RoundQueretaro
18 Wednesday Jun 2014
Posted Queretaro
in18 Wednesday Jun 2014
Posted Queretaro
in
20 Wednesday Nov 2013
Posted Technology
inI picked up this camera a few weeks ago. Hero3, waterproof container, remote control and an attachment for a mini helicopter! We’ll see what happens next with my favorite new toy when I have the time to use it.
I might have included my laptop, but I’m mad at it right now, the delete key doesn’t work, and Apple’s crappy new system, Mavericks, has given me a lot of grief. I’m about ready to live on an island with a knife as my sole technology.
I bought an Apple Quadra 840av in 1993, and I was employed using a computer one month after, and have been ever since. I’ve collaborated with designers, artists, business people, musicians, educators and art museums. I’ve worked on yearlong projects with people around the world that I’ve never met in person. All the while living in a town with a population of 1,300 people.
No doubt the future will be a Philip K. Dick book (hopefully with Howlin’ Wolf records just to make it bearable). In the meantime, let’s do the best we can, and have some fun with the toys.
11 Monday Nov 2013
Posted Francis Alys
inTags
Because I live in a rural area, it’s been difficult to find and document a new media installation. So, I thought I’d share a piece that I stumbled on in 2007, after a long day of looking at hundreds of art pieces. The antiquated technology this film projection in these days of hyper stimulative environments seemed quaint and restful.
“Shoeshine Blues”, Francis Alÿs installation, includes a 16mm projector playing an animation loop of a very hand drawn shoe shine, while simultaneously playing responsive music interludes. That is, certain gestures in the shining of the shoe trigger musical notes. In the installation, each drawing in the peg-holed animation covers the two walls. By framing each drawing, does the singular get elevated to the collective?
Alÿs chose both the laborious shoe shine and a the time-intensive method of animation to visibly measure human labor. The artist is headquartered in Mexico City, an example of the future city, with a vast amount of human labor. Is there perhaps an economic statement made here as well?
Although I am not sure what the lyrics mean — “Nothing we are, Nothing will be, I see you are, I tell you be” — they encourage the viewer to try and attach meaning. The ambiguity of the work’s intention is provocative.
This piece makes the viewer think not only of the beauty of the handmade, but the beauty of hand labor, illustrated by the melodies, with the suggestion of a human spirituality or humanism.
03 Sunday Nov 2013
Tags
David Tudor and I went to Hilversum in Holland to make a recording for the Dutch radio. We arrived at the studio early and there was some delay. To pass the time, we chatted with the engineer who was to work with us. He asked me what kind of music he was about to record. Since he was a Dutchman I said, “It may remind you of the work of Mondrian.” When the session was finished and the three of us were leaving the studio, I asked the engineer what he thought of the music we had played. He said, “It reminded me of the work of Mondrian.”
from the book Silence: Lectures and Writings
02 Saturday Nov 2013
Posted Sound Object
inTags
26 Saturday Oct 2013
Posted Self-Portrait
in25 Friday Oct 2013
Posted performance
inAs a big fan of old detective movies, and such, I loved the idea of following someone around, perhaps inventing stories. I also like that these photos are very cinematic in their cuts.
When I read New York Trilogy by Paul Auster, I often thought of these photos as the perfect art to be hanging in the detectives’ office.
14 Monday Oct 2013
Posted Collaborators
inTags
This is a nice collaboration. Gingsberg works well with multimedia.