20 Projector Tree


A nicely executed and documented installation along with performances for an event in Copenhagen worked on by Vibeke Bertelsen. Vibeke’s own words:

I am a part of the visuals collective Obscura (based in Copenhagen) and I thought I’d write you and tell a bit about a recent project we did.

We were commisioned to do the visuals for an event at The Royal Library in Copenhagen. The library is an amazing building with a big central hall that spans the full height of the building (29m). We decided to try and cover as big an area of this room as possible and came up with an idea of building a ‘projector tree’ – an installation of 20 video projectors on tripods. Here’s a clip from the preparations
where you can see us building the ‘tree’.

Of interest to you and your readers might be that we handled the whole thing from one Mac Pro using Modul8. We had 10 unique signals coming out of the Mac Pro. This was possible with two triple heads, one dual head and two additional outputs. These outputs were then doubled up and sent to the 20 beamers. Additionally at one point we took in a ‘camera input’ from an external machine using a capture card. Not once did we have any glitches or bottle necks. That was a nice experience.

Talk at ITP

m8talkitp
My good friend and colleague Chika Iijima (aka Visualicious) has arranged for me to do a talk at ITP in NYU where she is currently studying. For those unaware of ITP, it is school within NYU where people study the design, development and application of technology based interactivity.

This will be less tech, and more about the ideas behind the creation of Modul8 and The Mapping Festival. I will also talk about where we are now with these projects and the vision we have for its future(s), followed by some Q & A. The talk is free and open to the general public.

I will also be attending some of the events scheduled for the upcoming vimeo festival unfolding between October 8th through the 9th.

I am looking forward to being back in New York, re-absorbing its energy a bit, friends, family as well as meeting new people. If you are in attendance to any of the above mentioned and know what I look like feel free to say hi.

———-> Please note – Ilan Katin was previously scheduled for 3:30pm in Room 50. He will now speak at 4:30pm in room 20 in order to avoid conflict between these 2 events. Sorry for any inconvenience. <——————

Interview: Okinawa69

Tasso Okinawa
Okinawa69 (Tasso Okinawa) sits comfortably witin my non-existent top 10 VJ’s. His reputation preceded our meeting through videos from VMS, his long collaboration with the Cologne based Kompact label and a story that his V4 has a dent in it as a result of slapping the a/b buttons while wearing rings.

I finally met him during the 2009 edition of the Mapping Festival. His work, constant varations of geometrical shapes and still imagery, provided the Zoo with a smooth, light sensation. When observing him in action he is extremely engaged in what he is doing. His body moves to the music and when transitioning materials his movements are akin to a combination of machine operator and ballet dancer.

Mapping Festival meetings are always very brief. Between occasional skype chats and a collection of chances for face to face in Cologne and the UAF in Austria I was able to conduct an email based interview with him that charts his timeline and talks about what it is that he loves about the medium, what makes it work and, not to be too cheeky, how much he loves Modul8.

The images included in this interview are from the performances of Okinawa 69 and Bruno Tait during the Urban Artforms Festival in Austria during the DJ sets of Carl Craig and Sven Väth.

<< begin >>

m8us: What is your history with VJ’ing? What got you interested in the medium?

Tasso: I studied Art and Design in Cologne. During my studies I focused for quite a while on textile prints and flyer design. It was only a matter of time until that started to influence my other work.

As I was promoting partys in Cologne together with my partner-in-crime shumi, I became aware of the fact that we didn’t want to stop at promotion only. We wanted to be part of the party itself. So we started to do our own little evening in Cologne’s hallmackenreuther, every Tuesday evening. The owner of hallmackenreuther is an avid collector of design classics and had old wega tv’s in his bar. That’s where we started to show videos from VHS, cut together by us and presented together with Shumi’s music as a dj.

PXLZ at UAF 2010
Urban Art Forms 2010 – videos by the PXLZ feat. Bruno Tait & Okinawa 69

Later the hallmackenreuther opened its basement with two beamers and a professional DJ-Set-Up. Also, friends of ours had just programmed a vj-software called “almost sync.” That’s how it all began: shumi playing records in the basement of hallmackenreuther and me, mixing clips with my laptop. We called our evening “micro.”

md8.us: What kind of materials were you using for imagery back then? Were you transferring what you had on VHS onto the computer or were you creating new material? How were you assembling it and what were your sources for inspiration?

Tasso: Back in the days I started with found footage and sampled movies like koyaanisqatsi (lol), but pretty soon I got bored with that approach. I wanted to visualize music and not just show random clips.

So I generated my first loops with the computer, consisting of simple stuff like squares and circles. That was imagery giving me enough freedom to still manipulate the clips in a live surrounding via software.

More than anything else, music is my main source of inspiration, and since the music back then was quite “minimal” and repetitive, at least in Cologne, it made perfect sense to work with simple, abstract forms.

But, alas! The projectors available were quite shitty in those days and you were forced to work with high contrast and monochrome images to squeeze some persuasiveness out of them. That’s how the “superimpose” effect to be found on the classical Panasonic mixer became my best friend.

md8.us: What was the public reaction to your work like back then? Was there an awareness of what you were doing?

PXLZ at UAF 2010
Urban Art Forms 2010 – videos by the PXLZ feat. Bruno Tait & Okinawa 69

Tasso: At first only friends were aware of what we’re doing there. I can remember lots of occasions where people asked me:

“So what are you doing here tonight?”
“I’m mixing the videos”
“What videos?”

But with the growing availability of projectors there also was more need for content and people to play it. Everybody had some friends investing in the matter and so the network started to grow. VJs started more and more to play at festivals, commercial and cultural events reaching a much bigger audience. In the meantime promoters have been convinced that the VJ should be on the flyer as well… if those haven’t been also designed by the VJs themselves.

md8.us: Getting back to your own time line, where did yours and Shumi’s VJ work evolve from hallmackenreuther?

Tasso: At the soma festival we teamed up with dirk and kjell from the bruno tait video trio for the first time. We threw together our equipment and skills and started to play bigger shows at festivals besides preparing visuals for bands and labels.

bruno tait was also vj’ing for quite some time, also used a clean grafical style so we got to be best friends. Our parties and budgets got bigger and this gave us the opportunity to buy our own projectors and create individual set ups that allowe the audience to better see the visuals.

md8.us: You mention a shift towards a more of a clean graphical style. Can you expand on the advantages of this approach? How does a graphical approach differ from that of an ‘image’ based one, as in using solid shapes vs. photographs?

Tasso: It was again on one hand a availability of software and a matter of style at that time. software like Adobe´s Illustrator/ After Effects and Cinema 4D worked better and better together. Since we mostly played all night and didn´t want to play any imagery twice we needed a lot of content. When working with graphics it is much easier to combine different clips together.

PXLZ at UAF 2010
Urban Art Forms 2010 – videos by the PXLZ feat. Bruno Tait & Okinawa 69

Our approach in vj´ing together with a dj is to mix from record to record. That´s because we were raised with vinyl and tracks on vinyl have a beginning and an end. They are produced to be played from beginning to the end and then be mixed into the next one. So that´s how we mixed. We followed the records and tried to introduce a new set of clips with every record. Of course we had our pop moments with sampled footage or photos. We even shared or remixed clips from other vjs. It depended very much on the moment, on the music, the crowd, the location and the setup. No night was the same!

md8.us: How did Modul8 contribute to this approach?

Tasso: Oh, m8 was a revolution! It was clean fast, and graphic. It was exactly what we needed. From PSD and AI we were used to work with layers. Duplicating them and having control of everything very fast was just what we were looking for.

Our set up was always to use a Edirol mixer and a couple of MacBooks. Everybody was preparing his content live and we would play ping pong together. So one would mix in a clip and then the next one would take over, and so on.

For this m8 was perfect. We could easily sync over LAN and still would have to respond to the clip the other one just played. It was always very important for us to make “the perfect” mix, just as the djs.

We didn´t use almost sync anymore cause we couldn´t control it with MIDI. other softwares like resolume or isadora we couldn´t identify with. m8 was made by vj´s for vj´s like us. Duddenly we felt like we were part of a culture.

md8.us: Do you have any ideas about the direction this medium is taking? Where do you want to go with it?

Tasso: If you mean in general, it´s more and more dividing into the preproduction scene like mapping and processing. The industry is putting a lot of money in it cause it´s a good way to advertise their products in public with an arty touch. It´s a new kind of billboard. Mapping just looks awesome and it will be one future of architecture.

In classic live visuals, vjs work closer with bands, acts, djs and labels to visualize their music on stage and for netpromo/DVDs etc.

For me visuals need music. I always believed that visuals should rather just look nice and react to the music than tell a story and catch too much attention of the crowd. My favorite dancer is the one with closed eyes. That is why my work is so abstract and just works with forms, shades and light. It´s about retina reception. Club culture was always about leaving reality behind, forgetting time, dancing and not wanting to leave the club.

So if you ask me where i want to go with it… I´d say more stage designs for labels/events and more tour visuals for musicians. Both should be accompanied by videos and documentation.

<< end >>

Artist: POPNONAME
Titel: Hello Gorgeous (KOMPAKT)
Video: Bruno Tait & Okinawa 69
Prod: Tasso Treis • Dir/Edit : Dirk Rauscher • Techn. Dir: Kjell Rijntjes • Raum: Jonathan Hähn
Contact: promo@kompakt.fm
popnoname.de • kompakt.fm • okinawa69.de • brunotait.de • dirkrauscher.de

Iduun releases the much anticipated MapMapMap module


Last spring I attended the B-seite festival in Mannheim, Germany and had the great fortune of meeting the creative minds behind Iduun, an ongoing audio/visual project that gave birth to the Monomal, a boundary breaking module that allows for using the Monome with Modul8. I myself had purchased a Monome out of sheer curiosity to see how it all worked.

During our meeting we discussed several things, but one of the most contemporary subjects was the lack of proper tools for mapping layers to objects in physical space. The now, universally popular ‘mapping projection’ projects.

With Modul8, the quick approach started with the ‘Perspective Transform’ filter inside the ‘Filter’ module. About a year ago, with the release of v2.6 a module stand alone version of this filter was created by members of the Modul8 team. Whatever wonderful results this module provided, the interface is a bit limited in its interactive properties.


As with everyone else, I was delighted to see the preview video of their MapMapMap module only a few months later. Yesterday the annoucement from Phillip arrived via email.

The new iduun module is definitely the first tool that I have seen thus far that takes this concept in the right direction. The key interface development for me is the large circles located at each corner point. If any of you have ever done mapping using Illustrator or Photoshop then you know that trying to grab a tiny dot that is probably just off of the edge of the object you are trying to match is extremely frustrating.


MapMapMap is definitely a step in the right direction for proper mapping tools. Already this past weekend there was a lot of excitement about its availability proving once again that people want to spend less time figuring out how to do something and more time doing something with a result they can by happy with.

There is also some extra stuff in there such as the ability to create animations between two maps, akin to what was achieved with the VMS module demo.

As always I recommend providing feedback to the Iduun team. Enthusiasm is the fuel of dreams.

Modul8 Bootcamp, SAE Barcelona, Spain

SAE Modul8 bootcamp 17-18 September
¡SAE BARCELONA presenta MODUL8 BOOTCAMP!

Se trata de programa de FORMACIÓN INTENSIVA que tiene como duración 2 DÍAS de puro manejo y flujo de trabajo con Modul8.

De la mano con VJ Spain, Gnomalab y Garage Cube, SAE Barcelona ofrece la primera formación oficial certificada por el fabricante y expertos en el lenguaje VJ.

A continuación el enlace descarga para el FORMULARIO DE INSCRIPCIÓN:

http://www.sae.edu/media/Barcelona/pdf/4199_Formulario_Inscripcion.pdf

¡Reserva tu plaza!

Envía el formulario relleno a infobarcelona@sae.edu , abona la tasa de inscripción (50EUR) , participa automáticamente a la rifa de 1 x Licencia Modul8 y realiza el MODUL8 BOOTCAMP de SAE BARCELONA!

Nota:

El código de curso asociado al Modul8 Bootcamp es M8C 0910.

Información:

+34 93 238 7258
barcelona.sae.edu
infobarcelona@sae.edu