Presentation at SCOPE [Berlin]


I will be doing a presentation this evening in Berlin as part of the SCOPE series. The series focuses on artists working in this area of live digital media. The last session included some of my colleagues, Aude Françoise and David Szauder (aka Pixelnoizz), both regularly have Modul8 in there toolbox.

My presentation will be about the self made loops and found media I have been using for my VJ sets in the past 5 or 6 years. The media has changed and at the same time grown in that time, but not by very much. At the current time there are 94 pieces of media. I will talk about each one of them as pretty much each one of them as a small story and/or philosophy behind its existence. All of the media was designed with the intention of being used in Modul8.

All of this is in preparation for my retiring all of this media. Where I will go next, and how I will go about it? I have no idea. What I do know is that I will be making all of these media that I have created available for free under a Creative Commons license. I will post about it here when it is all ready.

Sharing this evening with me will be Peter Kirn, of the blog Create Digital Motion who will show us some fun with creating art with code. If you are in Berlin and have some time to spare come over to Atelier Überall. See the Facebook event page for details and location.

Video Art

Everything we see has a precedent, and this especially true of the visuals world. Sometimes the preceding work can actually can be more portent because of its pioneering processes. Before I got involved with video I spent some time programming. This craft lead me to a brief period at a company that, amongst its usual printers and servers had a small sound studio with a rack of equipment that looked a bit out of place, notably for using wood, nameless silver knobs and patch chords. I was informed that this strange rack was actually used for mixing.

Matthew Schlanger was the co-owner of this company where I was working and also the person who built and made art with this video mixing rack. Several years later, the company occupied a larger space and adorning the walls were paintings made from his video generated imagery.

Fast forward to a few days ago and I receive a message from Matthew. He is coming to Berlin because a gallery is showing his work and he is a huge fan of Modul8!

The show is tomorrow and you can connect to the facebook event here.

Last night Matthew showed me an experiment he had done with Modul8. Right on the first frame I knew right away that this was not a logical render. His immediate response was ‘yeah, I am all analog. I had this running through…’ and he proceeded to explain the processes and devices that he used to enhance this image. He apologized for the thin white, dotted line on the far right edge and I demanded that he not do so for the very fact validates that this is ‘real’ analog signal.

Due to the magic of the internet and YouTube Matthew has posted many of his works prior to the digital video revolution. Take a break and have a look.

*** Brief update ***
At the request of twitter follower Matthew has added information about how he processes the signal that we see in the above video.

SCREENPLAY.CHB in Berlin

Modul8 is a proud supporter of SCREENPLAY at the Collegium Hungaricum Berlin This one night only event will feature a variety of seasoned artists working in the field of live cinema, many of whom have found Modul8 to be an essential tool for expressing their ideas through live video performance.

April 9th from 14h00 until 02h00?
Ungarisches Kulturinstitut
Dorotheenstraße 12
10117 Berlin

For further info: http://chb.screenplaynights.com/

Silant.f.RED

Mid last month my friend fRED was approached by some colleagues of his to create an installation for one night in a new working space here in Berlin called House Of Clouds. There idea was to have an open house followed by a party to promote the space. For fRED and I to work together, an opportunity to have a free creative hand, test out the MadMapper and work with another friend, ElectricKettle who does breakcore music but has been interested in collaborating with me on something for a long time.

Installation at the 2011 Chaos Computer Congress in Berlin

Prior to this project fRED and I did some VJing together and when the MadMapper emerged for me in its incubative form he used it at this years Chaos Computer Congress. He and I were both interested in using wood. I have seen this used before. MXZEHN explored this type of material and I had seen other examples, namely a huge structure created in one of the previous editions of Burning Man. The above photos is almost all I have of the structure sans the projections on it as I did not stay for the event due to a heavy workload at the time.

silant.f.red.space

fRED and I reviewed the photos provided by House Of Clouds and decided on a particular room, the one pictured above. We liked the stage and the distances from it to the walls appeared to be appropriate for the distances that were needed to get a decent projection on the sculpture I had in mind.

Our initial impression of the room was dictated by photos provided. If there is no person standing in the space while the photo is taken, and there wasn’t then one can have no sense of proportion. When we finally got to see it in person it was a lot larger then we thought and I was a little worried that the sculpture I had in mind would be too small.

We measured the entire space using a handy little laser measuring device from BOSCH. I highly recommend getting one of these. Gone are the days when you have to use a measuring tape where someone has to hold the other end. Just place the base of the BOSCH device on the wall, press a button and the laser measures the distance between the two walls.

view #1

With these measurements fRED created a 3D model. The above is a rendering that helped up pre-visualise what we were getting into.

Conceptually I really wanted to work with a free standing structure with horizontal and vertical lines. I knew that visually, because our eyes see things in perspective, that it would still be chaotic looking. I also wanted to break away from the one point perspective and allow people to walk around the structure and look at it from various perspectives. That there are no large surfaces was part of my desire to move away from the ‘image’ projected on a surface akin to film and allow the viewer to create their own ‘image’ by observing the structure as it was transformed by light and sound.

I also was not interested in performing with the installation. I wanted to see if we could create an engaging and dynamic enough experience that was a video loop where nobody would realize it was a video loop. An ambient room that will allow people to stay there for a bit, go away, come back and never realize that there is a beginning, middle or end.

While we were working on the model I met up with ElectricKettle and I discussed some of the sounds I wanted him to create. I had some specific ideas, sounds that would created the impression of the structure disappearing and reappearing. I demonstrated these ideas by imitating what I had in my mind to him: ‘whoooooosh…. boooo’ and so on.

Naked wood

We were lucky to have the space three days prior to the date of the event. The first day we would build and set up the projectors, the second day work on the mapping and the animations and the third day, the day of the installation, we would put in the finishing touches.

By using exact measurements from the 3D modeler we were using, fRED was able to somewhat accurately recreate what we had visualized and in the end the sculpture appeared to fill the space more then we imagined, with a few minor alterations due to the throw of the projectors we had not being wide enough.

TITLE

The MadMapper made it extremely easy to do what we wanted to do in a fraction of the time it usually takes to do it. During the night the shelves we created for the projectors ‘settled’ and while it was still a bit of work it was not nearly as much work if we had used any other tool I can think of.

Total_v02-(0.02.41

Production wise I used a traditional compositing animation tool that I will not name here. The above is a frame I grabbed of how we created the file so that we could create segments of color and form that we would use as sources in MadMapper. It was a rather abstract way of working that was a nice exercise for the mind that thankfully created a sensation in the final output, that is, what was projected onto the sculpture. In a previous installation I used a whole series of loops and triggered them using a timeline in Ableton Live with two MacBook Pros, the network module slaved to the more powerful laptop of the two I had. The problem with this was that inevitably the audio would not sync up properly with the triggering of the loops. The audience did not see it, but I did. Since I did not want to work with loops I went for creating big video with audio so that nothing would go out of sync. Having a Mac Pro It also made me think of how I really need to think about some better tools for this kind of thing.

150 quads

We used up to 150 quads for this project. I am not sure if anyone else in our internal test team has done this, and it definitely was not part of any particular goal. The main goals being to create a work made entirely by the members of the collaboration, to get as much of the piece ready given the time that we had and still create something that people could experience without noticing any particular beginning, middle or end, and finally document it properly.

This documentation process is very important to me. For me it has always been difficult to get it right. I took a lot of time lapse photos, but I also took a lot of video footage. In the end the time lapses were much more befitting the vision I had. I was not so much interested in trying to replicate the experience as I don’t think that is really possible, but more to create documentation that was an art piece in itself.

I think I could probably write a whole lot of ideas here about the project, but this has already gone on much too long.

Now with this project behind us we have learned several things. First, I have found a team of people whom I can share a common vision with, each of us know our roles and how to best fulfill them. We also all have an excitement and vision of what we want to do when we get together again for the next project. One experience will build on the next and I look forward to sharing it.

Oh so pragmatic. Quick glimpses.

CHB berlin 2010: David Szauder
This past week was Bread & Butter here in Berlin , the international fashion fair. And what is a fashion fair without after parties and visuals to decorate these events where new trends are concocted and consumed simultaneously? A series of photos by Kriszta Turna provide a glimpse of a setup by David Szauder for a Custo after party at CHB in Berlin. David (aka Pixel Noizz) works a lot with Quartz Composer and Flash and was able to integrate these elements together quickly in order to have control over the atmosphere in the entire room. Color plays an important part in mood and this series of photos demonstrate Davids understanding of what is necessary in order to acheive this. David says “I was able to bring together my material quickly, QC compositions, .swf files, still images. No MIDI controller, mouse or any other external device. Amazing how quick and simple it was to put everything together. On top of that the client was really happy with the results.”

So layerset
I recently modified my keyboard. Look closely. I don’t need to look at the keys anymore when I type, but when I am using my keyboard to control modul8 I like to have an alternate way of changing layer sets and for this I use the 1 through 8 keys. Fine for the numbered keys that control group A. But what about group B? The solution? Grab the 1 through 8 keys from my older, backup laptop and swap them out.

T-shirt production line in place
Our recent move gave us access to more space and finally ready is the production space for t-shirt printing and box assembly.

Kab, Interferenze party installation
Installation, created by Fred from the Le Zoo crew in the Kab club for last weekends 4th edition of the Drum & Bass + Hardtek party. It was a 4 output setup with a Mac Pro. Connected the MacBook Pro in FireWire transfer mode so I could use my own system. Most charming. The tech was pretty much the last minute and setups were scrambled for at the last minute yielded the following setup:

nanoKontrol-m8
After creating compositions with all of the layer sets using the library of foreground material at my disposal it was just a matter of re-arranging layer sets over time for variety sake.

If anyone has their own Korg NanoKontrol that they want to share please let me know. Would be fun to see what other people are doing with the same controller and I would gladly test them out and then post them here.

signage
Finally would like to give a big thanks to Visual Berlin and fh.Meppen as well as all who attended the workshop this past Saturday. It was a small but very friendly group of people. Not only did they have a lot of good questions that kept things rolling along, they also communicated with each other giving the whole thing a sort of communal affair. There have been a few requests to do another. Likely in August. So if you are interested in a workshop, live in Berlin or happen to be coming to Berlin this summer please be sure to communicate so we can all get together.