Posts Tagged ‘seaquence’

Seaquence & Gray Area in the News- ABC

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

by Richard Hart
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — In San Francisco’s Tenderloin district, social networks are leading to “social artworks.”

In a brand new gallery and workspace, a community of designers is networking artware and software. It is the latest creation in the drive to discover a new art form.

“So, here you see this grid,” said Daniel Massy. “You can sort of fill it in with notes.”

On a 15-foot wall projection, Massey recently composed music using a tool developed with fellow artists Ryan Alexander and Gabriel Dunne. It’s called Seaquence and it is at the intersection of music and images.

With it, you can build a sea creature by creating music or create music by building a creature. Changing the attack, sustain and decay envelope of the music changes the body of your creature.

Seaquence is the latest project of Gray Area, an organization brightening up one corner of San Francisco’s Tenderloin. Josette Melchor is its Executive Director.

“Gray Area Foundation for the Arts is a non-profit,” she explains. “We’re dedicated to building social consciousness through digital culture.”

Gray Area exhibits interactive works such as Robert Hodgin’s new liquid screen installation and a laser scanner/projector by Aaron Koblin.

The next step is to exploit social networks. For example, two artists are using Gray Area to develop a web app to annotate works of art socially. Seaquence is also destined for the web, Daniel Massey promises.

“The idea is to create this environment in which people could collectively, online, create music and share music with each other in a playful way,” he says. “So, it takes on almost a game feel to it.”

If you can’t buy it the way you’d buy a painting or sculpture, how do you know when this kind of art is a success?

“I guess you could see how many page views you have,” Melchor laughs. “Or YouTube streams!”

In the end, she points out that good art spreads whether networked or not.

“It continues to further the community and further this kind of study, and get the word out so we’re able to get more people involved. It’s spreading. It’s social,” she says.

After all, Tweets are music too.

You can drop by the Gray Area installation to inspect Seaquence before it goes to the web.

Resident Artist Symposium

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

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Join us, this Thursday, January 28th, at 7PM, for our Resident Artist Symposium, where Gray Area’s first resident artists will share processes and concepts behind both personal and collaborative works. The evening will begin with individual artist presentations, followed by a short Q&A.

Gray Area Foundation For the Arts
55 Taylor
Thursday, January 28th
7PM – 9PM

ARTISTS:

Alphonzo Solorzano:
Recent mixed media works and wall installation titled The Future was Now uses iconography from early 1900′s auto ads. Vintage images, typoghrapghy, and slogans are used to create an alternate history to explore and challenge our interpretation of time and progress.

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Daniel Massey:
Light Speak is an installation that transmits images through the medium of light. Images are captured outside throughout the day, and relayed as morse code pulses through a series of distributed models. Pixel by pixel, the images are reconstructed.

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Gabriel Dunne:
Created with custom displays and original software, Gabriel’s works explore micro and macro systems of nature, technology, and perception.

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Miles Stemper:
Miles uses the digitization of brushstrokes to create a series of abstracted icon paintings. Geometry forms the structure of these works because it is dictated by the same criteria of function communication as technology: geometry is efficiency of form, an articulate representation of space

miles

Ryan Alexander:
Ryan’s work is a combination of ideas and systems created in the last two years. Laser fabrication and projection mapping are used to create a glowing gourd.

ryan

PROTOTYPE Installation Timelapse from GAFFTA on Vimeo.

Tendorama installation: SEAQUENCE

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

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Gray Area Foundation for the Arts is pleased to announce the arrival of Seaquence: an exciting original collaboration from three GAFFTA Resident Artists and the second featured composition in our ongoing Tendorama window gallery series.

Developed on-site by Gray Area Resident Artists Gabriel Dunne, Ryan Alexander and Daniel Massey, Seaquence explores interaction and collaboration through visual, musical and social web technologies.

Seaquence will make its physical debut in the Taylor St. Tendorama window gallery space with a special installation reception and beta testing party at GAFFTA on Saturday, December 5th, 2009 from 7pm-10pm

Help spread the word on Twitter and Facebook.

About Seaquence:

Seaquence is a social music project that allows people to create and consume short musical compositions in a unique interactive online environment. The musical patterns in Seaquence are represented as biologically-inspired life forms which are both heard and seen. Different musical sounds in each composition are visualized as unique character traits in each life-form. In addition to navigating and exploring through this field of micro compositions and sequences, users can also create, publish and share ‘Seaquences’ of their own via the native sequencer and synthesizer tools.

Installation Overview:

The Seaquence installation includes a physical step-sequencer made up of 256 individual buttons and RGB LED’s which are linked to audio and projected visuals. This button array allows people to compose musical patterns through the native Seaquence instruments, which can then be published to the Seaquence world. Audio and video is routed to the exterior of the Tendorama installation space on Taylor St, encouraging the public to hear and see the installation from the outside through the window glass. Window graphics will be designed to prompt the public to enter the gallery space to experience and participate in the project directly.

During and following the physical installation, Seaquence will live online via a dedicated, publicly accessible website.

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