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''Time Mutations'' is the second in a two-part series of collaborative exhibitions of new art works by Media practitioners from the [http://www.uni-weimar.de/cms/en/media/media-art-and-design/study-programmes.html Media Art & Design Program at the Bauhaus-Universität Weimar] and at the State University of New York at [http://mediastudy.buffalo.edu Buffalo’s Media Study Department]. Invited artists of international renown will exhibit alongside selected student works from both universities. | |||
The first installment of the series took place in August 2011 at the Nietzsche-Gedächnishalle (Humboldstraße 38) Weimar in collaboration with the [[PDCON:Exhibition|Pure Data Convention's exhibition]]. | |||
''Time Mutations'' part two will open on January 24<sup>th</sup> 2013 in Buffalo/New York. | |||
Also you can join our [http://www.facebook.com/groups/211884952196817 Facebook group] and our [https://www.facebook.com/events/189473144526028 Facebook event] to stay updated. | |||
(Archive: [http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=170244526382491 Time Mutations I Facebook event] ) | |||
==Participating Artists== | |||
==[[Ana Alenso]] – ''Vom Leben für das Leben''== | |||
[[Image:Time Mutations - Ana Alenso - Vom Leben für das Leben.jpg|thumb|right|[[Ana Alenso]] – Vom Leben für das Leben]] | |||
''Vom Leben für das Leben'' was filmed in December 2010 on a beach in Venezuela. The installation is made up of a video projection without audio, a turned on radio receiver placed on a turning record player. The installation tries to rebuild the perception of time from the noise of the radio receiver in a moment that is not only to be understodd as a memento but also as a contemplative and lasting meaning of life. | |||
[http://anaalenso.blogspot.com/ Visit artist's website] for more information | |||
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==[[Stephen Nolan]] – ''This Desert Was Once A Sea. Mother''== | |||
[[File:StephenNolanThisDesertWasOnceASeaMother.jpg|thumb]] | |||
19 frames, less than a second of David Leans 1962 epic movie Lawrence of Arabia loop indefinitely. The focus of the work, is a lone rider trapped in an on the spot trot, framed within the relentless unforgiving Arabian desert. The title of the work, could be the words of a poet who places wistfully the momentous changes of deep time and the passing of life from mothers on to sons, in the same single breath. | |||
[http://www.stephenjohnnolan.net Visit artist's website] | |||
==Kim Beom – ''Untitled (News) (2002)''== | |||
[[Image:Time Mutations - Kim Beom - Untitled (News) (2002).gif|thumb|right|Kim Beom – Untitled (News) (2002)]] | |||
1-channel video, 1 min 42 sec | |||
Kim Beom explores the formation of new relationships between images and concepts through a wide range of media, including drawings, installations, videos, publications and objects. Particularly concerned with ways of ''seeing'' and cognition in relation to sight—the basis of visual art—Kim continuously reveals the tension and conflict between visual perception and false mind. By suggesting images formed on the retina and works that escape from socially normative notions, Kim invites viewers to abandon fixed ideas and contemplate the world from a different perspective. | |||
Untitled (News) is made up of recorded and re-edited cable television news programs. Working from the basic acknowledgement that television programs represent the fundamental synthesis of visual image and spoken language of our age, the artist breaks them down into syllables and fabricates four stories out of the actual accounts delivered by anchorpersons. The text presents an alternative to the mass media, which has a monopoly on informing us of what takes place in the world and on the personal thoughts of individuals accustomed to viewing the reality exclusively through this controlled lens. Kim uses news, which incorporates images and spoken language, as source material in the construction of his own version of ''news'' and what he believes is ''news-worthy''. The content of Kim’s ''news'', therefore, reveals the nature of mass media, which selects, edits, translates, and criticizes stories about the world while crossing boundaries between fiction and nonfiction, truth and falsehood, society and individual, and public affairs and daily life. | |||
Quoted from [http://trustseoul.wordpress.com/trustartists/kim-beom/ TRUSTblog] | |||
Kim Beom's work ''Untitled (News)'' was shown at the 51st Biennale in Venice in 2005. | |||
==Katrina Boeming – ''I am telling you a story, home 1996-2006''== | |||
[[Image:Time Mutations - Katarina Boeming - I am telling you a story.jpg|thumb|right|Katarina Boeming – I am telling you a story, home 1996-2006]] | |||
Installation of hand Cut Tyvek and map pins | |||
My perception of time and space was exercised and altered through memory in several long sittings during the creation of this map. During these sittings I literally cut my passageways through space and time from memory. I simply placed my knife at the starting point of a walk and visualized my movements as my tool traced my footsteps. What you see when looking at the piece is a fictional map of the five boroughs of New York City as they exist in my minds eye. | |||
[http://katrinaboemig.tumblr.com/ See artist's website] for more information | |||
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==[[Matthias Breuer]] – ''Reconstructing the Truth''== | |||
[[Image:Reconstructing the Truth.jpg|right|thumb|[[Matthias Breuer]] - Reconstructing the Truth]] | |||
Nowadays reality is a highly constructed body made up of many different ideas, desires and influences. The biggest reality-producing machine, the media with all its different distribution channels, confronts us with a huge colourfulmoving mass made up of countless pictures and sounds. The question about whether what we see is real or not is neither asked nor encouraged. The catchphrase of modernity is see it and believe it, critical discourse is never held. While in ancient times, following Plato's ideas, reality to some is the dancing of shadows on a cave wall, for us it is the interplay of many differently coloured pixels on flat surfaces. Screens are our viewfinders to the world. Our perception is created by artificial interfaces. The connection between reality and man is created by copper wires and silicon plates. A very fragile umbilical cord highly dependent on those who feed it thus holding the ultimate control. | |||
Two movies dealing about the question of what is real, [[wikipedia:The Matrix|''The Matrix'']] (1999) by the Wachowski brothers and [[wikipedia:Welt am Draht|''World on Wires'']] (1973, orig. title ''Welt am Draht'') by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, are left to the electronic brain of a computer to create, with its countless circuits instructed by a programmer, a reality partly constructed partly real to explore reality and its constructed nature. The outcome is a formal critique of (mass-)media's reality. | |||
[[GMU:Breaking_the_Timeline/projects/Reconstructing_the_truth|Full documentation]] | |||
==Olivier Delrieu-Schulze – ''Underactuation''== | |||
[[File:Time Mutations - Olivier Delrieu-Schulze - Underactuation.jpg|thumb|right|Olivier Delrieu-Schulze – Underactuation]] | |||
steel, cooper, motor mechanism, video camera, projector | |||
''underactuation'' is a sculpture/installation that contrasts the measurement and display of time. The face of underactuation displays seconds, minutes, and hours through three horizontal windows. Time is displayed in a linear fashion -- the clock hands appear to move left and right. | |||
The video projecting the inside of the steel housing reveals the circular motion of the clock mechanism contrasting with the linear display of the face: problematizing these two ''opposing'' ideologies/representations of time as concepts that reveal the potential multitudes of perspective/cosmology. | |||
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==Sofia Dona – ''Twinning Towns: Leipzig—Detroit''== | |||
[[Image:Time Mutations - Sofia Dona - Twinning Towns.jpg|thumb|right|Sofia Dona – Twinning Towns: Leipzig—Detroit]] | |||
The idea of the project was based on the concept of ''town twinning'' (sister cities) whereby towns or cities in geographically and politically distinct areas are paired. The ''town twinning'' concept was applied in the cities of Leipzig and Detroit by focusing on the issue of shrinkage and abandonment. Three examples of that connection were realised. | |||
For the first connection a split video was created, with two trombonists playing in two abandoned swimming pools, one in Leipzig and one in Detroit, in a way that the music of both trombonists creates a composition. | |||
The ''twinning towns: Leipzig -Detroit'' project consists of different actions that could be seen as actual actions and symbolical actions. Actual actions can be considered moving from one city to another, transporting, installing, removing, playing music, being involved in the city's life, exploring, finding materials and cooperating with musicians, craftsmen and art initiatives. On the other hand the symbolic action is the twinning, the attempt to transform, through the exchange of materials, buildings of Leipzig into buildings of Detroit and the other way around, transforming in a way the one city into the other. Although the actual action, of the specific installations or events, is visible only to a limited audience (the passers buy, the people involved in the project, etc) the symbolic action aims to the larger image and idea of the twinning of two cities, a wider concept opened up to a lot of questions on what the twinning of towns could mean. | |||
[http://sofiadona.gr/#3838265717 See artist's website] for more information | |||
==Angelica Piedrahita Delgado – ''VideoRed''== | |||
[[Image:Time Mutations - Angelica Piedrahita Delgado - VideoRed.jpg|thumb|right|Angelica Piedrahita Delgado – VideoRed]] | |||
[http://www.videored.org ''VideoRed''] is the product of an investigation that seeks the development of a technological device on the internet that invites users to participate with short videos of no more than 15 seconds, that joined together build a video made of fragments as an exquisite corpse. | |||
Video = Vidē = first person of verb see in Latin; linguistic trace that points, since its origins,to the relationship of media to the individual. Video as a subjective practice that on the internet sinks in a totalizing blanket of standardized similarities. Although the differences are complex, when analyzing ''the individual'' as a body that sees in a timeframe within a certain discourse. Narrative and aesthetics practices that cannot be seen outside a unique perception shaped by body, time, and space. | |||
In VideoRed the audiovisual rhetorical figures are connected to each other in the most complex and, at the same time, basic way. A video network apparently connected through a mobile and ambiguous semiotic association, potentially interpreted as a group of empty pieces in search for meaning. Maybe, this is just an associative machine, an ode to interactivity and meaningless playfulness. However, the project focuses on dialogism, as a discourse modality that allows an active sharing of ideas; that can or cant be positioned as structured or vague entities. VideoRed contains videos as microstructures that defeats hermeneutics as others captivated by rhetorical figures. | |||
Beyond defining a true nature of video image, VideoRed intends to allocate video production and interpretation on individuals. Fragmenting, dissecting,connecting, framing, zooming, panning, borrowing and editing are practices that belong to a person that see how understand and understand how perceive. Video is a technological artifact and at the same time is a way to approach and act in front of and object, subject or topic. That is why this project, rather than concentrating its efforts on a technical machine builds its means in gatherings, workshops and communities. Allowing getting closer to other people through video production. Seeing these productions as presence of and author apparently absent but with a strong formal presence, revealing his eye, discourse and body operating the technological artifact. | |||
VideoRed invites to participate in the production of video responses of 15 seconds each. This project is a technological device as a pedagogical practice, product of a research project form Javeriana Univerity at Bogota Colombia. | |||
Since 2009 the group has been organizing gatherings and workshops with people interested on video, that join the project setting rhetorical games and aesthetic explorations. | |||
[http://www.videoredada.blogspot.com/p/time-mutations.html Visit artist's website] for more information | |||
==Carrie Kaser – ''Policy Makers''== | |||
[[File:Time Mutations - Carrie Kaser - Policy Makers.jpg|thumb|right|Carrie Kaser – Policy Makers´]] | |||
Policy Makers, 2010 Ink on Paper 7 Drawings, each 30 X 22 inches | |||
Images and information saturate daily experience. From newspapers, television, and the internet, life in the 21st century is on information overload. SIGNAL/NOISE addresses this overload of information, and my own attempts to make sense of it all. With messages from the media and from advertising combined with expectations on the part of society and family, how can we find our own place in the world anymore? Drawing from media sources, I create layered images that represent my experience with the world of multitasking, compartmentalizing, and juggling it all. My thesis exhibition includes works made from daily drawings based on internet web searches, social media, and news articles. In collecting these traces of popular media and current events, I create a ''landscape'' of information. What I hope to reveal is the nature of public interest, the publicity of the personal, and the equilibrium (numbness) that results in over-saturation of information. | |||
[http://carriekaser.wordpress.com/ Visit artist's website] for more information | |||
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==Adam Laskowitz – ''Sound-Portrait''== | |||
[[Image:Time Mutations - Adam Laskowitz - Sound-Portrait.jpg|thumb|right|Adam Laskowitz – Sound-Portrait]] | |||
This work explores the temporal acoustics of the everyday soundscape. By fitting electronics inside of a hat, the wearer exposes themself to a recording of their daily sounds, creating a sound-portrait. The hat records 3 seconds of audio every 20 minutes, in a type of stop-motion fashion. While continuous recording would obviously pick up every sound which the wearer would experience, a disparate capture offers a dense experience of the everyday soundscape. This technique instills a feeling of cyclical temporality during playback. It is both environmental exploration and self-discovery. Leave the hat in one space and hear the cycles of a space, wear the hat for days, weeks, or years and hear the cycles of a life. | |||
[http://adamlaskowitz.com/ Visit artist's website] for more information | |||
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==Carl Lee – ''Last house''== | |||
[[Image:Time Mutations - Carl Lee - Last house.jpg|thumb|right|Carl Lee - Last house]] | |||
(2010, 3-channel HD video, stereo sound, 16:30 loop) | |||
When I first moved to Buffalo, NY I was struck by the everyday beauty of the many single-family homes that make up the city. These iconic, turn-of-the-century houses seemed to have endless interpretation. Each structure with its unique details, angles, and arrangements was like a variation on a theme or an instance of an archetype, with its own singular history handed down from deed to deed. | |||
At the same time, Buffalo numbers among the many rust-belt cities dealing with decades-long economic decline and its concomitant depopulation. As a result, vacant and abandoned houses abound. Thousands have been torn down and many more await a similar fate. Empty windows stare out from the last house standing on the block. They wait like a question posed, or a reminder. | |||
If houses are containers for our memories, the structures within which so many minor and major domestic events take place, then each week in this city a collective amnesia grows block by block: a city disappears before our eyes. The demolition of these structures—by design or accident—and the speed, indifference and violence with which it takes place, the transmutations of scale, of space, and even of one's sense of time is breathtaking, tragic, and full of contradictions. Last House is an inquiry, part document, part memorial, into this changing built environment. | |||
[http://tsarsstars.com/lh_about.php See artist's website] for more information | |||
==Cayden Mak – ''Buffalo(ve)''== | |||
[[Image:Time Mutations - Cayden Mak - Buffalove.jpg|thumb|right|Cayden Mak – Buffalove]] | |||
''Buffalo(ve)'' is a multimedia collaborative installation. The lightbox is equipped with an unnamed map of the neighborhood around the [http://www.buffalolib.org/libraries/crane/index.asp Crane Branch Library] in Buffalo, New York, which library patrons are invited to contribute their own names to. During the course of the installation, a new clear layer on top of the map is added every few days to give more people the opportunity to share and contribute, as well as create a literally layered archaeology of names that local people give to the landscape around them. | |||
Naming is essentially a social practice, and inscribes values and ideas about a place onto the literal physical landscape. A function of conquest, discovery, and historicization, naming places is usually left up to the strongest, history’s ''winners''. However, many places hold secret caches of names — whether they’re what the indigenous people used to call a nearby river, or the name your daughter first gave the grocery store, or a made-up language all your own. Many of these names get lost as people age, die, or move away. ''Buffalo(ve)'' is an attempt to preserve some of the hidden, personal, or inscrutable names that we give to our city. | |||
[http://thenoiseofthestreet.net/?cat=3 Visit artist's website] for full documentation | |||
==[[Tommy Neuwirth]] – ''Untitled''== | |||
[[Image:Time Mutations - Tommy Neuwirth - Untitled.jpg|thumb|right|[[Tommy Neuwirth]] – Untitled.jpg]] | |||
freedom<br /> | |||
"Background images started disappearing when logged in" "Icons started disappearing from Word tool bar" "Paragraphs suddenly started disappearing" "Have '90s songs started disappearing from the radio?" "My eyebrows have suddenly started disappearing." | |||
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==Scott Ries – ''Aceeeh ino rrssstUv''== | |||
Taking the complete Beatles discography as one track arranged in chronological order (that in which they were released), I divide it into 0.1 sec segments (long enough not to produce a consistent tone, short enough to elude recognition), and then arrange those segments in order of their total energy over each of the 0.1 sec segments, from the least to the most. Each segment's first sample is zeroed at the previous segment's last sample, and the absolute value of its energy pointed towards zero. In other words, I rearrange the familiar Beatles chronology into barely recognizable segments following an entirely different chronology, that of the universe (from least energy to most, or from order to chaos), and point it, futilely, toward equilibrium. The complete track is then re-divided into the exact lengths of each album and track, and is released in the same chronology as were the correspondingly-long Beatles' albums (but could be played in its entirety and transferred easily online for an installation). | |||
==Stephanie Rothenberg – ''School of Perpetual Training''== | |||
[[Image:Time Mutations - Stephanie Rothenberg - Perpetual.jpg|thumb|right|Stephanie Rothenberg - School of Perpetual Training]] | |||
''School of Perpetual Training'' is an ironic instructional training program that exposes the underbelly and not so glamorous side of the computer video game industry. Most people associate jobs in the computer video game industry with information-based labor such as 3D graphics and coding game programs. Yet the majority of the industry relies on the sweat and stamina of migrant and low-income laborers working for electronics contract manufacturers in developing countries. | |||
By following a series of training exercises, participants learn about the precarious employment and unjust labor conditions of workers in the areas of overseas digital game manufacturing and distribution. A virtual ''personal trainer'' created in Second Life leads participants through a series of training exercises that use motion detection and require full range of body motion to play. Rather than using a mouse or joystick, the motion detection demands the participants ''labor'' to complete the training exercises, emphasizing the extreme physical nature and motion economics of these jobs. The individual training exercises recontextualize popular classic arcade games – Dig Dug, Tapper, Space Invaders and Tetris – in order to ''train'' participants for jobs in mineral mining, printed circuit board assembly, box build and global shipping. At the end of the training program, participants can gauge their ''global market value'' to find out how much they are ''worth'' in contrast to white-collar workers in the industry and game company profits. | |||
[http://www.perpetualtraining.com Try the project online] | |||
==Gabriel Shalom – ''wash choose peel chop rinse''== | |||
[[Image:Time Mutations - Gabriel Shalom - wash choose peel chop rinse.jpg|thumb|right|Gabriel Shalom – wash choose peel chop rinse]] | |||
In the five movements which make up wash choose peel chop rinse, different stages of the process of making vegetable soup stock are examined in microcinematic detail. Rhythmic audiovisual compositions are revealed in the most mundane and subtle aspects of the preparation of various different vegetables. This video was premiered at the opening ceremony of Transmediale 2011, Berlin. | |||
Gabriel Shalom is a videomusician, hypercubist and audiovisual artist living and working in Berlin, Germany. His signature work takes the form of rhythmically edited audiovisual compositions. He has been an artist in residence at the ZKM | Karlsruhe. He is the co-founder, together with [http://pavako.com/ Patrizia Kommerell], of [http://ks12.net/ KS12], a creative studio which produces original transmedia narratives. He has been a guest speaker on audiovisual trends in London, Berlin and São Paulo, and since Spring 2009 he is adjunct faculty at the Berliner Technische Kunsthochschule where he lectures on [http://analogmotiongraphics.com/ analog motion graphics] and experimental film and video. He is a contributor to opinion-leading blogs on the [http://quantumcinema.blogspot.com/ future of cinema] and [http://arsvirtuafoundation.org/research/ augmented reality]. | |||
[http://www.gabrielshalom.com See artist's website] for more information | |||
* [[Ana Alenso]] | |||
* Kim Beom | |||
* Katrina Boeming | |||
* [[Matthias Breuer]] | |||
* Olivier Delrieu-Schulze | |||
* Sofia Dona | |||
* Angelica Piedrahita Delgado | |||
* Carrie Kaser | |||
* Adam Laskowitz | |||
* Carl Lee | |||
* Cayden Mak | |||
* [[Tommy Neuwirth]] | |||
* Scott Ries | |||
* Stephanie Rothenberg | |||
* Gabriel Shalom | |||
* Stephen Nolan | |||
==Location== | |||
Time Mutations | ==Time Mutations: Vertical Horizons== | ||
''You'll find the english version below'' | |||
Seit der Erfindung der Uhr und des Telegrafen sind Raum und Zeit in einen kulturell bedingtem Gleichschritt zusammengeschlossen. Der überregionale Zugverkehr führte zur Standardisierung von Fahrplänen und 1884 zur Einführung von [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-12849630 Zeitzonen], deren räumliche Grenzen bis heute das Erleben der Welt bestimmen. Paradoxerweise hatte die Normierung der Zeit den Effekt, die Relativität von Raum und Zeit selbst in den banalsten Situationen zu Tage zu fördern. Von Jetlag über GPS zu der Synchronisation von Uhren, die sich scheinbar mit jedem neuem elektronischen Gerät multiplizieren, scheinen wir ständig in dem Gewässer des relativen und absoluten Raums und der relativen und absoluten Zeit zu treiben. Elektronische Kommunikationstechnologien wie Email und Echtzeit-Videostreams verstärken in unserem Alltag diesen Eindruck und lehren uns die relative Geschwindigkeit und Verzögerung vermittelter Zeit als gegeben hinzunehmen und uns ihr mit neuen gesellschaftlichen Konventionen und anderen ungeschrieben Verhaltensregeln anzupassen. | |||
Der Drang die Grenzen von Raum und Zeit zu durchbrechen ist von sich aus utopisch: kulturelle und geographische Unterschiede zu entfernen und anstatt dessen eine Gesellschaft zu etablieren in der Kommunikation eingebunden und unmittelbar ist, ist ein immerwährender jedoch schwer fassbarer Traum. Selbst wenn die Motivation dahinter ein starker Drang nach Austausch ist, kann der Wunsch Unterschiede in Kultur, Zugang, Zeit und Sprache in der Gegenwart totaler Gleichzeitigkeit aufzulösen natürlich nie vollständig sein. Übergangsloser bzw. verlustfreier Austausch wird immer von der in ihm enthaltenen Art der Kommunikation, Kultur und Technologie vereitelt. Manipulation von Raum und Zeit durch Aufzeichnungs- und Bearbeitungstechniken könnte letztendlich dazu führen, dass wir Zeit und Ort als bestimmten Zustand wahrnehmen, wobei solche Eingriffe die Erfahrung nie auf solch feste bzw. konkrete Begriffe reduzieren können. | |||
''Time Mutations'' ist eine Ausstellung neuartiger Kunstwerken die diese Konzepte, Probleme und Potentiale erforschen durch eine Kollaboration zweier Institutionen, die aufgrund ihrer Geschichte ein großes Interesse an experimentellen Medienpraktiken haben. Angehörige des Studiengangs Medienkunst/Mediengestaltung der Bauhaus Universität Weimar und der [http://mediastudy.buffalo.edu Fakultät Media Study der State University of New York] in Buffalo haben sich zusammengetan um neue Projekte Seite an Seite mit Arbeiten international rennomierter Künstler zu präsentieren und eine Plattform für die Interaktionen der beiden Institutionen zu schaffen. Für diese Ausstellung suchen wir Arbeiten die einen Schwerpunkt auf der individuellen und kollektiven Wahrnehmung von Raum und Zeit die aus der vermittelten Wahrnehmung von Raum und Zeit durch Technologie hervorgeht. Von besonderem Interesse sind Arbeiten die das Konzept von Zeit als linear und dem Ort als fest erfolgreich hinterfragen, manipulieren oder auslöschen und damit die Richtung für alternative Erfahrungen und Konstruktionen von Raum, Zeit und Ort aufzeigen. Eindeutig gescheiterte Versuche werden als unausweichlich und interessant begrüßt, zum Beispiel das Scheitern von Technologie oder vermittelten sozialen Interaktionen um Unterschiede in Sprache, Kultur, Protokoll, etc. auszulöschen. | |||
==Time Mutations: Vertical Horizons== | |||
Since the invention of the clock and the telegraph, space and time have been harnessed to each other in a culturally imposed lock step. Standardizations in train time ultimately led to the establishment of global time zones that persist today in fundamentally structuring our daily experience of the world. Ironically, the standardization of time has had the effect of illuminating the relativity of time and space in even our most mundane experiences. From jet lag and GPS to the syncing of dozens of clocks that seem to multiply around us with every electronic device, we find ourselves constantly adrift in the waters of relative and absolute space and time. Electronic communications technologies from email to live real-time video streaming have intensified this experience in our daily lives, conditioning us to take for granted the relative speed – and lag – of mediated time and space, and to accommodate it with new social conventions and unwritten codes of behavior. | |||
The desire to collapse boundaries of space and time is inherently utopian. To erase cultural and geographic distinctions, and instead inhabit a community in which communication is integrated and instantaneous is a persistent, yet elusive dream. Even when motivated by a generous impulse toward exchange, the desire to dissolve difference in culture, access, time, place and language in the experience of total simultaneity can, of course, never be complete. Seamless or lossless exchange is always thwarted by the embodied nature of communication, culture and technology. Manipulations of time and space through recording and editing techniques may lead us to perceive time and location as particulate states, but ultimately such interventions can never fully reduce experience to such stable or concrete terms. | |||
''Time Mutations'' is an exhibition of new artworks that explore these concepts, challenges, and potentials, through a collaboration between two institutions that have historically been deeply invested in experimental media practice. Media practitioners from the [http://www.uni-weimar.de/cms/en/media/media-art-and-design/study-programmes.html Media Art & Design Program at the Bauhaus-Universität Weimar] and at the State University of New York at [http://mediastudy.buffalo.edu Buffalo’s Media Study Department] have come together to present new projects alongside works of internationally renowned artists and provide a platform for interaction between our institutions’ physical and research localities. For this exhibition we are seeking works that focus on individual and collective perceptions of space and time emerging from technologically mediated interaction and exchange. Of particular interest are works in which the concept of time as linear or location as static is successfully challenged, manipulated or collapsed, giving way to alternative experiences and constructions of time, space and place. Explicit failures in these attempts are embraced as both inevitable and interesting – for instance, the failure of technology or mediated social interactions to erase differences in language, cultural protocol, etc. | |||
== | ==Supporters== | ||
We are supported by: Studierendenservicefonds Bauhaus-Universität Weimar, State University of New York at Buffalo Media Study, SUNY Buffalo Gender Institute, Visual Studies Department, Architecture and Media Architecture Departments, The Media Study Starter Grant, the Graduate Student Association of SUNY Buffalo, [[GMU:Start|Chair Design of Media Environments Bauhaus-Universität Weimar]] | |||
<!-- [[/Organization|Subpage for organizers.]] --> | |||
[[Category:Event]] | |||
[[Category:Exhibition]] | |||
Latest revision as of 17:47, 16 January 2013
Time Mutations is the second in a two-part series of collaborative exhibitions of new art works by Media practitioners from the Media Art & Design Program at the Bauhaus-Universität Weimar and at the State University of New York at Buffalo’s Media Study Department. Invited artists of international renown will exhibit alongside selected student works from both universities.
The first installment of the series took place in August 2011 at the Nietzsche-Gedächnishalle (Humboldstraße 38) Weimar in collaboration with the Pure Data Convention's exhibition.
Time Mutations part two will open on January 24th 2013 in Buffalo/New York.
Also you can join our Facebook group and our Facebook event to stay updated. (Archive: Time Mutations I Facebook event )
Participating Artists
Ana Alenso – Vom Leben für das Leben
Vom Leben für das Leben was filmed in December 2010 on a beach in Venezuela. The installation is made up of a video projection without audio, a turned on radio receiver placed on a turning record player. The installation tries to rebuild the perception of time from the noise of the radio receiver in a moment that is not only to be understodd as a memento but also as a contemplative and lasting meaning of life.
Visit artist's website for more information
Stephen Nolan – This Desert Was Once A Sea. Mother
19 frames, less than a second of David Leans 1962 epic movie Lawrence of Arabia loop indefinitely. The focus of the work, is a lone rider trapped in an on the spot trot, framed within the relentless unforgiving Arabian desert. The title of the work, could be the words of a poet who places wistfully the momentous changes of deep time and the passing of life from mothers on to sons, in the same single breath.
Kim Beom – Untitled (News) (2002)
1-channel video, 1 min 42 sec
Kim Beom explores the formation of new relationships between images and concepts through a wide range of media, including drawings, installations, videos, publications and objects. Particularly concerned with ways of seeing and cognition in relation to sight—the basis of visual art—Kim continuously reveals the tension and conflict between visual perception and false mind. By suggesting images formed on the retina and works that escape from socially normative notions, Kim invites viewers to abandon fixed ideas and contemplate the world from a different perspective.
Untitled (News) is made up of recorded and re-edited cable television news programs. Working from the basic acknowledgement that television programs represent the fundamental synthesis of visual image and spoken language of our age, the artist breaks them down into syllables and fabricates four stories out of the actual accounts delivered by anchorpersons. The text presents an alternative to the mass media, which has a monopoly on informing us of what takes place in the world and on the personal thoughts of individuals accustomed to viewing the reality exclusively through this controlled lens. Kim uses news, which incorporates images and spoken language, as source material in the construction of his own version of news and what he believes is news-worthy. The content of Kim’s news, therefore, reveals the nature of mass media, which selects, edits, translates, and criticizes stories about the world while crossing boundaries between fiction and nonfiction, truth and falsehood, society and individual, and public affairs and daily life.
Quoted from TRUSTblog
Kim Beom's work Untitled (News) was shown at the 51st Biennale in Venice in 2005.
Katrina Boeming – I am telling you a story, home 1996-2006
Installation of hand Cut Tyvek and map pins
My perception of time and space was exercised and altered through memory in several long sittings during the creation of this map. During these sittings I literally cut my passageways through space and time from memory. I simply placed my knife at the starting point of a walk and visualized my movements as my tool traced my footsteps. What you see when looking at the piece is a fictional map of the five boroughs of New York City as they exist in my minds eye.
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Matthias Breuer – Reconstructing the Truth
Nowadays reality is a highly constructed body made up of many different ideas, desires and influences. The biggest reality-producing machine, the media with all its different distribution channels, confronts us with a huge colourfulmoving mass made up of countless pictures and sounds. The question about whether what we see is real or not is neither asked nor encouraged. The catchphrase of modernity is see it and believe it, critical discourse is never held. While in ancient times, following Plato's ideas, reality to some is the dancing of shadows on a cave wall, for us it is the interplay of many differently coloured pixels on flat surfaces. Screens are our viewfinders to the world. Our perception is created by artificial interfaces. The connection between reality and man is created by copper wires and silicon plates. A very fragile umbilical cord highly dependent on those who feed it thus holding the ultimate control.
Two movies dealing about the question of what is real, The Matrix (1999) by the Wachowski brothers and World on Wires (1973, orig. title Welt am Draht) by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, are left to the electronic brain of a computer to create, with its countless circuits instructed by a programmer, a reality partly constructed partly real to explore reality and its constructed nature. The outcome is a formal critique of (mass-)media's reality.
Olivier Delrieu-Schulze – Underactuation
steel, cooper, motor mechanism, video camera, projector
underactuation is a sculpture/installation that contrasts the measurement and display of time. The face of underactuation displays seconds, minutes, and hours through three horizontal windows. Time is displayed in a linear fashion -- the clock hands appear to move left and right.
The video projecting the inside of the steel housing reveals the circular motion of the clock mechanism contrasting with the linear display of the face: problematizing these two opposing ideologies/representations of time as concepts that reveal the potential multitudes of perspective/cosmology.
Sofia Dona – Twinning Towns: Leipzig—Detroit
The idea of the project was based on the concept of town twinning (sister cities) whereby towns or cities in geographically and politically distinct areas are paired. The town twinning concept was applied in the cities of Leipzig and Detroit by focusing on the issue of shrinkage and abandonment. Three examples of that connection were realised.
For the first connection a split video was created, with two trombonists playing in two abandoned swimming pools, one in Leipzig and one in Detroit, in a way that the music of both trombonists creates a composition.
The twinning towns: Leipzig -Detroit project consists of different actions that could be seen as actual actions and symbolical actions. Actual actions can be considered moving from one city to another, transporting, installing, removing, playing music, being involved in the city's life, exploring, finding materials and cooperating with musicians, craftsmen and art initiatives. On the other hand the symbolic action is the twinning, the attempt to transform, through the exchange of materials, buildings of Leipzig into buildings of Detroit and the other way around, transforming in a way the one city into the other. Although the actual action, of the specific installations or events, is visible only to a limited audience (the passers buy, the people involved in the project, etc) the symbolic action aims to the larger image and idea of the twinning of two cities, a wider concept opened up to a lot of questions on what the twinning of towns could mean.
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Angelica Piedrahita Delgado – VideoRed
VideoRed is the product of an investigation that seeks the development of a technological device on the internet that invites users to participate with short videos of no more than 15 seconds, that joined together build a video made of fragments as an exquisite corpse.
Video = Vidē = first person of verb see in Latin; linguistic trace that points, since its origins,to the relationship of media to the individual. Video as a subjective practice that on the internet sinks in a totalizing blanket of standardized similarities. Although the differences are complex, when analyzing the individual as a body that sees in a timeframe within a certain discourse. Narrative and aesthetics practices that cannot be seen outside a unique perception shaped by body, time, and space.
In VideoRed the audiovisual rhetorical figures are connected to each other in the most complex and, at the same time, basic way. A video network apparently connected through a mobile and ambiguous semiotic association, potentially interpreted as a group of empty pieces in search for meaning. Maybe, this is just an associative machine, an ode to interactivity and meaningless playfulness. However, the project focuses on dialogism, as a discourse modality that allows an active sharing of ideas; that can or cant be positioned as structured or vague entities. VideoRed contains videos as microstructures that defeats hermeneutics as others captivated by rhetorical figures.
Beyond defining a true nature of video image, VideoRed intends to allocate video production and interpretation on individuals. Fragmenting, dissecting,connecting, framing, zooming, panning, borrowing and editing are practices that belong to a person that see how understand and understand how perceive. Video is a technological artifact and at the same time is a way to approach and act in front of and object, subject or topic. That is why this project, rather than concentrating its efforts on a technical machine builds its means in gatherings, workshops and communities. Allowing getting closer to other people through video production. Seeing these productions as presence of and author apparently absent but with a strong formal presence, revealing his eye, discourse and body operating the technological artifact.
VideoRed invites to participate in the production of video responses of 15 seconds each. This project is a technological device as a pedagogical practice, product of a research project form Javeriana Univerity at Bogota Colombia.
Since 2009 the group has been organizing gatherings and workshops with people interested on video, that join the project setting rhetorical games and aesthetic explorations.
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Carrie Kaser – Policy Makers
Policy Makers, 2010 Ink on Paper 7 Drawings, each 30 X 22 inches
Images and information saturate daily experience. From newspapers, television, and the internet, life in the 21st century is on information overload. SIGNAL/NOISE addresses this overload of information, and my own attempts to make sense of it all. With messages from the media and from advertising combined with expectations on the part of society and family, how can we find our own place in the world anymore? Drawing from media sources, I create layered images that represent my experience with the world of multitasking, compartmentalizing, and juggling it all. My thesis exhibition includes works made from daily drawings based on internet web searches, social media, and news articles. In collecting these traces of popular media and current events, I create a landscape of information. What I hope to reveal is the nature of public interest, the publicity of the personal, and the equilibrium (numbness) that results in over-saturation of information.
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Adam Laskowitz – Sound-Portrait
This work explores the temporal acoustics of the everyday soundscape. By fitting electronics inside of a hat, the wearer exposes themself to a recording of their daily sounds, creating a sound-portrait. The hat records 3 seconds of audio every 20 minutes, in a type of stop-motion fashion. While continuous recording would obviously pick up every sound which the wearer would experience, a disparate capture offers a dense experience of the everyday soundscape. This technique instills a feeling of cyclical temporality during playback. It is both environmental exploration and self-discovery. Leave the hat in one space and hear the cycles of a space, wear the hat for days, weeks, or years and hear the cycles of a life.
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Carl Lee – Last house
(2010, 3-channel HD video, stereo sound, 16:30 loop)
When I first moved to Buffalo, NY I was struck by the everyday beauty of the many single-family homes that make up the city. These iconic, turn-of-the-century houses seemed to have endless interpretation. Each structure with its unique details, angles, and arrangements was like a variation on a theme or an instance of an archetype, with its own singular history handed down from deed to deed.
At the same time, Buffalo numbers among the many rust-belt cities dealing with decades-long economic decline and its concomitant depopulation. As a result, vacant and abandoned houses abound. Thousands have been torn down and many more await a similar fate. Empty windows stare out from the last house standing on the block. They wait like a question posed, or a reminder.
If houses are containers for our memories, the structures within which so many minor and major domestic events take place, then each week in this city a collective amnesia grows block by block: a city disappears before our eyes. The demolition of these structures—by design or accident—and the speed, indifference and violence with which it takes place, the transmutations of scale, of space, and even of one's sense of time is breathtaking, tragic, and full of contradictions. Last House is an inquiry, part document, part memorial, into this changing built environment.
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Cayden Mak – Buffalo(ve)
Buffalo(ve) is a multimedia collaborative installation. The lightbox is equipped with an unnamed map of the neighborhood around the Crane Branch Library in Buffalo, New York, which library patrons are invited to contribute their own names to. During the course of the installation, a new clear layer on top of the map is added every few days to give more people the opportunity to share and contribute, as well as create a literally layered archaeology of names that local people give to the landscape around them.
Naming is essentially a social practice, and inscribes values and ideas about a place onto the literal physical landscape. A function of conquest, discovery, and historicization, naming places is usually left up to the strongest, history’s winners. However, many places hold secret caches of names — whether they’re what the indigenous people used to call a nearby river, or the name your daughter first gave the grocery store, or a made-up language all your own. Many of these names get lost as people age, die, or move away. Buffalo(ve) is an attempt to preserve some of the hidden, personal, or inscrutable names that we give to our city.
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Tommy Neuwirth – Untitled
freedom
"Background images started disappearing when logged in" "Icons started disappearing from Word tool bar" "Paragraphs suddenly started disappearing" "Have '90s songs started disappearing from the radio?" "My eyebrows have suddenly started disappearing."
Scott Ries – Aceeeh ino rrssstUv
Taking the complete Beatles discography as one track arranged in chronological order (that in which they were released), I divide it into 0.1 sec segments (long enough not to produce a consistent tone, short enough to elude recognition), and then arrange those segments in order of their total energy over each of the 0.1 sec segments, from the least to the most. Each segment's first sample is zeroed at the previous segment's last sample, and the absolute value of its energy pointed towards zero. In other words, I rearrange the familiar Beatles chronology into barely recognizable segments following an entirely different chronology, that of the universe (from least energy to most, or from order to chaos), and point it, futilely, toward equilibrium. The complete track is then re-divided into the exact lengths of each album and track, and is released in the same chronology as were the correspondingly-long Beatles' albums (but could be played in its entirety and transferred easily online for an installation).
Stephanie Rothenberg – School of Perpetual Training
School of Perpetual Training is an ironic instructional training program that exposes the underbelly and not so glamorous side of the computer video game industry. Most people associate jobs in the computer video game industry with information-based labor such as 3D graphics and coding game programs. Yet the majority of the industry relies on the sweat and stamina of migrant and low-income laborers working for electronics contract manufacturers in developing countries.
By following a series of training exercises, participants learn about the precarious employment and unjust labor conditions of workers in the areas of overseas digital game manufacturing and distribution. A virtual personal trainer created in Second Life leads participants through a series of training exercises that use motion detection and require full range of body motion to play. Rather than using a mouse or joystick, the motion detection demands the participants labor to complete the training exercises, emphasizing the extreme physical nature and motion economics of these jobs. The individual training exercises recontextualize popular classic arcade games – Dig Dug, Tapper, Space Invaders and Tetris – in order to train participants for jobs in mineral mining, printed circuit board assembly, box build and global shipping. At the end of the training program, participants can gauge their global market value to find out how much they are worth in contrast to white-collar workers in the industry and game company profits.
Gabriel Shalom – wash choose peel chop rinse
In the five movements which make up wash choose peel chop rinse, different stages of the process of making vegetable soup stock are examined in microcinematic detail. Rhythmic audiovisual compositions are revealed in the most mundane and subtle aspects of the preparation of various different vegetables. This video was premiered at the opening ceremony of Transmediale 2011, Berlin.
Gabriel Shalom is a videomusician, hypercubist and audiovisual artist living and working in Berlin, Germany. His signature work takes the form of rhythmically edited audiovisual compositions. He has been an artist in residence at the ZKM | Karlsruhe. He is the co-founder, together with Patrizia Kommerell, of KS12, a creative studio which produces original transmedia narratives. He has been a guest speaker on audiovisual trends in London, Berlin and São Paulo, and since Spring 2009 he is adjunct faculty at the Berliner Technische Kunsthochschule where he lectures on analog motion graphics and experimental film and video. He is a contributor to opinion-leading blogs on the future of cinema and augmented reality.
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- Ana Alenso
- Kim Beom
- Katrina Boeming
- Matthias Breuer
- Olivier Delrieu-Schulze
- Sofia Dona
- Angelica Piedrahita Delgado
- Carrie Kaser
- Adam Laskowitz
- Carl Lee
- Cayden Mak
- Tommy Neuwirth
- Scott Ries
- Stephanie Rothenberg
- Gabriel Shalom
- Stephen Nolan
Location
Time Mutations: Vertical Horizons
You'll find the english version below
Seit der Erfindung der Uhr und des Telegrafen sind Raum und Zeit in einen kulturell bedingtem Gleichschritt zusammengeschlossen. Der überregionale Zugverkehr führte zur Standardisierung von Fahrplänen und 1884 zur Einführung von Zeitzonen, deren räumliche Grenzen bis heute das Erleben der Welt bestimmen. Paradoxerweise hatte die Normierung der Zeit den Effekt, die Relativität von Raum und Zeit selbst in den banalsten Situationen zu Tage zu fördern. Von Jetlag über GPS zu der Synchronisation von Uhren, die sich scheinbar mit jedem neuem elektronischen Gerät multiplizieren, scheinen wir ständig in dem Gewässer des relativen und absoluten Raums und der relativen und absoluten Zeit zu treiben. Elektronische Kommunikationstechnologien wie Email und Echtzeit-Videostreams verstärken in unserem Alltag diesen Eindruck und lehren uns die relative Geschwindigkeit und Verzögerung vermittelter Zeit als gegeben hinzunehmen und uns ihr mit neuen gesellschaftlichen Konventionen und anderen ungeschrieben Verhaltensregeln anzupassen.
Der Drang die Grenzen von Raum und Zeit zu durchbrechen ist von sich aus utopisch: kulturelle und geographische Unterschiede zu entfernen und anstatt dessen eine Gesellschaft zu etablieren in der Kommunikation eingebunden und unmittelbar ist, ist ein immerwährender jedoch schwer fassbarer Traum. Selbst wenn die Motivation dahinter ein starker Drang nach Austausch ist, kann der Wunsch Unterschiede in Kultur, Zugang, Zeit und Sprache in der Gegenwart totaler Gleichzeitigkeit aufzulösen natürlich nie vollständig sein. Übergangsloser bzw. verlustfreier Austausch wird immer von der in ihm enthaltenen Art der Kommunikation, Kultur und Technologie vereitelt. Manipulation von Raum und Zeit durch Aufzeichnungs- und Bearbeitungstechniken könnte letztendlich dazu führen, dass wir Zeit und Ort als bestimmten Zustand wahrnehmen, wobei solche Eingriffe die Erfahrung nie auf solch feste bzw. konkrete Begriffe reduzieren können.
Time Mutations ist eine Ausstellung neuartiger Kunstwerken die diese Konzepte, Probleme und Potentiale erforschen durch eine Kollaboration zweier Institutionen, die aufgrund ihrer Geschichte ein großes Interesse an experimentellen Medienpraktiken haben. Angehörige des Studiengangs Medienkunst/Mediengestaltung der Bauhaus Universität Weimar und der Fakultät Media Study der State University of New York in Buffalo haben sich zusammengetan um neue Projekte Seite an Seite mit Arbeiten international rennomierter Künstler zu präsentieren und eine Plattform für die Interaktionen der beiden Institutionen zu schaffen. Für diese Ausstellung suchen wir Arbeiten die einen Schwerpunkt auf der individuellen und kollektiven Wahrnehmung von Raum und Zeit die aus der vermittelten Wahrnehmung von Raum und Zeit durch Technologie hervorgeht. Von besonderem Interesse sind Arbeiten die das Konzept von Zeit als linear und dem Ort als fest erfolgreich hinterfragen, manipulieren oder auslöschen und damit die Richtung für alternative Erfahrungen und Konstruktionen von Raum, Zeit und Ort aufzeigen. Eindeutig gescheiterte Versuche werden als unausweichlich und interessant begrüßt, zum Beispiel das Scheitern von Technologie oder vermittelten sozialen Interaktionen um Unterschiede in Sprache, Kultur, Protokoll, etc. auszulöschen.
Time Mutations: Vertical Horizons
Since the invention of the clock and the telegraph, space and time have been harnessed to each other in a culturally imposed lock step. Standardizations in train time ultimately led to the establishment of global time zones that persist today in fundamentally structuring our daily experience of the world. Ironically, the standardization of time has had the effect of illuminating the relativity of time and space in even our most mundane experiences. From jet lag and GPS to the syncing of dozens of clocks that seem to multiply around us with every electronic device, we find ourselves constantly adrift in the waters of relative and absolute space and time. Electronic communications technologies from email to live real-time video streaming have intensified this experience in our daily lives, conditioning us to take for granted the relative speed – and lag – of mediated time and space, and to accommodate it with new social conventions and unwritten codes of behavior.
The desire to collapse boundaries of space and time is inherently utopian. To erase cultural and geographic distinctions, and instead inhabit a community in which communication is integrated and instantaneous is a persistent, yet elusive dream. Even when motivated by a generous impulse toward exchange, the desire to dissolve difference in culture, access, time, place and language in the experience of total simultaneity can, of course, never be complete. Seamless or lossless exchange is always thwarted by the embodied nature of communication, culture and technology. Manipulations of time and space through recording and editing techniques may lead us to perceive time and location as particulate states, but ultimately such interventions can never fully reduce experience to such stable or concrete terms.
Time Mutations is an exhibition of new artworks that explore these concepts, challenges, and potentials, through a collaboration between two institutions that have historically been deeply invested in experimental media practice. Media practitioners from the Media Art & Design Program at the Bauhaus-Universität Weimar and at the State University of New York at Buffalo’s Media Study Department have come together to present new projects alongside works of internationally renowned artists and provide a platform for interaction between our institutions’ physical and research localities. For this exhibition we are seeking works that focus on individual and collective perceptions of space and time emerging from technologically mediated interaction and exchange. Of particular interest are works in which the concept of time as linear or location as static is successfully challenged, manipulated or collapsed, giving way to alternative experiences and constructions of time, space and place. Explicit failures in these attempts are embraced as both inevitable and interesting – for instance, the failure of technology or mediated social interactions to erase differences in language, cultural protocol, etc.
Supporters
We are supported by: Studierendenservicefonds Bauhaus-Universität Weimar, State University of New York at Buffalo Media Study, SUNY Buffalo Gender Institute, Visual Studies Department, Architecture and Media Architecture Departments, The Media Study Starter Grant, the Graduate Student Association of SUNY Buffalo, Chair Design of Media Environments Bauhaus-Universität Weimar