Research Journal
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August 27, 2010
Mesocosm (Northumberland UK), NEW almost-final work
OK I just updated the page and files.
This is the latest, almost done.The brilliant Veronique Brossier is working with me to create all the new code for this new piece I began in 09/09 at Eyebeam, and it’s in great shape.
Check out the work in progress here. It’ll probably take a while to load.
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August 21, 2010
Mesocosm Prints (in progress)
I am working on large format archival prints this summer/fall from the behemoth formerly known as The Friend Feeder, now to be titled Mesocosm (Northumberland). Thanks Timothy Morton for introducing me to the term. Morton, ‘dark ecologist’ looking at literature, ambient poetics, ecocriticism (and more), authored two texts I find really clarifying and expansive: the book Ecology without Nature , and an amazing essay, Queer Ecology. He also keeps two blogs:
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August 1, 2010
Fantastic Creatures and more Real world faeries!
Tags:(via Sue Morgan, from Pink Tentacle):
Gensou Hyouhon Hakubutsukan (“Museum of Fantastic Specimens”) is an online collection of creatures “curated” by Hajime Emoto. The three-story virtual museum consists of 9 rooms chock full of water- and land-dwelling monstrosities from all corners of the globe.
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July 29, 2010
HEAT records set in the u.s. (in us), 2010
Tags:I find it amazing and exhausting that people are surprised about The Weather. But then there are those who make silk purses out of it, like pollution magnate David Koch:
“Global warming could be good for the planet, Koch says. ‘A far greater land area will be available to produce food.’”
– from New York Magazine, via Climate Progress (continued below)“Lengthened growing seasons in the northern hemisphere, he says, will make up for any trauma caused by the slow migration of people away from disappearing coastlines. “The Earth will be able to support enormously more people because a far greater land area will be available to produce food,” he says.”
Koch is a major supporter of deregulation and the Tea Party. Koch’s Family Foundation’s philanthropic arm funded a permanent exhibition at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History: the David H. Koch Hall of Human Origins, cancer research, and the arts (Lincoln Center’s State Theater has been renamed after him)…
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June 14, 2010
Rand Paul doesn’t think we’ll miss a couple of little mountaintops…
Tags:Words from Mr Paul on Kentucky coal mining:
I think whoever owns the property can do with the property as they wish, and if the coal company buys it from a private property owner and they want to do it, fine. The other thing I think is that I think coal gets a bad name, because I think a lot of the land apparently is quite desirable once it’s been flattened out. As I came over here from Harlan, you’ve got quite a few hills. I don’t think anybody’s going to be missing a hill or two here and there.
And some people like having the flat land. Some of it apparently has become quite valuable when it’s become flattened. And I think they do a good job at reclaiming the land, and you know, adding back in topsoil, bringing in help. So the bottom line is, it’s not just me pandering to coal. It’s me believing in private property.
Video interview here:
http://crooksandliars.com/david-neiwert/rand-paul-mountaintop-removal-i-don -
June 12, 2010
Vegetation shift Map, 2100
Tags:A study conducted by scientists from the University of California, Berkeley and the U.S. Forest Service projects major vegetation shifts worldwide if greenhouse gas emissions are not brought under control and the Earth continues to rapidly warm. The study forecasts that by 2100 much of Arctic tundra will replaced by boreal forest and that deserts will spread in regions such as North America, Australia, and Central and South Asia. – from environment360
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May 11, 2010
The Friend Feeder
I’m ready enough to post this work in progress of a new animation project, The Friend Feeder.
The Friend Feeder is based on the figure of Leigh Bowery from a painting by Lucien Freud. He’s a sort of ür British green man, watching out over the moors of Northumberland.
Using a probability system, non-linear animated sprites come and go from the stage. Ultimately, all four seasons will unfold over a 146 hour long cycle.
If you click on the link, a file will load that shows summer only – disregard the time stamp at the top of the frame. It begins at midnight.
It’s still fairly buggy – but it’s running. There are day animals and night animals, and some weather input at the moment. The man is stationary, until I film reference footage of the inimitable Lawrence Goldhüber this week.
Here’s some information on the project:
While a Resident artist at Eyebeam Art + Technology in New York this fall, I began developing a non-linear animation system with software artist Jeff Crouse; we are almost finished building the shell of a Flash ActionScript based system that will allow me direct input of animation components.
Actually, we started on this in 2008 as an OpenFrameworks project. But after a year or so, realized it was too much like emulating Flash. So heeeere we are.
In this first incarnation of the work, I am building a very long animated cycle that represents one year of real time: animated objects are placed on a stage, and code determines the frequency and order of their appearance. No cycle is identical to the last, because the appearance of characters and seasonal weather are based on probability. One year of narrative time is condensed into a 146-hour cycle:
1 real-time hour : 1 animation minute
1 day : 24 minutes
1 season : 36.5hours
1 year : 146 animation hours
Seasons unfold, snows fall, days pass and moons rise, animals come and go. We do not know if the man in the garden is alive or some kind of magical food: he sits naked, day in and day out, and offers his body as nourishment to the garden feeders. Fog, vehicles, mythical nature pass through and have various interactions on stage, sometimes absurdly (like the 1% chance that a flock of Fairies will pass through on a Midsummer night). -
May 11, 2010
Love
My cousin Pejk Malinowski sent me this poem last night by Robert Creeley. I am smitten.
Love
The thing comes
of itself(Look up
to see
the cat & the squirrel,
the one
torn, a red thing,
& the other
somehow immaculate)– Robert Creeley