Archive for May, 2008

29
May

My New Favorite Book Cover

Screen: Essays on Graphic Design, New Media, and Visual Culture by Jessica Helfland

So simple, so beautiful. What’s not to love?

So far, the essays are good as well. This book seems to be the total package.

25
May

this months eMusic downloads

More QPE. My newborn daughter, Hope, loves this stuff. Nothing soothes away her grumpies like downtempo electronica.

I’ve given this one a quick listen and like it very much. I spend some more time with it in the next few days. If I can, I will give a little more of a review here.

On a side note, I love eMusic very, very much, but I always download all of my alloted tracks the first day I can and then I have to wait a month to get more. I’ve considered opting for a larger subscription plan, but would I just feel the same way, always wanting more?

25
May

“Nanny” by John Delk scares the crap out of me

Rhizome
Uploaded with plasq’s Skitch!

Stealing camera feeds, yikes!

I’ve come back to this post after thinking about this “work in progress” all day. Here is a link to Delk’s site, by the way: http://www.johndelk.com. It seems that a lot of new media work gets a little overly involved in the how and not the why. It’s clever and impressive technically that Delk can tap into people’s nanny cams, but why would he want to do it? I’m sure the piece will be about the loss of privacy in a our lives, but invading peoples privacy in this way may not be the best way to explore this idea. I’ve seen many works on this topics that limit the artist’s and the viewer’s “snooping” to public spaces. Is Delk going to far by “invading” people’s homes? Is that ok for an artist to do?

I have more questions than answers. i hope to see the finished piece one day.

24
May

elegy for robert rauschenburg (1925 – 2008)

from the art 21 blog

24
May

reblog: touchscreen turntables


Final Product // ATTIGO TT from Scott Hobbs on Vimeo.

Live DJ-ing takes a step further into the 21st Century with this invention which lets DJ’s view, cut, grab, loop and mix tracks by doing live waveform editing on a twin touchscreen “turntable.” Invented by UK student Scott Hobbs as part of his innovative product design course, ATTIGO is about the same size as a conventional deck set-up, but has all the flexibility of digital track storage: choosing new tracks without all that swapping of vinyl. Check out the video to see it in action.

The digital basis of the system could allow for some pretty interesting new sounds at the hands of an expert DJ, even as it waves bye-bye to the tactile feedback that you get from the old-fashioned technique, moving a record under a needle.

It exists as a single working prototype for now, but Scott is going to try and commercialize it.

 

from gizmodo

19
May

special topics on terminal

Students in my Special Topics: Internet Art class have organized and curated an exhibition on the internet art site, <terminal>.  

Terminal is a space sponsored by the Department of Art and the Center of Excellence For The Creative Arts at Austin Peay State University to showcase and examine internet art.

Visit Terminal

19
May

[ fladry + jones ] to perform in nashville

A little self promotion here.  

My friend and collaborator, Robb Fladry, and I will be performing a vj set at Studio 1403 in Nashville on May 30th.  The headliner is a very well known house DJ from Chicago, Justin Long. 

19
May

diy barry update

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kell sent me an update to the model.  He mentioned something about overlooking the obvious.  I don’t get it. 

17
May

diy barry courtesy of kell black

barryjones.jpg My bff Kell Black has created a build it yourself Barry. You can download the template yourself (its a pdf) and have a Barry all of your own. Thanks Kell.download the file here.diybarryjones1.pdf

17
May

design podcasts

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I thought I might share links to a couple of the design podcasts (both audio and video) that I subscribe to.

School of the Visual Arts Paul Rand Lecture Series - This is an incredible series of lectures on design by Stephen Heller, one of the most important names in the field.

Web Design TV - This is a nice video podcasts with hints and tutorials for web designers. 

Be A Design Group - An audio podcasts from the makers of the Be A Design Group blog.  I’m sad that they will no longer be making new podcasts or blog entries, but there is a very large archive to explored. 

There will be more to come later.  Let me know if there are any that you enjoy.  

16
May

john luther adams

placesummernoonsmall.jpgI just read an article on the composer John Luther Adams in the most recent New Yorker.  His work is another instance where sound, music, and art are intersecting in our current cultural climate. I was extremely taken by Adams’ piece “The Place Where You Go To Listen” which is currently on view at the Museum of the North in Fairbanks, Alaska. In this site specific installation,

“information from seismological, meteorological, and geomagnetic stations in various parts of Alaska is fed into a computer and transformed into an intricate, vibrantly colored field of electronic sound”.

The installation consists of five glass panels which change color depending on the time of day and the season (the image above shows the installation at noon in the summer).  The sounds emmanating from the installation also depend greatly on the weather, season, the movement of the earth, and the aurora borealis.  Patterns of bass can be heard during very small earthquakes and

“shimmering sounds in the extreme registers—the Aurora Bells—are tied to the fluctuations in the magnetic field that cause the Northern Lights”.

I have never had much of an interest in visiting Alaska, but I certainly do now.  I couldn’t find video or audio of this piece on the web.  Let me know if you stumble across something.(quotes taken from the New Yorker article)

14
May

i can’t resist – here is my little ballerina

 

Marlena’s big ballet recital was last night.  It’s pretty clear how excited she was (I was just as excited).  I love these moments in parenting. 

13
May

Latest eMusic Downloads – QPE and Philip Glass

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I’m a big fan of downtempo electronic music, but I have to admit that most of it is so downtempo that it gets a little boring.  QPE (quiet personal electronica) manages to create downtempo music that can keep your attention.  This is a downright warm, enjoyable, chillout record.  This is one of my best download decisions in a very long time. I highly recommend it. 

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I also downloaded “Philip Glass – Complete String Quartets” by the Smith Quartet (just disc 1).  I haven’t given it a thorough listen yet, but I’m sure it is wonderful.  I can’t get enough Philip Glass lately. 

11
May

Reblog: Top Ten Things That They Never Taught Me in Design School

I found this short article in Design Observer.  It was reblogged from  the Architect’s Newspaper, so I guess this is a re-reblog post.  It has some really good advice for everyone. 

The Top 10 Things They Never Taught Me in Design Schoolby Michael McDonough

1. Talent is one-third of the success equation.
Talent is important in any profession, but it is no guarantee of success. Hard work and luck are equally important. Hard work means self-discipline and sacrifice. Luck means, among other things, access to power, whether it is social contacts or money or timing. In fact, if you are not very talented, you can still succeed by emphasizing the other two. If you think I am wrong, just look around.

2. 95 percent of any creative profession is shit work.
Only 5 percent is actually, in some simplistic way, fun. In school that is what you focus on; it is 100 percent fun. Tick-tock. In real life, most of the time there is paper work, drafting boring stuff, fact-checking, negotiating, selling, collecting money, paying taxes, and so forth. If you don’t learn to love the boring, aggravating, and stupid parts of your profession and perform them with diligence and care, you will never succeed.

3. If everything is equally important, then nothing is very important.
You hear a lot about details, from “Don’t sweat the details” to “God is in the details.” Both are true, but with a very important explanation: hierarchy. You must decide what is important, and then attend to it first and foremost. Everything is important, yes. But not everything is equally important. A very successful real estate person taught me this. He told me, “Watch King Rat. You’ll get it.”

4. Don’t over-think a problem.
One time when I was in graduate school, the late, great Steven Izenour said to me, after only a week or so into a ten-week problem, “OK, you solved it. Now draw it up.” Every other critic I ever had always tried to complicate and prolong a problem when, in fact, it had already been solved. Designers are obsessive by nature. This was a revelation. Sometimes you just hit it. The thing is done. Move on.

5. Start with what you know; then remove the unknowns.
In design this means “draw what you know.” Start by putting down what you already know and already understand. If you are designing a chair, for example, you know that humans are of predictable height. The seat height, the angle of repose, and the loading requirements can at least be approximated. So draw them. Most students panic when faced with something they do not know and cannot control. Forget about it. Begin at the beginning. Then work on each unknown, solving and removing them one at a time. It is the most important rule of design. In Zen it is expressed as “Be where you are.” It works.

6. Don’t forget your goal.
Definition of a fanatic: Someone who redoubles his effort after forgetting his goal. Students and young designers often approach a problem with insight and brilliance, and subsequently let it slip away in confusion, fear and wasted effort. They forget their goals, and make up new ones as they go along. Original thought is a kind of gift from the gods. Artists know this. “Hold the moment,” they say. “Honor it.” Get your idea down on a slip of paper and tape it up in front of you.

7. When you throw your weight around, you usually fall off balance.

Overconfidence is as bad as no confidence. Be humble in approaching problems. Realize and accept your ignorance, then work diligently to educate yourself out of it. Ask questions. Power – the power to create things and impose them on the world – is a privilege. Do not abuse it, do not underestimate its difficulty, or it will come around and bite you on the ass. The great Karmic wheel, however slowly, turns.

8. The road to hell is paved with good intentions; or, no good deed goes unpunished.
The world is not set up to facilitate the best any more than it is set up to facilitate the worst. It doesn’t depend on brilliance or innovation because if it did, the system would be unpredictable. It requires averages and predictables. So, good deeds and brilliant ideas go against the grain of the social contract almost by definition. They will be challenged and will require enormous effort to succeed. Most fail. Expect to work hard, expect to fail a few times, and expect to be rejected. Our work is like martial arts or military strategy: Never underestimate your opponent. If you believe in excellence, your opponent will pretty much be everything.

9. It all comes down to output.
No matter how cool your computer rendering is, no matter how brilliant your essay is, no matter how fabulous your whatever is, if you can’t output it, distribute it, and make it known, it basically doesn’t exist. Orient yourself to output. Schedule output. Output, output, output. Show Me The Output.

10. The rest of the world counts.
If you hope to accomplish anything, you will inevitably need all of the people you hated in high school. I once attended a very prestigious design school where the idea was “If you are here, you are so important, the rest of the world doesn’t count.” Not a single person from that school that I know of has ever been really successful outside of school. In fact, most are the kind of mid-level management drones and hacks they so despised as students. A suit does not make you a genius. No matter how good your design is, somebody has to construct or manufacture it. Somebody has to insure it. Somebody has to buy it. Respect those people. You need them. Big time. 

08
May

i’m a dj now

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My newest toy, a M-Audio Torq Xponent, arrived yesterday, and I could not be more excited.  Now I just have to find the time to learn how to use it. 




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