VJ Jago interview from LPM 2012


I found this as a submission to our group in vimeo, VJ Jago talking about her work, interleaved with excerpts of her footage and performances. If my memory serves me correctly VJ Jago attended my last workshop video mapping workshop in Berlin, and from the meeting I had no idea about her work, that from this document appears to be very strong in the way she utilizes the stylized approach, with high quality footage, to tell a story with images, akin to another contemporary.

Surprisingly too that she mentions that she used the Canon 60D. I recently conducted a test between the 7D and the 60D during a brief visit to Russia for the Multimatograf Festival. It was a brief, but highly memorable trip to a country I had not visited before. Part of my trip there was to present to Alexander Torokhov his FaderFox MicroModul8 controller. He mentioned to me that for the promo he shot for the competition he used the 60D. Surprised at the video quality I asked him if we could do a comparison test, and luckily we both had the cheap, Canon 50 mm lens. In my tests I discovered that, while projected colors that were red were not as vibrant on the 60D, the blacks were a lot less noisy.

In short, if you are in the market for a decent camera to document your projection work I would recommend having a look at the 60D. I would also recommend not even bothering with buying the stock lens. Save a couple of pennies, buy the body only and find a decent lens. The 50 mm is always a good start.

It seems everyone is heading to LPM this year. The ever growing performers meeting in Rome expands in the minds of VJ’s across the globe, akin to the empire that once emanated from that fine city where LPM is held every year. I won’t be making it there this year due to other commitments. But I am sure we’ll see lots of documentation.

Mads Meskalin


Video: Armin Werx and Mads Meskalin

I admire positive persistence in whatever form it may take, and Mads Meskalin has been active in this endeavor for a significant amount of time that it merited a proper interview. Mads enthusiasm for VJing expresses itself through his persistence and it is inspiring to see how hard he works to share this with anyone eager to learn. He has done this through countless (I lost count) workshops in Norway and is now starting to reach out to other countries in that region starting with Denmark.

Before we get down to the question and answer phase, I must point you to his ongoing workshops at Studio 2 in Oslo, and commend the headmaster Andy Cross (whom I have met during one of my trips to that fair city) for including live video in their curriculum.

http://www.studiotwo.no/courses/courses-on-offer/live-video-mixing/

m8.us – Can you explain your name? It’s meaning and origin, and what it means to you?

Mads – Well, my name is actually derived from the psychoactive ingredient in some south-american cactuses. The shamans used to eat it to communicate with the gods. I, however, ate it before long forest walks and thus was named Mads Meskalin by my friends. I didn’t think too much of it in the start, but after awhile it slowly became my identity. Most people think it’s my real name, and it works because I always strive to add a little surrealistic edge to my works, to add some deeper substance and meaning to it.

m8.us – Where you from originally? If not Oslo, then somewhere else in Norway?

Mads – I’m from a suburban, fairly rich community called Bærum outside of Oslo, but I used to live a few years in Denmark and Hungary. In Denmark I mainly did martial arts and electronic music, and in Budapest I started out
VJ’ing when I realised my music was not for the masses. I moved back to Oslo in 2010, and discovered that there was not a big scene for live video performance in Oslo. This was pretty good for me, as it was easier to establish myself. Norway is generally a good country for artists, as there are many grants and applications to fund audio/visual projects.

m8.us – What kind of music do you usually like to perform with? What kind of parties?

Mads – Well, that is a tough question. I remember one time we were doing this Pay It Forward party at The Villa in Oslo. I remember this guy, Jostein Skaret, mostly known for bass music, performed a deep ambient set with some dark soundscapes, and it was so easy to add imagery to it. Everybody was lying on the floor, looking at a light installation I mapped out into the ceiling.

Another production I really enjoyed, was an audio/visual theatre piece called DropOut. We had two months and enough funding to dedicate ourselves 100% to produce a play written for projections by Kate Pendry. We were two video artists, me and Jan Hajdelak from Czech, and we got very involved in both directing and producing the play. It was set in a 40sqm blackout ten that we then went on tour with. Keywords for a good event for me would be artistical freedom, a professional and friendly crew, as well as enough funding to do a good job.

Link for highlights from the theatre production is here: http://vimeo.com/62442048. We used Qlab, Syphon Virtual Screen, Ministage Console and MadMapper to play back the show from one laptop.

m8.us – After doing quite a few workshops, what have you learned about VJing since you started doing workshops?

Mads – Well, I am used to being a pedagog by profession, so teaching is my second nature. On one part(?), I learned a lot of details about Modul8 and MadMapper.

When you have to explain step-by-step, the bells and whistles of a software, you become aware of all the functions you might not normally use. An example is the record layer function in Modul8. I didn’t really use it, until I had to explain all the creative possibilities to my class. Now its one of functions I use the most.

When you talk out loud to another person about a certain topic, you sometimes get ideas you might not have been that aware of otherwise. On the other hand, the result of my teaching is not so much about the teaching itself, but from the people I meet. I’ve met so many interesting people in my VJ workshops, and everybody has their own approach, motivation, workflow and challenges that I learn a lot from.

Right now we have a small group with one student working as a designer for professional interfaces in oil-companies, another is working at a major projector rental company, and a third person has a more traditional club-VJ approach. I actually landed a few jobs out of it as well, for example I got the A/V theatre job from a former student who is a director that became a student after he saw one of my other students performances. Small world.

The courses have been pretty successful, but it always helps to have a good crew behind you when you get into frustrating situations. The owner of our DJ/VJ school, Andy Cross, has been invaluable in promoting, advertising and getting this course up and running. It always helps to have someone you can spar professionally with, as well as have a shoulder to cry on.

m8.us – Do you experience competitiveness within the live video community?

Mads – That depends entirely on how to define competitiveness. When I started my VJ workshops, some people warned me that I’m creating my own competition. However, competition has only benefited me. If one of my students takes one of my gigs, it means that he/she is better for the job, and that I didn’t perform an adequate service. That has happened a few times, and made me rethink my work, something I see as a good thing.

The only challenge is if a student undercuts the established prices. We all try to keep a minimum standard wage for video services, as we are few and far between, and that is often higher than what promoters try to get VJ’s to play for. But promoters are beginning to understand how much we work, and how many hours are involved in providing our service.

Here in Oslo I don’t experience that much competitiveness, more collaboration and combined efforts. Most of us know each other, and we try not to steal jobs from each other. If we are on each others “territory”, we try to negotiate collaboration as everybody has something to contribute. It does help that many of the most active VJ’s have been students of mine, or otherwise have some relation to our studio. If the VJ’ing was as big as DJ’ing is today, this answer might have been entirely different. But for now we are all colleagues. At least that’s how I view it.

m8.us – What advice would you give to anyone starting with live video production and performance?

Mads – I can give three advices off the of my head.

1. Be serious and organised. If you want to be a professional, you need to act like a professional. Show up on time, use gear that you know works, buy legal software, always be on the lookout to improve your workflow, offer your services, create a niche, do things are not necessary but might not be fun, have quality gear, and generally have professional work ethic.

2. Get to know other VJ’s. The best way of learning is through experience, and the best way to benefit from somebody’s experience is through working with them. As mentioned above, I learn as much from my students as they do from me. Don’t be afraid of outsourcing what you can’t do yourself. For the last party I did, one of the organisers is a professional carpenter. Through rigging up 150m of white chains together, I learned a lot about the use of power tools, materials and rigging.

3. Just do it. The biggest achilles heel of my students is performance anxiety. They might be scared, might not feel properly prepared etc. But if you got somebody to watch your back, there is not that much that can go wrong. Once my students do a show, they feel so relived and it is a big stepping stone for them. Kinda like sex, scary the first time, but unless you do it horribly wrong, you will be relived after.

Of course the best advice is to move to Norway and sign up at my workshops, however that might not be feasible for everybody (hehe).

http://www.studiotwo.no/

Editors note: We had to move the site in the past few days and due to this this article had to be re-posted. As a result the comments on this post were lost. We sincerely apologize for this inconvenience.

Interview: Annapurna Kumar

Annapurna has been developing a lovely visual language. The performance above is a display of vibrant colors and forms along with a vitality that is demonstrated in how clips are switched to the music. It is a basic formula that is to me undeniable, and has compelled me to ask some questions about her work.

Modul8.us: What is your artistic background?

Annapurna: I’ve been studying drawing and painting since I was a kid, and got
into animation more recently. I’ve been doing projections with bands
for a couple years, and I’ve done some one-off pieces as well. This
year I had an animation screened at the Punto y Raya Festival,
projected a site-inspired animation onto the Civil War Museum at
InLight Richmond, and was part of a multi-media performance
commissioned by the Annenberg Foundation. I also went on two US tours
as a VJ performing my original animations.

Modul8.us: When and where did you learn about live video and when did you start doing it?

Annapurna: I started doing live video about 3 years ago. I was living with an
electronic musician and was jealous about how he was able to perform
his work live. I wanted to do the same thing visually because I felt
like my drawings and animations were too detached from the present
moment. I had never really considered VJing before that, and I spent a
few months trying to think up a system from scratch. Then I stumbled
across the Modul8 blog and realized there was already a community with
accessible tools available for exactly what I wanted to do.

Modul8.us: What do you use to control your video?

Annapurna: I’ve been keeping my setup really simple to make it easy to take on
tour. I use a UC-33 midi controller plugged into an old macbook pro.
Modul8 is the only program I have running. I do a lot of rhythmic
triggering on my keyboard using the media set and a module called
Layer Selector. Once in a while I will link something to the BPM. I
never use sound reactivity. It’s more fun to button-mash. I generally
use pre-made animations that I create with specific sections of
specific songs in mind with areas laid aside for improvisation.

Modul8.us: How do you go about creating your material for live shows?

Annapurna: The videos posted here were done using mostly After Effects, Cinema
4d, and a little Flash. These days, I work in Flash a lot more because
I got addicted to it’s interface for drawing things frame by frame. I
have a lot of different influences so I’m usually improvising and
piecing different ideas together. I will not pursue something unless
it remains fun during the whole process.

- What inspires you?

I’m inspired by the geometry that I see underlying things. I like to
take recognizable objects and make them move in new ways that
emphasize their design. Lately I’ve been really into graffiti,
mosaics, stained glass, and constellations. But I’m inspired by a lot
of stuff. There are many contemporary illustrators and painters that
have influenced me, but my main sources of inspiration come from the
past. I’ve been doing a lot with Renaissance architecture lately, and
before that I was looking at Native American paintings that were
created on the trail of tears. Before that I was immersing myself in
the work of the first experimental animators like Norman McLaren and
Oskar Fischinger. I guess I go through phases and I just celebrate
whatever I’m drawn to visually.

Modul8.us: What is next for you?

Annapurna: I’m doing my third US tour in May to promote Ryat’s next album, Totem,
which is coming out on Brainfeeder. The projections for this tour are
a little less abstract than what I’ve done in the past, but still
based on a lot of geometry. I’m looking forward to doing visuals for
Mono/poly and Mast on that tour as well. In the meantime I am making a
sequel to my visual score, “Candy”, doing some freelance work, and
creating a visual show for pcoat’s next album.

MUTEK outdoor installation “Period”: An interview with Daniel Iregui of Iregular


MUTEK, in Montreal, Canada is a major destination for the electronic music scene. In the past GarageCUBE has attended MUTEK to host workshops and many of the artists who perform during the festival are often using Modul8 for VJing.
Therefore it was exciting to see an installation that literally put the experience of MUTEK on the street vis a vis an interactive projection installation on a building in the city of Montreal during the festival. We were also thrilled to learn that Modul8 was the tool of choice for delivering the video content of this project.

Through the magic of vimeo I was able to contact the people behind the installation and was therefore able to interview Daniel Iregui:

m8.us: First, tell us who you are and what you do.

Daniel: My name is Daniel Iregui and I am the founder of Iregular, an interactive
content creation studio based in Montreal. We create projects like interactive
installations, live visuals and experiential websites.

m8.us: How did this project come about?

Daniel: Mutek, the electronic music festival in Montreal, commissioned our
collaborators in the project Baillat Cardell & fils to create a project on the facade of a building. BC&F later contacted us, Iregular to make these projections interactive. What we decided to do was to adapt the web experience we did before (mutek.org/play) so that the public on the street could interact with installation. The result is Period.

m8.us:What was the creative process for its development? You had the design
first and this dictated the overall look and feel. What technical
elements came into play that altered the appearance of the graphic design?

Daniel: The father of Period. is Play (mutek.org/play), an experiential website
we did with BC&F for Mutek. We wanted to create an experience where the
audience could get the feeling of what the festival was but on the web.
Once we decided to make a large scale installation with the same concept
the look and feel was already done but we had to adapt it to the size of
the building, the angle we could project on, etc. Also now the project
was multiuser so this added a requirement of creating a way to have many
people interact at the same time. That is where the iPhone app came into
place… and that of course came with its own bag of challenges.

m8.us: What made Modul8 an indispensable part of the tools you used? How well
did it ‘play’ with the other tools used?

Daniel: We use Modul8 almost every time we do this kind of project because it
allows us to embed interactive sources (Flash/Quartz) and mix them with
video. It is also very easy to move assets around, rotate them, scale
them, etc… so mapping the projection on the building becomes very easy.

Daniel Irgui in front of the installation of Period at MUTEK
Photo credit: Adam Thompson

m8.us: Can you share any advice with our community about some of the caveats
involved in producing such a project that you think would be helpful?

Daniel: Yes, go to the location many times. Especially before the installation
of the project because, for example, trees grow. See how people get to
the location and determine how much they will interact with it. The
location is real and you have to work around it, so it is important to
know it very well.

m8.us: What other softwares did you use, and what were the protocols you used
to connect these other technologies to Modul8?

Daniel: For the whole installation we used Modul8. As for the play back of
content and mapping, Flash for the generative content, Max/MSP for the
data management, and web technologies for the iPhone interface. We
communicated with the Flash files inside Modul8 using OSC.

m8.us: What kind of projectors did you use?

Daniel:2x 22K Christies

m8.us: What was the turn around time for the project?

Daniel: 4 weeks.

m8.us: Were their other projects that came about as a result of doing this one?

Daniel: Yes. We took [Period] to Mexico and it was an amazing experience. We are
currently looking for other festivals to present it as well.

For more information about Iregular and their other projects go to see their website at their website: http://thisisiregular.com/.

Legoman paces MadMapper

Legoman in the Conges, Brussles

Seasoned projection artist Legoman, known for his layering of screens and collaborations with AntiVJ is one of the fortunate few who has had access to testing early alpha versions of MadMapper.

After receiving these images interviewed him briefly about his experience using the MadMapper in relation the the images.

<< start >>

md8: What what ideas you were trying to explore with the project?

Legoman: It was just a small unpretentious VJset. The evening was organized in a train station without any infrastructure for video, nothing to hang something from the ceiling and without a big budget. The idea was to find a easy way to integrate video into the site without needing a complicated and expensive technical system. Therefore we chose to project onto the ceiling with 2 wery wide angle projectors placed on the ground.

Legoman Modul8/MadMapper screeshot

md8: How did the MadMapper help you?

Legoman: The ceiling was composed of square tiles. To successfully integrate video into the place, we needed to map these tiles to create a kind of “video mosaic.” MadMapper helped us to quickly create this mosaic, correct the distortions of perspective, and make different presets of tiles. Without MadMapper it it would have been very hard to do that as quickly and efficiently.

The result was artistically very interesting and surprising. The sofware has allowed us to very well integrated in the place visuals not created especially for this event.

<< end >>

The point best illustrated in this article is how easy it is to create mappings with the MadMapper while using your existing content within Modul8. Creating something truly site specific still takes a lot of work, and that is true in most cases anyway, the MadMapper does allow for a more spontaneous mode of exploring this fast growing area of projection art.