Archive for the ‘Overheard’ Category

cacophony test

Saturday, August 15th, 2009
Michael’s test using binaural microphones. Big difference between listening through a speaker and  wearing headphones. Well, that’s the point!

working

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

lap topsM&W working

Laptops are the main tool for now.

M&W at DeBaun

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009
Michael and Wendy — experiments from November 2008 at DeBaun
This video was originally shared on blip.tv by Wendy Richmond with a No license (All rights reserved) license.

lighting possibilities

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

Meditation on Spatial Relations Between Conversations

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

space ideas 7

A sketch of a complex interaction in the gallery space using rope&pulley interfaces.  A collection of ropes connect satellite “private” spaces to a single “public” space.  Participants in the “public space” manipulate ropes connected to the “private” spaces and engage in a dialog, which consists of projected words of a conversation in both spaces.  I was imagining in this sketch that a participant in the “public” space could engage in a “tug of war” with another participant in remote “private” space (and perhaps there would be partitions to further reinforce the idea of “private”).  More conversations are projected on the floor in the “public” space as more participiants pull on the ropes.

Other thoughts:

  • Projecting on the floor may cause some interesting effects as the light is broken up by the pulleys and the people.
  • It could also be interesting to cover the pulleys with screens so new participants in the galley don’t immediately see what is happening.
  • Are pulleys an appropriate interface for this?  Are we limiting our possibilities by considering this interface instead of other interfaces?
  • Should participants in both “public” and “private” locations be able to see what is being “said” in both locations?
  • Projections could fade away after interaction stops.
  • More activity (rope movement) brings a conversation “forward” (meaning on top) in the public space.

blip.tv-hosted video

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

blip.tv has good licensing provisions (the full complement of CC licenses) and also the ability to turn off advertisements. I was also trying to setup a custom player, but so far it seems that I can only do that for “episode”-based uploads.

This video was originally shared on blip.tv by mchladil with a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 license.

Vimeo-hosted Video

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Youtube-hosted Video

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Flickr-hosted Video

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

This is a test of uploading a video to flickr for hosting.  Unfortunately, Flickr only allows two video uploads per month in a free accout.

Posting Videos in Blogs

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

I’ve been trying to find a “workflow” that will make it easy for Wendy to post videos into her blog.  There are a couple of considerations:

  • Wendy prefers to keep the videos private right now (avoiding video services such as Youtube, Viddler, Vimeo, Blip.tv).
  • The posting process should be easy as adding an image to a post (or a youtube video) — hand-editing “embed code” snippets is probably not going to make the cut.

So far, these considerations mean that she will probably need to host the video files on her site.  In the past few days as I’ve been researching how to do this, I was focusing more on the Wordpress side of the problem: finding an integrated workflow that makes the posting process easier.  This research has turned up a few Wordpress plugins:

  • Stream Video Player looks promising — and the interface for adding the video is typing a special tag that Wordpress recognizes when the plugin is installed.  The backend of this process (encoding the videos) will be a bit complex, though.
  • Wordpress also has its own built-in video player, but again, it doesn’t handle the encoding portion of the process.

This morning, I took a slightly different approach to figuring out how to solve the video posting problem we’re having.  I searched for “host your own video”.  Michael Martine’s post on whether to host your own videos offers a concise summary of the considerations.  My inclination would be to go for a video hosting service (perhaps Flickr… which seems to allows the content owner a good degree of control over the reuse of uploaded content) to keep things simple.

I think that part of the “meta” conversation of this aspect of documenting our work is Wendy’s exploration of public/privacy.  We’re also putting out “private” conversation (or somewhat edited versions of private conversation here), but at the same time want to control how it’s used.

    Spots on tables

    Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

    Spot lights shining on tables, illuminating the text. (text will be the halves of cell phone conversations. BTW last night when I told DK the idea for title “Half the Conversation” said, “Half the Story.” ) Anyway, maybe the text should not sandblasted on glass. Maybe we want more modest materials. Maybe all cardboard. Choices of materials will be very important.

    spots on table small

    Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

    When I draw, I get different ideas than when I write.

    thots small

    hanging out at Smooch

    Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

    coffee cup small

    good place to draw and think

    drawing by Max

    Saturday, August 1st, 2009

    Not sure why I am adding this little drawing by my 8 year old nephew. Looks like a drawing by Yayoi Kusama. Perhaps just a reminder of staying fresh and visual. max drawing

    wall text from “Creating the Modern Stage”

    Thursday, July 30th, 2009

    “Working on a sketch for a setting is probably the happiest and briefest part of the artist’s work in the theater.” — Donald Oenslager (1902- 1975)

    Morgan Library exhibit

    Thursday, July 30th, 2009

    from “Creating the Modern Stage”

    Alexandra Exter, Construction for a Tragedy ca. 1925

    from Morgan Library exhibit

    along the way

    Thursday, July 30th, 2009

    Yesterday Michael and I met to get the blog going, for real. All went smoothly until we tried to embed video. No luck. Michael had to leave before he figured out a solution, and he is about to go on vacation. Well, I should have known that he would keep working on it: this morning I got a lengthy email outlining the reason why it didn’t work and the options (with pros and cons) of fixes.

    I am writing this to make a note of all the details along the way of making a body of work—the vast effort that is never seen, but is so crucial to development.

    space sketch

    Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

    space sketch invert

    Lighting ideas

    Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

    Lighting ideas

    heavy lifting

    Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

    I want to start doing more on PAPER. I would like to draw more. More physicality as opposed to making everything w a keyboard and/or screen. That will be a big part of the exhibit, that is, the tension (literally) between digital and physical.

    The hoisting of words with your whole body vs. the little finger hopping. I like the hoisting.

    So, hoisting words. Heavy lifting. What would such an exhibit be like? Is it possible to tie emotions of words to actually lifting them?

    Are the words going to be heavy words or frivolous words? What would it mean to have to exert great force and effort to lift trivial words?