from: http://www.naimark.net/projects/benowhere.html
"Be Now Here is an installation about landscape and public places. Visitors gain a strong sense of place by wearing 3-D glasses and stepping into an immersive virtual environment. The imagery is of public plazas on the UNESCO World Heritage Centre's list of endangered places - Jerusalem, Dubrovnik, Timbuktu, and Angkor, Cambodia – places both exotic and disturbing. The style is ambient, as if the imagery is live.
For production, a unique recording system was built consisting of two 35mm motion-picture cameras (for 3D, one for each eye) mounted on a rotating tripod. The installation consists of an input pedestal for interactively choosing place and time, a stereoscopic projection screen, four-channel audio, and a 16-foot rotating floor on which the viewers stand.
Be Now Here is an extension of several media trajectories. One is of enhanced cinematic representation, such as the Imax-sized projections of the Lumiere brothers in 1900 and the 3-screen triptychs of Abel Gance’s Napoleon in 1927. Another is of non-narrative cultural activism, such as the films of Godfrey Reggio and Tony Gatlif. But Be Now Here also points forward: as a simulation of what net cinema can be, it is both a regard and a provocation."
<< preface
this blog is nina wenhart's collection of resources on the various histories of new media art. it consists mainly of non or very little edited material i found flaneuring on the net, sometimes with my own annotations and comments, sometimes it's also textparts i retyped from books that are out of print.
it is also meant to be an additional resource of information and recommended reading for my students of the prehystories of new media class that i teach at the school of the art institute of chicago in fall 2008.
the focus is on the time period from the beginning of the 20th century up to today.
it is also meant to be an additional resource of information and recommended reading for my students of the prehystories of new media class that i teach at the school of the art institute of chicago in fall 2008.
the focus is on the time period from the beginning of the 20th century up to today.
>> search this blog
2008-07-17
>> Michael Naimark, "Be Now Here",
Gepostet von Nina Wenhart ... hh:mm 8:29 PM tags - artistic software, expanded cinema, interactive art, media art, virtual reality
Bookmark this post:blogger tutorials
Social Bookmarking Blogger Widget | I'm reading: >> Michael Naimark, "Be Now Here", ~ |
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
>> additional class blogs
>> labels
- Alan Turing (2)
- animation (1)
- AR (1)
- archive (14)
- Ars Electronica (4)
- art (3)
- art + technology (6)
- art + science (1)
- artificial intelligence (2)
- artificial life (3)
- artistic molecules (1)
- artistic software (21)
- artists (68)
- ASCII-Art (1)
- atom (2)
- atomium (1)
- audiofiles (4)
- augmented reality (1)
- Baby (1)
- basics (1)
- body (1)
- catalogue (3)
- CAVE (1)
- code art (23)
- cold war (2)
- collaboration (7)
- collection (1)
- computer (12)
- computer animation (15)
- computer graphics (22)
- computer history (21)
- computer programming language (11)
- computer sculpture (2)
- concept art (3)
- conceptual art (2)
- concrete poetry (1)
- conference (3)
- conferences (2)
- copy-it-right (1)
- Critical Theory (5)
- culture industry (1)
- culture jamming (1)
- curating (2)
- cut up (3)
- cybernetic art (9)
- cybernetics (10)
- cyberpunk (1)
- cyberspace (1)
- Cyborg (4)
- data mining (1)
- data visualization (1)
- definitions (7)
- dictionary (2)
- dream machine (1)
- E.A.T. (2)
- early exhibitions (22)
- early new media (42)
- engineers (3)
- exhibitions (14)
- expanded cinema (1)
- experimental music (2)
- female artists and digital media (1)
- festivals (3)
- film (3)
- fluxus (1)
- for alyor (1)
- full text (1)
- game (1)
- generative art (4)
- genetic art (3)
- glitch (1)
- glossary (1)
- GPS (1)
- graffiti (2)
- GUI (1)
- hackers and painters (1)
- hacking (7)
- hacktivism (5)
- HCI (2)
- history (23)
- hypermedia (1)
- hypertext (2)
- information theory (3)
- instructions (2)
- interactive art (9)
- internet (10)
- interview (3)
- kinetic sculpture (2)
- Labs (8)
- lecture (1)
- list (1)
- live visuals (1)
- magic (1)
- Manchester Mark 1 (1)
- manifesto (6)
- mapping (1)
- media (2)
- media archeology (1)
- media art (38)
- media theory (1)
- minimalism (3)
- mother of all demos (1)
- mouse (1)
- movie (1)
- musical scores (1)
- netart (10)
- open source (6)
- open source - against (1)
- open space (2)
- particle systems (2)
- Paul Graham (1)
- performance (4)
- phonesthesia (1)
- playlist (1)
- poetry (2)
- politics (1)
- processing (4)
- programming (9)
- projects (1)
- psychogeography (2)
- publications (36)
- quotes (2)
- radio art (1)
- re:place (1)
- real time (1)
- review (2)
- ridiculous (1)
- rotten + forgotten (8)
- sandin image processor (1)
- scientific visualization (2)
- screen-based (4)
- siggraph (1)
- situationists (4)
- slide projector (1)
- slit scan (1)
- software (5)
- software studies (2)
- Stewart Brand (1)
- surveillance (3)
- systems (1)
- tactical media (11)
- tagging (2)
- technique (1)
- technology (2)
- telecommunication (4)
- telematic art (4)
- text (58)
- theory (23)
- timeline (4)
- Turing Test (1)
- ubiquitious computing (1)
- unabomber (1)
- video (14)
- video art (5)
- video synthesizer (1)
- virtual reality (7)
- visual music (6)
- VR (1)
- Walter Benjamin (1)
- wearable computing (2)
- what is? (1)
- William's Tube (1)
- world fair (5)
- world machine (1)
- Xerox PARC (2)
>> timetravel
-
▼
08
(252)
-
▼
7
(141)
-
▼
17
(22)
- >> Critical Art Ensemble
- >> Joe Davis, "Microvenus"
- >> Blast Theory, "Can You See Me Now?", 2004
- >> Jens Brand, "Global Player", 2004
- >> Art+Com, "Terravision",
- >> Michael Naimark, "Be Now Here",
- >> Jeffrey Shaw, "The Legible City", 1989
- >> Siggraph Artshow Archive
- >> Noah Wardip-Fruin, "Hypermedia, eternal life, a...
- >> Myron Krueger, "Videoplace", 1970
- >> Bob Adrian X, "The World in 24 Hours", 1982
- >> Paul Sermon, "Telematic Dreaming", 1992
- >> Christa Sommerer + Laurent Mignonneau, "Life Sp...
- >> Karl Sims, "Artificial Evolution for Computer G...
- >> Karl Sims, "Particle Dreams", 1988 + "Panspermi...
- >> phonesthesia
- >> Erkki Huhtamo, "Elements of Screenology", 2001
- >> Golan Levin, "Dialtones", 2001
- >> Golan Levin, Zachary Lieberman, "Messa di Voce"...
- >> Toshio Iwai, "Electroplankton"
- >> Toshio Iwai, "Tenori-on", 2001-2007t
- >> Toshio Iwai, Ryuichi Sakamoto, "Music Plays Ima...
-
▼
17
(22)
-
▼
7
(141)
>> cloudy with a chance of tags
followers
.........
- Nina Wenhart ...
- ... is a Media Art historian and researcher. She holds a PhD from the University of Art and Design Linz where she works as an associate professor. Her PhD-thesis is on "Speculative Archiving and Digital Art", focusing on facial recognition and algorithmic bias. Her Master Thesis "The Grammar of New Media" was on Descriptive Metadata for Media Arts. For many years, she has been working in the field of archiving/documenting Media Art, recently at the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Media.Art.Research and before as the head of the Ars Electronica Futurelab's videostudio, where she created their archives and primarily worked with the archival material. She was teaching the Prehystories of New Media Class at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) and in the Media Art Histories program at the Danube University Krems.
No comments:
Post a Comment