Modul8 wishes you all a Happy New Year in 2009!



Modul8 wishes you Happy New Year for 2009!

To all modul8 users and enthusiasts out there we hope you had a happy and productive year of creating live visuals and that the coming year will be just as fulfilling. The past year has been very eventful for the GarageCUBE team. Beginning with the entry of David Geldreich to the development team and followed by many exciting projects that further expanded our personal and professional presence in the world of live visuals.

What do we have to look forward to in 2009?

001++ Modul8 v2.6 in the 1st quarter of 2009

We are pleased to announce that we will be releasing modul8 v2.6 in the 1st quarter of 2009. We will keep you informed of developments on this highly anticipated release through our blog (www.modul8.us) and the GarageCUBE forum (www.GarageCUBE.com/forum).


002++ GarageCUBE team expands

In the beginning of this year we welcomed David Geldreich to the GarageCUBE team. Since that time he has helped us release two updates, provided us with tools and knowledge that have added and enhanced our experience of the development cycle. We are very much looking forward to his continued efforts and contributions to modul8 in 2009.

At the end of this year Eric Morzier joined the GarageCUBE team. You may know Eric from his active participation on the GarageCUBE forum as Sigma6. He has been a user of modul8 from its first release and has authored several very useful modules that can be found in public section of the modules library. Beyond modul8 he has worked in the fields of motion graphics and interactive design and co-founded the collective Sigma6. http://www.sigma6.ch/


003++ Team Modul8 out and about

This year saw many projects that have advanced the medium of VJ'ing as an art form and we were very fortunate to be a part of this process. After the Chicks On Speed/Modul8 'Butt Slaps' installation for Mapping 2008, Chicks On Speed http://www.chicksonspeed.com/ and the Modul8 team came together at the Hangar http://www.hangar.org/ in Barcelona. In 10 days the 'Super Suits' project was born.

Prior to this was our residency at the Exyzt http://www.exyzt.org/ Southwark Lido installation where the surrounding buildings were lit up with time lapse footage and moving portraits of the participants taken by Julie Guiches and Benoit Laurent. Little did we know at the time that this interaction would lead to our final collaboration of the year at the Corps Urbain festival in the Le Brigittines, Brussels under the umbrella of the newly initiated Continent-Virtual http://www.continent-virtuel.org/.



004++ Facebook, Flickr and Vimeo... oh my!

Are you on facebook? We have a group and a fan page dedicated to modul8. It is checked by us on a weekly basis and we announce modul8 related news and events on both of them. You are welcome to find us and join us there, contribute your photos, videos, demos, ideas, reports and discuss VJing, mapping and techniques amongst yourselves. There is also a strong modul8 presence on flickr and vimeo with groups for both.

http://www.flickr.com/groups/modul8/
http://www.vimeo.com/groups/modul8/

Do not neglect to read the former post about the open call for submissions to the Mapping VJ Festival.

Best wishes again from all of us at the modul8 team to you.

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Mapping Festival 2009 open call for submissions!



Mapping 2009 edition call for submissions are open now!


The dates are set for May 8th through the 17th 2009. Join us for our 5th anniversary.

We expect your projects and proposals for the following sections:
- VJing
- Audiovisual performances
- Installations
- Outdoor projections/performances
- Lectures/Workshops/Presentations/Demos

The deadline for all submissions is January 26th 2009. The letter must be postmarked by that date.

To download the english version of the application please point your browser to:
http://www.mappingfestival.com/mapping2009/inscriptions/

We look forward to your submissions!

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Some artistic explorations



I received an energetic email from Kasumi X. Less then a year ago she adopted modul8 as her tool of choice. Even before then she has been working with the likes of Grandmaster Flash, DJ Spooky, Modeselektor, grok, the New York Philharmonic and others.

You can find further examples of her work on her MySpace profile including her collaborations with the Copy Violators.

If you are in New York City in February Kasumi X will be premiering a performance using modul8 at Carnegie Hall.

Some interesting approaches to remixing classic film materials with lots of offsetting and colorful backgrounds.

In a similar vein is a post from a user named 'nestor.'


HOMBRES DE NEON from nesbras on Vimeo.

Very economical and creative usage of original materials combined with the 3d possibilities of modul8 create a narrative through space and time. We see what looks like a monster running away from a mechanized society into a world of infinite space with dancers culminating in a multi-colored 'flower.' The petals appear to be the face of the artist himself.

Finally there is the work of Gabriel Valleccio with his Memoria 0100110101. Gabriel kindly posted a description of the piece on the forum:

Memory must have an object. What happens when the object of memory disappears?

":.:..:Memoria 0100110101:::. is a video poetry installation created and performed using Modul8. Five 3D objects with different dimensions placed on a black wall, 5 simultaneous and different videos(mixed). One projector. "

":.:..:Memoria 0100110101:::.is a Live Cinema installation which explores the transformation of our senses into objects, in mere machines that receive and register. :.:..:Memoria 0100110101: explores the neutralization of human emotions, how we substitute basic human functions with technological prosthetics, the essential dedifferentiation between an object and person."


:.::. Memoria 0100110101 :.::: from Gabriel Vallecillo on Vimeo.

This video is actually an excerpt from the full performance. At the very end of the video clip are some still renderings of the installation he created for this performance involving several primitive objects.

I hope to see more such explorations in the future. As always please do not hesitate to show us what you have been doing with modul8.

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Fraçois Chalet. A creative evolution.



Vector graphics and design for its own sake in general came into its own during the 90's with companies like Buro Destruct, Designers Republic and a host of others with similar or countering sensibilities. At the head of fueling the appetites of a growing niche of design professionals, enthusiasts and trend seekers is the Berlin based publisher Die Gestalten Verlag. One of the many themes that is prevalent was the crossing between illustration and design. Almost purely at the illustration end of the spectrum was Chalet. An entire book dedicated to seemingly countless iterations of googlie eyed circle faced characters occupying a vividly colored world all from the mind of one individual by the name of François Chalet. This book is one of the major references of vector based illustration and you can see the continuing influence his work has had on the genre.

During my first year working for the Mapping Festival I became aware that François was VJ'ing via an application that he submitted to us. He provided a highly memorable performance. Behind two laptops and a V4 he deftly synchronized his bouncy visuals to whatever music was he was submitted to. Amongst his signature characters there was also evidence of bitmapped images such as arms neatly transformed into clock hands. A different Chalet was emerging though the vectored trappings of the past.





Chalet at Mapping 2007. Photos: Ork



I had the pleasure of meeting with François recently at cafe in Berlin where he gave me an update about his activities. He showed me still images and videos of large scale projections on buildings that were on par with those of Exyzt and AntiVJ in terms of content and narrative along with examples of his work with dancers where the hint of flesh that I saw during his performance at the Mapping had clearly expanded. Further more he confesses to have adopted modul8 as his tool of choice. We managed to cover quite a few subjects in the limited time he I had. The following is mostly his evolving experience with modul8 that has opened new creative outlets for François to explore.

"I discovered Modul8 when I was invited to the Mapping Festival. First I wasn't very willing to use it because it look too sophisticated to me and I like really simple tools with no effects."

"During this time I was working with a French contemporary dance company in France called Compagnie Thomas Duchatelet. For their piece called "de 0 (...) a l'infini" and for this I produced all of the visuals that accompanied the performance. For that I used two laptops, an edirol V4 and Quicktime Pro. I always had a lot to carry so a year ago I decided to change to Modul8 so that I could reduce the amount of equipment to one laptop. The more I used it the more I saw its advantages and discovered possibilities I wanted to use for a new piece called "oculus." The focus of the piece is a dialogue between dance, music, light and visuals."

"Before we began to write the piece there we performed a series of experiments exploring the posibilites of modul8. As the theme relates to the specific functions of the body, the eye, the ear expressed through dance, we chose functions in modul8 (trace, sphere, multilayer, multiply....) that we felt best related to our subject."


Some experiments:







"Then Thomas Duchatelet the chroreographer, marie (lighting) and Jean-paul bredif (music) and me formed a constant dialogue about the piece. The four participating dancers dancers were of course directed by Thomas Duchatelet as to how to interact with all of the elements."


(poster of the new piece)




"The piece contains two diffenrent ways of using modul8. One is to videocapture a dancer in realtime in a space on the left side of the stage. Her captured image is modified using colours, trace and Pixel FX. The image is projected in the background with the dancer in front her her own image."



On the left the dancer which is filmed, transformed and then projected in the background.




"Modul8 is also used as VJ-tool 'simply' projecting images onto the backround of the scene and from above onto the floor"



Projections of Visuals on the backscene and the floor





what it looks like a little later in the piece




"The piece is modular and can be easily modified for different contexts. Modul8 is a fantastic because it allows me to easily change a few parameters in order adapt the visuals to whatever conditions are I am presented with."

François Chalet, December 2008

It is very inspiring to see this kind of enthusiasm in relation to modul8. It was very kind of François to share his ongoing creative process and it should be noted that the material here is still in development. Considering what is already there I look forward to seeing and posting more about Chalet/Modul8 projects in the future.

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Intermezzo


Intermezzo Corps Urbain from ilan katin on Vimeo.

I finally got around to putting the finishing touches on the zippy documentation of the installation by Boris for Corps Urbain at Les Brigittines. The methods employed for this were my trusty Canon EOS Rebel XSI (known in Europe as the 450D), that other compositing tool that I still use quite a lot and a bit of evolved inspiration from the documentation of exyzt although my shooting style probably borrows more from Jonas Mekas. Optionally you can view a smaller res sized (but larger file size) version that uses a more favorable compression scheme.

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Brussels + Starloops delivers Claridge with their dreams



During my last visit to Brussels for the Cimatics Festival we were taken by our friend François from Starloops to see an ongoing installation site in an event space called Claridge. I met with Marco who is the director of the space. He explained the importance of Brussels in that it is the administrative capital of the European Union. Because of this many large organizations are also based there. Claridge provides these organizations with a space and full range of services to host events such as presentations, parties and ceremonies. The goal of Claridge is to constantly find new and innovative ways to enhance and maximize the use of the space. To appeal to the olfactory senses of the attendees by providing a fully immersive experience. For Marco modul8 was a key step in accomplishing this goal.

Initially Starloops was hired to provide visuals for the events at Claridge in the form of projections of fractals. However once Marco was introduced to Modul8 and its multi-projection capabilities he, along with François and the Starloops team were able to accomplish an idea that had been in their minds for some time. Along both sides of the walls of Claridge are inset arches. An elevation is situated just below these. With the multi-projection Starloops was able to have a projection in side each arch on both sides of the space. The dream was to be able to project a panoramic still image across the screens so that the images in the arches were continuous and provided the illusion so that the space could transport people into another place on the globe without having to travel there.



Examples of this experience are enhanced by using various materials for each type of panorama. For example to provide the experience of a beach sand and deck chairs were brought in to compliment a panorama of a sunny sea side. For a forrest setting a carpet of real grass filled the floor and a setting for a picnic. For a mountain range the lesser yet still effective fake snow. This combination of image and material can be quite thrilling for audiences. Marco used the word 'surreal' to describe the experience.

Some cool tools so you don't have to run around with a remote control.



From the success of this idea new solutions emerged. For awards ceremonies it was commonplace to use the stage as the focal point of the evenings presentations. Instead Claridge borrowed the fashion industry approach of a catwalk placed down the center of the room. This change yielded two advantages. The first was that that the time needed to announce all of the nominations was cut in half because the images of the nominees could be presented simultaneously inside each arch instead of one by one on a single screen. The second advantage was that the audience was seated facing each other at all times preventing people from falling asleep when realizing how embarrassing it would be if anyone saw them.



With these capabilities fully realized the Starloops and Claridge partnership is looking to new achieve new goals. Instead of just still panoramic images they want to have full motion video panoramas in order to deepen the sensation of immersion. The current obstacle is obtaining such footage that would fill all the screens without having to stretch the image. At this time there few if any companies that offer stock in these sizes. The solution the are currently looking at is to use a camera from RED that would allow them to shoot 4k. Starloops can shoot original materials to be used at Claridge and also provide them as stock for their online store that has been providing quality loops for the video and event industry for several years now.

A collaborative client like Claridge that is open to new ideas has been a real treat for a company like Starloops. Having a shared vision between the customer and the client has allowed Starloops to do experiments in a space that Claridge has clearly benefited from. Once you have a proving ground based on concrete projects it is easier to present these projects to other existing customers.

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Modul8 version 2.5.8



Hello everyone,

An update to modul8 has been uploaded to the servers today. The update adds some modifications to existing features and resolves some conflicts that have emerged with the recent updates to Mac OS X.

What's new:
- Support for .swf file playback using Flash 10.
- Support for video capture (live video feed) at HD resolution.
- Default memory settings in the preferences are now set to 60MB, 60%, 128MB.
- Default video capture settings are now at the maximum quality.

Fixes:
- Potential crashes when changing media quickly.
- Potential freezes during a logical render.
- In Leopard the output window did not return to front when switching to modul8 from another application.
- Possible crashing when detecting video cards.

To download the most recent update access the 'Download modul8 Update' command from the 'modul8' menu. If you cannot please contact us at support at garagecube dot com and we will send you a link.

If you want to use the modules you have downloaded or created using v.2.5.x it will be necessary to move or copy them from the modules folder of that version and put them in the modules folder of v.2.5.8.

Enjoy and have a great weekend!

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Corps Ubain Report

mezzo-cathy3

www.continent-virtual.org



Earlier this month the modul8 team spent almost two weeks in Brussels, Belgium collaborating with other designers and VJ's to apply a digital skin to the Corps Urbain. The spaces included the Brigittines chapel, its lobby and stairwell area that connects the lobby to the chapel and separately the Congress train station. For the duration of the project we were provided with the nearly completed artist residencies of the Brigittines located next door.

The Corps Urbain is an music festival / public intervention. It was organized by Cafe Central (a popular night spot in the middle of Brussels) in collaboration with the Birgittines.

Normally individual VJ's or VJ collectives are requested to perform as part of the music acts. The approach of Corps Urbain was to invite a group of people to create not just visuals for music but to also augment the environment in and around the parties taking place. The content of these projections was drawn from the city, its buildings, textures and energy.

chapelle11

www.continent-virtual.org



Having several days leading up to the event I was able to connect with the other individuals who participated in the project. Besides the presence of Joanie Lemercie, Olivier Ratsi from the AntiVJ label the crew also consisted of the of Jean-François Roversi, Felipe H. Sierra, Deborah Robbiano, Nicholas Clement all under the umbrella of the Coproduction Continent-Virtuel.

The events occupied two different spaces. The first night took place at the Gare Congres. A train station in the northern part of central Brussels. The two remaining nights were in the The Birgittines chapel, in the lobby of its twin building and the part glass structure that connects the two buildings.

congres2

www.continent-virtual.org



The Congres currently receives very little traffic during the day and at night it is locked. In effort to liven the space up a bit the offices that once hosted the ticket sellers and administrative functions of the station are now used to showcase art projects. For our sake it occasionally hosts parties sans access to the ramps leading to the train platforms. Anti-VJ took up residence in the main entrance hall with it's columns and high ceilings this was the main dance floor area. As always Anti-VJ is not about putting up screens but using the space as a screen. They went about mapping the stairwell leading with its angled wall and station name. In one of their many ever clever moves they played with this type by adding other type to it or highlighting only parts of it. What very much worked for me was being able to see the projection from the ticket/bar area with its low ceiling.

In the ticket booth area and the bar there was a small room with two windows. Inside the room there was a long solid wood bench. Evidence that this room once served as waiting room for passengers. One of the windows was situated on a diagonal wall facing into the central waypoint between the ticket booth and entrance to the train platforms. Inside this room we projected an image from within the room. In order for the projection to have a substantial substance of surface Inside the room Julie set up a table with a computer and camera equipment in order to conduct electroshock photography. A willing member of the public is seated on a chair and is touched with a electrical discharge from a camera flash battery. A photograph is taken of the seated person comes into contact with the shock resulting in a still image of the facial expression caused by the shock. Using modul8 Julie could have a live feed of the person projected onto the window as well as post recently taken high quality images. In this way the public could see the images, come closer and then look inside to see that they could participate in this activity if they wished to do so.

The installation that Boris created was a last moment inspiration. Connecting the train platform and the ticket both area was a long hallway. A series of glass doors that were locked at night separated the platforms from the ticket booth area. Using two projectors situated at each side of the hall with two semi transparent screens, stretched wall to wall, ceiling to floor and situated in between the two projectors with a 4 to 5 meter distance between screens and projectors. Using a dual head 2 go Boris setup an automated playback of several different animated geometric compositions. The result was a sort of silent storm of white light emitted from an indeterminate distance.

Festival Corps Urbain - Chapelle des Brigittines

www.continent-virtual.org



With some time to recover from that night the team started preparations for the two nights at the Brigittines. Anti-VJ would occupy the chapel and similar to their activity in the train station they utilized the interior structure of the chapel by mapping it and augmenting it with projections. It was very interesting to observe the methods they used in order to map the environment. Using a laptop connected to the projector that would be used for the night of the event they mapped the structure using Illustrator. Once they had the mapping template they were able to create any type of visual material with any graphics program be it 2D or 3D.

mezzo-stairs1

www.continent-virtual.org



The stairwell area was a collaborative operation with the installation of the projectors directed by Boris. There were 7 projectors connected to a Mac Pro and another laptop with a triple head 2 go. The projectors were positioned in such a way that the entire staircase was illuminated when viewed from below or while ascending or descending. Two screens made of semi-transparent cloth were used to create an illuminated virtual floor at each level of the stairwell and on each glass door that separated the stairwell from the corresponding elevator was draped with this same semi-transparent cloth.

mezzo4

www.continent-virtual.org



Different types of content were used throughout the evening. Nicholas Clement collaborated with a dancer Kathy Contreras to produce a series of video clips of the dancers body in full view. Julie contributed her stock of video portraits of dancers and still sequences of commuters. Deborah added her touch of graphic illustrations of half torsos, faces hidden from removing their shirts with the map of Brussels as the texture of the shirt.

I need to add that the experience of walking through these projects produces a very interesting experience. If our eyes often deceive us about appearances there is something about having projections envelope your body that produces a sensation that is not unlike putting on clothing. This is especially true in the absence of sound. The absence of sound and the immersion of the body in the projected image allows me to imagine the lines and colors as having more then just the properties of light but something physical and almost warm.

mezzo11

www.continent-virtual.org



Secondary to this were projections across from the stairwell unto the paneled glass windows that looked out of the building as well as a projection upon the interior wall of the chapel from the other end of the lobby. The same elements were repeated here so that the images projected on the stairwell could be visible and act as this skin from the outside of the buildings.

The end of the last night, almost before the sun started to rise we set about doing some proper and improper documentation of the space. To do this and direct me in doing so Boris set up a remote connection between modul8 on his laptop and modul8 on the Mac Pro. We were able to walk around in the space together with him changing the settings of the setup, slowing down the playback, changing the images while checking the photo sequences I was making. The results of this project were very satisfying. Even though the installation itself was not dependent upon the party, creating something peripheral challenged the idea that a party is just on dark room with pounding music fast moving lighting and visuals. It is an interesting challenge to find the spaces in between. There is an element of the unexpected within this context. Also the approach to how this project was created provided a structure where several creators could utilize it. We are so used to going to bars and seeing the one or two TV's on the wall. At this point it is easier then would imagine to break the frame in a participatory manner so that the boundaries of our minds can intermesh with each other.

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