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Archive for the 'interactive arts' Category

10th Annual Planetary Collegium International Research Conference, Consciousness Reframed: Art & Consciousness in the Post-biological Era: Experiencing Design – Behaving media

Title: 10th Annual Planetary Collegium International Research Conference, Consciousness Reframed: art and consciousness in the post-biological era
Experiencing Design, – Behaving media –
Partner and Host: MHMK (Macromedia) University of Applied Sciences Munich
The Consciousness Reframed conference series was founded by Roy Ascott at the University of Wales in 1997. It has subsequently been hosted [...]

Enactive Arts Open House

ENACTIVE ARTS OPEN HOUSE
FREE EVENT
EXPERIENCE:
•INTERACTIVE MEDIA INSTALLATIONS
•UNIQUE MOVEMENT AND MUSIC COMPOSITIONS
•INNOVATIVE WORK USING MOTION CAPTURE TECHNOLOGY
The Enactive Arts group (EA) of the Arts, Media and Engineering (AME) program is composed of faculty and students representing the disciplines of Psychology, Dance,
Music, Electrical Engineering, and Computer Science. The primary research goal of EA is to build an [...]

Nick Didkovsky Residency / Concert w/ AMP Ensemble

Nick Didkovsky Residency
Composition Seminar
Monday 27 March
1:30-3:00pm
ASU Music Department
Nick Didkovsky and the AMP Ensemble
Wednesday 29 March
7:30pm
Digital Arts Ranch
Nick Didkovsky is a guitarist, composer, and computer music
programmer. In 1983, he founded the avant-rock septet Doctor Nerve.
He presently resides in New York City, where he composes for Doctor
Nerve and other ensembles, programs music software, and teaches
computer music [...]

Motion Analysis meeting on Thursday, Dec 1st

This is a brief summary of the MA meeting that took place on December 1st.
First, Harvey started throwing chairs around the room and screaming something about applications, while Jodi and I watched. Then Gang came and calmed Harvey down, and we got to business.
I presented some initial work on getting features from motion capture [...]

space-time narratives

I just finished reading edward tufte’s remarkable book Envisioning Information – he makes a compelling case for rethinking notation and visualization of dance movement. In general, there is a lot of exciting research to be done in summarizing human activity in physical spaces, both in terms of communicating through flat displays (e.g. [...]