22 April 2007

I o' D





Intaglio of the Day


1 of a series coming from drawing a blank as to what an image might
be (upon preparing a set of plates), and then seeing a fingerprint
embedded in the asphaltum ground on the plate...its magnification.

fwd: save the wails/ a petition

Hi, it's Tim from Pandora,

I'm writing today to ask for your help. The survival of Pandora and all of Internet radio is in jeopardy because of a recent decision by the Copyright Royalty Board in Washington, DC to almost triple the licensing fees for Internet radio sites like Pandora. The new royalty rates are irrationally high, more than four times what satellite radio pays, and broadcast radio doesn't pay these at all. Left unchanged, these new royalties will kill every Internet radio site, including Pandora.

In response to these new and unfair fees, we have formed the SaveNetRadio Coalition, a group that includes listeners, artists, labels and webcasters. I hope that you will consider joining us.

Please sign our petition urging your Congressional representative to act to save Internet radio: http://capwiz.com/saveinternetradio/issues/alert/?alertid=9631541

Please feel free to forward this link/email to your friends - the more petitioners we can get, the better.

Understand that we are fully supportive of paying royalties to the artists whose music we play, and have done so since our inception. As a former touring musician myself, I'm no stranger to the challenges facing working musicians. The issue we have with the recent ruling is that it puts the cost of streaming far out of the range of ANY webcaster's business potential.

I hope you'll take just a few minutes to sign our petition - it WILL make a difference. As a young industry, we do not have the lobbying power of the RIAA. You, our listeners, are by far our biggest and most influential allies.

As always, and now more than ever, thank you for your support.

tim_signature.jpg
-Tim Westergren
(Pandora founder)

21 April 2007

GMF



Just a belated congrats to Flash's
entry into the Hall of Fame. A lifetime
of "never touching the grooves, but rather
always the side of the record"
...



White Lines for the ears (realplayer req.)

19 April 2007

some revised Americana writing from 360 days ago and a picture of the sky after 4 days of rain

Washington, Allston, Eatonia- greenest of the greengrass then
shymy dew caught on barely blossoms now, the different academics,
differently walking than talking and on to Camino Real- the ROYAL
PATH by the new england where they buy gold cause more than
paper does it weigh
the only new garage doors on the block,
we had a guy come paint them that green of Fenway hinges
left black, looks sharp now we rent them out a sixteen year old
towing a hummer first job, mother still in apron, wipes her
hands from dough
the balcony over
the enclosed alley they just throw things there-
food scraps, papers, whatever- the younger brother
recounts these stories and can barely supress laughter,
the older one wishes he hadn't (friends) the sound of Portuguese,
not
turning around to see the source it's all very much like a sketch
for a pristine tank someone long ago drew up, a museum tank, never
to be used, little dashes
where light falls, fit to be the treasury engraver,
and everything dissipates with the same cadence as the engine below
falls into neutral

from one point,
John Hancock was to be seen from the best, elegantest angle
our arc of triumph at the end of the avenue, a deliberately
exaggerated vertical signature being eaten by fresh mist.















10 April 2007

easter, but more like april fool's






NB: NOT photoshop, but rather fine cakemaking skills

26 March 2007

Interview with Andy Zimmermann



Upon entering Andy Zimmermann's recent video installation at the
FPAC Gallery, an uncanny sense of time and space warping seems
to come over the viewer. Onto several plexiglass screens composed
to form a jagged wall plays a projection. The images- interiors,
landscapes, architectural fragments- all contain parts which move
slowly between being in and out of focus, playing with varying depths
of field. The factuality of the wall is at times forgotten, replaced by the
clarity of the projection, which articulates a tangible space- but in the
next moment, the rug is pulled out from under the viewer, leaving
only a vague atmosphere of light. Experientially, the piece is sublimely
engaging- sometimes leaving the viewer baffled, but in a wholesome fashion.






Curious about the ideas that went into this work, I interviewed
Andy about his recent show...


MK: The work of yours I've seen prior to this show was at your
thesis exhibition at MassArt. There, you had constructed what
seemed to be a mini-city, which you used as a canvas
for a projection; essentially, an object in a state of permanent
change. In the recent show, however, you seem to be more involved
with an idea of passage- the movement of the viewer seems to be of high
importance to the completing the experience of the work. Can you talk
about how the idea to build the installation evolved for you?


AZ: In my thesis exhibit I was also concerned with how the viewer
moved through the piece. I'm very interested in having projected images
occurring in three dimensions, and the best way for someone to
experience this is by moving around, and into, the piece. You are
right, however, that in Seven Songs, the piece at the FPAC Gallery, I
was dealing with a specific path which the viewer would follow. The
piece is designed to be seen first from outside the gallery, as you
are looking in through the large window and doorway from the
Channel Cafe. Then you walk alongside the piece as you come
through the door and move into the interior space.
The idea evolved as I myself spent time in the cafe. I couldn't
help noticing that people invariably spent a lot more time there,
waiting for a table, waiting to be served, eating, chatting, hanging
out, than they did looking at the art inside the gallery. I just
wanted to make my piece so that people could watch it while they were
eating lunch! I'm very interested in making video poems that have
some duration, have a little plot development, but most videos
installations are limited by the relatively short amount of time that
most viewers are willing to give such pieces when they are walking
through a gallery.
The three-dimensional aspect of the piece, the layers of frosted
plexiglass panels, the cloudy, out-of-focus effect created by
overlapping layers, the different sizes of the panels, all developed
out of the idea of structuring the space so that viewers experienced
the piece first from outside the gallery, and then saw it unfold as
they walked into it. This then guided the content of the songs
themselves, having to do with uncertainty, and illusion; of things
looking different from different angles; of the images ultimately
dissolving and disappearing as you come close to them and walk past
them.


MK : That makes sense...a propos the interactivity of the
transient audience (the audience that views the work from the cafe),
it actually sounds like an attempt break down
the so-called "fourth wall". For instance, the
fact that you have decided to project the "songs" in a random
sequence brings about a different sort of expectation on the casual
looker's part; a lesser one than, say, having the narrative of the
projection be sequential and cumulative. At the same time, my
impression was that the randomization carries with it the effect
of the images entering the viewer's awareness on a more
subconscious level. Was this intentional?


AZ
: You're right about the idea of the 'fourth wall'.
There were a couple of reasons behind the idea of making
the songs play in random order. One was to get around the
viewers' expectation that they could know when they had seen
the whole program; that they might then no longer need to
watch anymore. I wanted them to gradually become aware that
there might still be parts they had not yet seen. I liked the idea
that the piece would keep re-making itself; that even if the
individual parts had been seen, they were going to continue to
occur in new and different combinations, and therefore have a
slightly different meaning each time.
I thought about not only what the piece would be like for the person
who spent a lunch hour there, but also the people who worked there
every day. I wanted the piece to be enjoyable for them, and not oppressive.
Secondly, the piece is in some ways a political critique. It deals with
uncertainty, blurring of vision, things that disappear when you get close
to them. Just because it is called Number Five does not mean it comes
after Number Four. There is not one Number Three, there are two of
them, and three Number Fives. Just because you see it in print
doesn't mean it's true.


MK
: That's a very clever way of dealing with the issue of narrative;
the idea that the piece keeps remaking itself harks back to the notion
of the artwork as a being in itself . Backtracking a bit, can you talk
about your history as an artist, and how you came to the themes which
you are dealing with currently? Have you always been a video artist,
or is this something you arrived at via other media?


AZ
: I started as a painter; studied it in college. Went through a
long sequence of gradually using more and more relief elements on the
canvas, then shaped canvas, then making painted wall-sculptures.
These still had the aspect of an image painted onto a three-
dimensional surface. When these got heavy to the point of pulling the
bolts out of the wall, I started doing floor sculptures out of welded
steel, then outdoor sculptures. This was my focus for several years.
I came back to the idea of having images on the surfaces of the
sculpture when I started using digital photos printed out on buswrap
adhered to the flat surfaces of welded aluminum sculpture. Somehow,
the complexity of the illusion of depth in a picture layered onto the
actual depth of a three-dimensional structure has always fascinated me.
In 2001, I entered the MFA program at MassArt. There I pretty
quickly got the hang of using digital projectors and editing video
and sound. I brought it right back to my original impulse to make the
images happen not just on a plane, but three-dimensionally. I think
the theme that I've been exploring is the relationship between the
stationary material world, which doesn't change much from one day to
the next, represented by the sculpture, and the fleeting, flickering
sequences of our living moments, represented by the video
projections. In my working process, too, I find it satisfying to
spend time carefully planning and building the framework onto which I
will be projecting, and then allowing the video and sound work to be
more improvisational and spontaneous.


MK: That sounds like a very organic trajectory. It reminds me of
something Robert Morris wrote:

"The trouble with painting is not its inescapable illusionism per se.
But this inherent illusionism brings with it a non-actual elusiveness
or indeterminate allusiveness. The mode has become antique.
Specifically, what is antique about it is the divisiveness of
experience which marks on a flat surface elicit.
There are obvious cultural and historical reasons as to why this
happens. For a long while the duality of thing and allusion sustained
itself under the force of profuse organizational innovations within the
work itself. But it has worn thin and its premises cease to convince.
Duality of experience is not direct enough. That which has ambiguity
built into it is not acceptable to an empirical and pragmatic outlook.
That the mode itself (rather than the lagging quality) is in default,
seems to be shown by the fact that some of the best painting today
does not bother to emphasize actuality or literalness though the
shaping of the support."

And this was written in 1967! I guess I'm just trying to point out
that there is a tendency- almost an inevitability- within those who
have worked in the two-dimensional, to branch out, become curious
about the potency of more tangible media. Based on what you've
described as your history, it seems your work mirrors this condition,
and it's remarkable to see where you have arrived- coming from a
painting background.

Lastly: (and this one's a bit virtual)
Describe your idea of what the ultimate installation would be.
I mean, one you would create. Realizable, or not...


AZ
: An interesting question! I find myself thinking in something like
religious terms. On entering the ultimate installation, the viewer
would be re-born, would suddenly have a deeper, more intense
perception of reality; "…was blind, but now can see!"
It’s a funny puzzle that, to get the sensation of experiencing the
whole of reality more deeply, one has to experience specifics and
details. It is by learning more details that we know we are seeing
more than we saw before. So, that leads me back from the
ultimate installation to the regular installation, one which has
specifics and details which are new to the viewer, and leads to a new
way of apprehending those specific ideas. That, in turn, makes the
viewer realize that it is possible to be, and to actually become,
more conscious than s/he was before that moment. That, ultimately, is
all I hope to accomplish.



more work by Andy Zimmermann can be seen at www.andyzimmermann.com

21 March 2007

19 March 2007

D o' D




Drawing of the Day

On entropy.

14 March 2007

"All right, act natural, everybody"



The governor is beginning to look a little pissed.

Could it be because at a press conference yesterday, he was asked whether his wife's entry into the hospital for exhaustion/depression would make him consider stepping down from his post? Don't those reporters know that even the bike couriers downtown are sporting Patrick stickers on their bikes?

Anyway, let's hope the Dukakis ghost doesn't stay around for long...

08 March 2007

Pulling a Scooter Libby (let's call it a Scooty)

So, this band Arcade Fire is pulling some pretty clever pr tricks for
their newly-released (yesterday in N. America) album, Neon Bible.

Reportedly, the Canadian baroque-pop group accidentally leaked
the wrong single
from their forthcoming album onto iTunes...

"On December 26, 2006, Arcade Fire accidentally uploaded the wrong song to iTunes. They were going to release the studio version of "Intervention" as a charity single for Partners in Health. As Win Butler wrote on the Arcade Fire website, "I guess it is sort of charming that we can send the wrong song to the whole world with a click of a mouse... Oh well." The song, "Black Wave/Bad Vibrations," was subsequently removed from iTunes, but was reportedly found on many P2P networks..."


Merging the lo-fi and hi-fi, for their first album release the band set up a hotline which fans can call to hear the single "Intervention": (866 NEON-BIBLE, extension number 7777). The band website is also pretty funky, with an annoying mirror-mouse thing happening when you go to the "black mirror" section (don't stare too long). Et...uhh, ils parfois chantent en Francais!


Anything reminiscent of Bowie, and I'm hooked...

Mark on Pandora

(www.pandora.com is the issue in question)...

"Pandora looks like a great idea.
In '94 my Religious Studies A-Level dissertation was on the ethical
implications of virtual reality. They were predicting how artificial
intelligence, like the one in Pandora (it uses neural networks, and
prob'ly genetic algorithms as well) will add up into an unforeseen
superintelligence - or at least that the danger of this cannot be
logically excluded.

The fact that all computerised learning networks have not yet taken over
the world: does it prove that no giant AI has emerged yet? Or that it did,
but knows better than to reveal itself? Kind of like Pascal's argument for
the existence of God.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascal%27s_Wager

and of course

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascal_programming_language

Which calls to mind that when the French were looking for a
non-English sounding name for 'computer' in the 60s, they picked
'ordinateur': a technical term from Pascalian theology,
unused since the 17th century.

And Pandora's fate, after she opened the box.

06 March 2007

D o' D



Drawing of the Day.

Old manila paper dress patterns from the upstairs dressmakers
the back of them turn greenish from the all the
acid in the paper migrating away from UV rays.