Recent Tweets
Loading tweets...
Greg Hughes: Creative and Academic.
Inspiration
Practice
Video references
Writing
Exhibitions
Project Notes:
Matter and Memory
Analogue-trace
Loading tweets...

High-res
(via AD Converter: Camera System: Glossary: Learn: Digital Photography Review)
Nervous Structure (field) (2012) (by Cristobal Mendoza)
Made in collaboration by Annica Cuppetelli and Cristobal Mendoza, Nervous Structure (Field) is an installation piece designed to confuse and then illuminate the line between the physical and digital. 144 vertical lines are strung and then 144 lines of light are projected on to them. The lines of light respond to the movement of visitors and the result is a hypnotic field of waves and moire patterns. (http://www.fastcodesign.com/1668980/a-light-projection-that-blurs-the-boundary-between-physical-and-digital)
Videorative Portrait of Randall Okita (by Sergio Albiac)
“Painting a Videorative portrait (a generative, narrative and interactive video portrait) starts with collecting personal videos of the person portrayed, tagged by him/her with relevant concepts and descriptions. Then, using a custom developed tool, the artist “paints with meanings” and generates a video portrait, subtitled with generative personal narratives. In the interactive installation version of the work, the viewer can “navigate” through the subject’s mind, opening his/her video memories, accessing their thoughts and revealing hidden connections between the meanings, using real time access to Wikipedia to infer related emotional states. These “data visualizations” create new and unexpected interpretations of the portrait.” (http://www.sergioalbiac.com/videorative-portrait-post/)
(via Book Preview: Visual Storytelling: Inspiring a New Visual Language | Parka Blogs)

1000 Days of Theory: td053
Date Published: 3/28/2007
www.ctheory.net/articles.aspx?id=574
Arthur and Marilouise Kroker, Editors
High-res
(via Mind-Boggling Digital Portrait Uses Video Clips As Paint [Video] | Co.Design)
(via Making Future Magic: light painting with the iPad – Blog – BERG)
Hang on tight while we grab the next page