Posts Tagged ‘art’

April Soft Circuit Workshop!

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

For those of you who may have missed registration for our last Soft Circuit workshop, we have good news! Grace Kim will be instructing another beginner Soft Circuit workshop this April!

Schedule:
Saturday, April 17th & Saturday, April 24th || 1PM-6PM

Description:
Soft Circuit will cover basics of wearable technology. Workshop participants will be given a historical overview of wearables in the context of fashion, art, and technology. Instructor Grace Kim will share basic sewing and embroidery techniques and tips on how to repurpose everyday sewing procedure for use in wearables projects. Students will be given project-based instruction on basic circuitry and will construct soft circuits using conductive thread and fabric. No prior experience with electronics or sewing required. All materials and fees are included. Limited space available.

Day One:
History and context
Measuring energy
Creating a circuit on a breadboard
Soft circuit basics
Embroidery basics
Workshop time: make an LED wristband
Assignment: prototype a concept of an exaggerated sense

Day Two:
Class presentations
Introduction to resistance (including how to use a multimeter)
Introduction to sensors
Introduction to switches (including how to turn everyday sewing notions into switches)
Email inquiries to: education [at] gaffta [dot] org

April Soft Circuit Workshop Registration:

Please note: There are no refunds If you are unable to make the workshop and cancel in less 7 days prior to the scheduled class time- You will receive a credit for another class at Gray Area.





Roman Witt Residency Program, University of Michigan

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Artist: Michele Oka Doner
photo credit: Rex Larsen

Deadline Type: fixed
Deadline: 2/1/2010
Call Type: Residencies, Workshops, Exchanges
Eligibility: International

CALL FOR PROPOSALS
The mission of the Roman Witt Residency Program is to support the production of new work with assistance from the School of Art & Design community. The program awards one residency per academic year for a visiting artist/designer to work at the school to develop a new work in collaboration with students and faculty. A centerpiece of the residency is the open studio, a centrally located studio space that is part of the school’s main gallery where the resident carries out work in a public domain. This public visibility of the artist’s process is intended as an exemplary teaching tool for the school as a whole. The residency is expected to culminate in the realization of the proposed work, as well as a presentation that summarizes the process and work accomplished.

GUIDELINES FOR WITT RESIDENCY PROPOSALS

Eligibility
The Witt Residency is open to both established and emerging artists/designers. Applicants must be collaborative by nature, have good social and communication skills and be interested in generating creative partnerships across disciplines. It is the goal of the Witt Residency to foster an atmosphere of inventive creative activity that extends throughout the University community.

Honorarium
Witt Residents receive an honorarium of $20,000 for up to twelve weeks in residence served over an academic year. There is flexibility in how the time in residence is apportioned. In addition to the honorarium, residents will be provided with housing, studio space, and up to $5,000 funding support for project materials.

How To Apply
Proposals should delineate in one to three pages the nature and course of the project, including research currently in progress and an estimate of the time required to bring the project to fruition. The proposal must include a description of how the project will address the school’s non-media specific curriculum, incorporate students and benefit the community. It should outline the equipment needs vital to the project’s success and, where possible, indicate how the resources of the University of Michigan will facilitate successful project completion. Please include a detailed budget of anticipated project expenses for the residency.

All proposals should be accompanied by a current curriculum vitae or resume and representative examples of the candidate’s work (DVD’s, CD’s or other appropriate materials). Application materials will not be returned.

Application Schedule
Proposals Due – February 1, 2010
Selection Committee Review – February, 2010
Selection Committee reviews materials and selects finalists to interview. Applicants will receive email notification, so please be sure to include your correct email address in your proposal.
Interviews – March/April, 2010
Notification – May 1, 2010

Contact
Chrisstina Hamilton
Director, Witt Visiting Artist Program

School of Art and Design
University of Michigan
2000 Bonisteel Blvd
Ann Arbor, MI 48109

Email: chrissti@umich.edu
Tel: (734) 764 3464
Fax: (734) 615 9753
URL: http://art-design.umich.edu/

UCLA Art|Sci: Rubisco Stars, SETI Molecules and the Paradox of Scale

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

rubisco01

January 15, 2010:
Noon to 2PM

UCLA Art|Sci center + lab presents:
“Rubisco Stars, SETI Molecules and the Paradox of Scale”
Joe Davis, MIT; Daniëlle Hofmans, Center for Art and Genomics, Amsterdam; Ashley Clark, Massachusetts College of Art

In the 1980s, poetic and philosophical implications of the serious, scientific search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) helped to inspire pioneering work in a new field of molecular biology art. This presentation will draw together ideas about radio, lasers, genetics, sculpture, mathematics, natural language, history and the nature of discovery itself.

C(N)SI Auditorium:
map

Parking is available in Lot 9, all day parking $10.
more…

NPR: Science Friday + Frank Oppenheimer

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Frank Oppenheimer

Profiling Frank Oppenheimer

Author K.C. Cole writes about physicist and Exploratorium-founder Frank Oppenheimer in Something Incredibly Wonderful Happens. Cole, a friend of Oppenheimer’s, digs into FBI files and personal memories to describe the complex man also called the “Uncle of the Atomic Bomb.” Originally broadcast Aug. 7, 2009.

NPR:Transcript

more Science Friday fun…

Equilibrium Sensorium (Science/Art/Music)

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

fivesenses-clean

Equilibrium is a monthly party series that blends a mix of Science, Art, and Music around a new theme each month. This month Equilibrium‘s theme is “the Five Senses”. Events start this Friday, Nov. 6.

Talks
- FutureSense: Technologically Augmented Senses with Matt Bell & Eric Boyd
- 8 Synesthesiatic Experience in 8 Minutes by Bryan Alvarez
- The Neuroscience of Vision by Jascha Sohl-Dickstein
- Chocolate and Technology with Timothy Childs

Art
-Painted Scores and Live Performance with Amanda Schoofs
-Light Painting by Ed Hsu http://www.edihsu.com

Music
- Fat basslines, wobbles, and beats by Rodman (aka LUX)

International Festival for Arts and Media, Yokohama

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

International Festival for Arts and Media Yokohama 2009 – oct. 31 – nov. 29

During the 150th anniversary year of the Yokohama port opening, the city is hosting the International Festival for Arts and Media Yokohama 2009 as part of the Creative City Yokohama initiative. The festival embraces a variety of different fields, including, but not limited to, contemporary art, media art, computer graphics, animation, film and photography. This event is not restricted to the confines of an art or film festival, but aims at becoming a new breed of festival that will push the boundaries of media and art as we know them. Approximately fifty artists in and out of Japan will participate in the festival. Works related to moving images from a wide range of genres will be presented together in Yokohama.

Participating Artists 87 artists / groups from 16 countries

Chantal Akerman / ART LAB OVA / CHANNEL CREAM / Chris Chong Chan Fui / Fujihata Masaki / Graffiti Research Lab / Hachiya Kazuhiko / Duane Hopkins / Izumi Taro / Alfredo Jaar / Jung Yeondoo / Lim Minouk / Christian Marclay / Aernout Mik / Nomura Makoto & Nomura Yukihiro / Nakazawa Hideki / Eko Nugroho / Paulien Oltheten / Steven Pippin / Walid Raad / remo / Sato Masahiko / Shiga Lieko / SHIMURABROS. / Michael Snow / Sun Xun / Fiona Tan / Urban meme project / Pablo Valbuena / Edwin van der Heide / Wang Jian Wei / Apichatpong Weerasethakul / Yamakawa Fuyuki / Yangachi / Yasuno Taro / Artur Żmijewski

Symposium on Art & Technology, Connecticut College

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Ammerman Center of Arts and Technology, Connecticut College

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: THE TWELFTH BIENNIAL SYMPOSIUM ON ARTS AND TECHNOLOGY
MARCH 4-6, 2010

Revolution: “Technology as Change”

The mission of the symposium is for participants to present new works, research and performances in the areas of technology and the arts. The symposium will consist of commissioned works, paper sessions, panel discussions, exhibitions, concerts, film screenings and multi-media performances. In an effort to demystify the artistic process and create a forum for dialogue, we are encouraging all presenters and artists whose works are being shown or performed to speak about their work at the symposium. In addition, artists and researchers are encouraged to relate work to a wider context and engage in critical debate. The Center seeks submissions in the general areas of Innovative Uses of New Technologies, Interactivity, Compositional and Artistic Process, Technology in Arts Education, Interdisciplinary Topics in Arts and Technology including: Art, Music, Video, Film, Animation, Theater, Dance, Virtual Reality, Computer Science, and other pertinent topics.

The Buckminster Fuller Challenge

Monday, September 28th, 2009

“If success or failure of the planet and of human beings depended on how I am and what I do… How would I be? What would I do?”
—Buckminster Fuller

For The Buckminster Fuller Challenge, presented by the Buckminster Fuller Institute, a distinguished jury awards a $100,000 prize to support the development and implementation of a strategy that has significant potential to solve humanity’s most pressing problems. Entries are now being accepted and the deadline is midnight, Eastern Time on October 30, 2009.

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Proposed projects must primarily address two of the following issues :

  • communication and media
  • community and social systems
  • economy and livelihood
  • education
  • energy
  • environmental health
  • food systems
  • human health
  • human rights
  • materials and resources
  • shelter and built environment
  • transportation
  • water


The Idea Index is a searchable repository for entries from previous years. It currently contains over 200 innovative solutions addressing the world’s most pressing problems including, sustainability, education, art, health, data visualization, communication, water systems, ecology, social systems, collaboration, community, food, and many more.

via http://challenge.bfi.org/

Bruce Conner exhibition at Gallery Paule Anglim

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Bruce Conner


TOTEMS, NOVEMBER 15, 1981
1981
Ink on paper
22 1/4” x 30”

Bruce Conner has become a central figure in the evolution of new media and unconventional art forms, providing contemporary art with radical and iconic approaches. From film, photography, painting, drawing and printmaking to found object/found media appropriations Conner’s unexpected drawings, sculptures, collages and assemblages defined an otherworldly state of consciousness.

Conner’s work is process-oriented and can be considered a main influence to contemporary algorithmic and computational art-making approaches.

Now showing at Gallery Paule Anglim at Geary at Market in San Francisco from September 8th to October 10, 2009

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