability to modify, rotate and change their point of view. This work was launched in London from March 3 through May 12, 2007.

A link to the “Watercouleur Park” by Qubo Gas is located below:

http://www.tate.org.uk/intermediaart/qubo_gas.shtm

Monday, April 6, 2009

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #6

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #6


My sixth example of contemporary new media art is titled, “1st Light” and was created by Paul Chan. Mr. Chan was born in Hong Kong in 1973 and now lives in New York. Paul Chan is a major player in the world of American art and also gets quite involved in political activism. The article doesn’t list the location of the exhibition but it does list the date of the project as 2005. “1st Light” is a computer animated video and is a part of a series. “1st light” describes a religious vision of individuals resurrecting to heaven. Paul Chan made this exhibition in reference to the 9/11 tragedies. The floor projection shows shadowy silhouettes of bodies and everyday objects falling to the ground and then rising towards the sky. This digital video projection combines a sense of terror as well as a sense of utopia and hope.

A link to the “1st Light” projection by Paul Chan is located below:

http://www02.zkm.de/mediumreligion/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=68:paul-chan&catid=34:kuenstlerliste&Itemid=53&lang=en


Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #5

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #5


My fifth example of contemporary new media art is titled, “Misplaced Reliquary” and is displayed online as internet artwork. It also exists as a physical installation with Gameboy Advance and Handmade Book. It was created by Paul Catanese and was commissioned in 2004 by Rhizome.org. Paul Catanese was trying to examine video gaming and its relation to the actual hunt. He had spent much time out in nature looking for bone fragments, fur and other small pieces that used to belong to small animals. The small animal fragments are shown on the web as well as in the physical installation. These picture files can also be seen using an actual Gameboy Advance. The physical installation includes a Gameboy Advance with a picture of one of the small animal fragments that Paul Catanese found in his journey out into nature. The installation also includes a book with field notes that Mr. Catanese had taken during his journeys out into nature

A link to the “Misplaced Reliquary” by Paul Catanese is located below:

http://www.paulcatanese.com/artwork/misplaced/index.html



Monday, March 30, 2009

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #4

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #4



My forth example of contemporary new media art is titled “Screening Circle” and is displayed on the World Wide Web. It was created by Andy Deck and was launched on March 22, 2006. The Screening Circle brings in the cultural tradition of the quilting circle into an online and virtual format. People that come to the website can enter the drawing area to create loops of graphics and affect and edit each other's screens. These internet artworks can be made by one person or by several people and the arrangement of the segments can be jumbled or precise. This artistic process allows users to add meaning to Andy Deck’s work through participation. Andy Deck has done much work in the realm of internet art and has done much research pertaining to the limitless possibilities of incorporating art into the internet. I myself enjoy this type of art work because it lets the audience interact more with the web and gives the web more of an artistic feel to it.

A link to the “Screening Circle” by Andy Deck is located below:

http://artport.whitney.org/commissions/screeningcircle/screeningcircle.shtml


Saturday, March 28, 2009

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #3


Example of Contemporary New Media Art #3



My third example of contemporary new media art is titled “Unprojectable: Projection and Perspective”. It is a commissioned art form in which Tony Conrad addresses the massive area of the Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall. It uses the central bridge as a stage and exposes the audience to his most recent exploration of projection and long duration on a major scale. This projection starts off with a tremendous sound that fills the Turbine Hall that incorporates a buzzing pulse at 25 per second. It also mixes in a string quartet including Tony Conrad on violin, an electric drill and hand-held phonograph arms. Projection screens were erected on both sides of the central bridge. Behind the projection screens, performance activities included a live music performance and re-enactments of alternative film production processes Tony Conrad developed in the mid-1970s. The audience would be present on the floor below looking at the massive silhouette of Tony Conrad. All this took place in July of 2008.

A link to “Unprojectable: Projection and Perspective” by Tony Conrad is located below:

http://www.tate.org.uk/intermediaart/tony_conrad.shtm


Monday, March 23, 2009

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #2


Example of Contemporary New Media Art #2


My second example of contemporary new media art is titled “Abundance”. It was a temporary public installation created by Camille Utterback in 2007. It was commissioned for the City of San Jose in California. It was commissioned by ZER01, the Art and Technology Network. It is a night time installation and spectators interact with this art form in the city hall plaza. Part of “Abundance” includes a video camera at a high point and it captures the spectators moving around. An animation of what the video camera picks up is projected onto the 3 story rotunda. Besides the silhouettes of the spectators, Camille Utterback adds other elements to his projections. I like this form of contemporary new media art because it gives life to the San Jose City Hall. It beautifies the city hall and gives the spectators a sense of creativity and also gives them something to do in.

A link to “Abundance” by Camille Utterback is located below:

http://www.camilleutterback.com/abundance.html



Saturday, March 21, 2009

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #1

Example of Contemporary New Media Art #1


My first example of contemporary new media art is titled “Under Scan”. It is a large-scale public art project by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer. The Installation was done at Trafalgar Square in November of 2008. The Public Portraits were at the Tate Modern Seminar Room in of September 2008. This involves hundreds of video-portraits projected onto the ground in Trafalgar Square. Anyone who was interested could have participated in this artwork by contributing their video portrait from September 19 to 21, 2008 at Tate Modern. The portraits were shot from above, as members of the public lie beneath a suspended camera. Each person could portray themselves any way they wanted to. I found this type of contemporary new media art very intriguing and I find it to be the next revolution in art.

A link to "Under Scan" and Rafael Lozano-Hemmer is located below:

http://www.tate.org.uk/intermediaart/underscan.htm