View allAll Photos Tagged circuitbending

Eet opened for Dead Air Fresheners fronted by word mistress Jennifer Robin and KnotPineBox at Legong Gelato in the eclectic St. John's neighborhood of Portland on Saturday, August 15th.

"Concept Graphics" of new photo project .

An introspective journey through man in network .

 

( This is just the graphic concept , wait for see more )

"Fire! Don't move!" sound in a Polaroid camera. You can change the pitch with the additional button or seeing through. Jack output. 150 euros.

Live @ Naumon, Barcelona, 09-Feb-2007

Cementimental live on the Experimental Circle Club stage.

SOOC: iPhone bending (iPhone 4) DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME!

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Bit like: Circuit Bending.. (Reed Ghazala, the Father of Circuit Bending)

 

old soviet travel TV that i bent to oscilloscope.

more info on how did i do it -> aeeprojects.blogspot.com/

from circuit bent eyemodule camera

Data bending a picture of a rainbow I took. Techniques used: Wordpad edit + Hex Edit + Photoshop edit.

Lara Grant, part of the circuit bending orchestra for Diana Eng's Fairytale Fashion Show held at Eyebeam NYC. Through various hacks and circuit bending techniques, Lara's sewing machine trigger signals that is then fed onto laptops running MAX/MSP to produce the final soundtrack for the runway. Other team members of the orchestra are Peter Kirn and Matt Ganucheau.

 

Lara and Sarah are a sisterly team with interests in physical computing, electronic textiles, controller design and signal processing.

 

Lara has a background in fashion and textile design and is currently studying at NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program. Sarah has a background in visual arts, programming and sound design. She is also an alumni of NYU ITP.

 

+ fsp.fm

+ laras-home.com

+ chootka.blogspot.com

+ facebook.com/lara.cat

+ flickr.com/8528527@N02

 

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SML 720p HD Simulcast

+ flickr.com/photos/seeminglee/4392722594/

+ vimeo.com/9784116

+ youtube.com/watch?v=fksyhmCi0FM

 

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Fairytale Fashion Show

2010-02-24

7pm - 9pm

Eyebeam

 

Diana Eng presented the Fairytale Fashion Collection in a technology fashion show on Wed., February 24, 7PM, at Eyebeam. Models hit the runway while an orchestra of circuit bending DJs create music from hacked video game consoles.

 

The Fairytale Fashion Collection uses technology to create magical clothing in real life. Electronics, mechanical engineering, and mathematics are used to create clothing with blooming flowers, changing colors and transforming shapes. Research and development for the Fairytale Fashion collection are shared online at FairytaleFashion.org as an educational tool that teaches about science, math, and technology through fashion. Fairytale Fashion was created with the support of Eyebeam Art and Technology Center, the leading not-for-profit art and technology center in the United States.

 

Diana Eng is a fashion designer who specializes in technology, math, and science. Her designs range from inflatable clothing to fashions inspired by mechanical engineering. She is a designer from Bravos Emmy nominated TV show, Project Runway season 2 and author of Fashion Geek: Clothes, Accessories, Tech. Diana is cofounder of NYC Resistor hacker group. Diana is currently a resident artist at Eyebeam.

 

eyebeam.org/events/fairytale-fashion-show

fairytalefashion.org

 

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CC-BY-SA See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Photography / SML Universe

 

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SML Thank You

+ Blogged: 2010-03-05: Create Digital Music: Musical Sewing Machines, Electronic Honky-Tonk, and Handmade Music NYC Monday

+ Blogged: 2010-03-06: Makezine: Handmade Music Brooklyn 3/8 - Musical sewing machines, electro-country, + new venue!

Chris making me a little something for the TG experimental performances.

Co-founder of the great experimental duo of crazy musicians/performers "Calhau!"

 

About the project "Calhau!":

"Under the name of Calhau! and other capricious derivations, the Porto-based couple, Marta Ângela and João Alves, have produced a remarkable body of cross-disciplinary work since 2006 in visual arts, film and music -- silkscreens, musical instruments, texts, wardrobes and characterisation, public presentation of films, concerts, performances and lectures -- highlighting a fascination for the "sometimes esoteric elitism of certain manifestations of (rural) popular culture". Accepted as seductively bizarre in the world of independent music and considered as ethically compromised with humor and 'craft experts in contingency' in the field of visual arts, their work is always bold and pertinent." (from culturgest.pt description)

 

A Film (Excerpt) by Calhau!:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=KakatyigLDQ

 

Interview with "Calhau!":

www.youtube.com/watch?v=kzQQCFFqDXw&feature=youtu.be

 

Homepages:

einsteinvoncalhau.com/

voncalhau.bandcamp.com/

www.flickr.com/photos/voncalhau

Made in 1978. Combination organ, sequencer.

Working on a music-making project.

 

Taken with Panasonic 20mm f1.7 lens on Panasonic GX9.

Based on an excellent model by Polly.

This one is 7°:

1°: Folded in half the long way

2° little miura-ori on the top

3°: Box fold on top splits the 2 skinny halves in half

4°: Miura-ori across the pleats made by the 3°

5°: Box fold similar to 3° but now with more pleats

6°: miura-ori across even more pleats

7°: box folds making all those skinny pleats you see at the bottom.

 

CP

ORIPA CP (ORIPA file for nerds)

Performance by Martin Campillo at Erg (École de Recherche Graphique), Brussels, October 20, 2016.

 

Erg (École de Recherche Graphique), Arts Numériques-Atelier, 2016-2017.

Professor : Marc Wathieu.

Lara Grant, part of the circuit bending orchestra for Diana Eng's Fairytale Fashion Show held at Eyebeam NYC. Through various hacks and circuit bending techniques, Lara's sewing machine trigger signals that is then fed onto laptops running MAX/MSP to produce the final soundtrack for the runway. Other team members of the orchestra are Peter Kirn and Matt Ganucheau.

 

Lara and Sarah are a sisterly team with interests in physical computing, electronic textiles, controller design and signal processing.

 

Lara has a background in fashion and textile design and is currently studying at NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program. Sarah has a background in visual arts, programming and sound design. She is also an alumni of NYU ITP.

 

fsp.fm

laras-home.com

chootka.blogspot.com

 

facebook.com/lara.cat

flickr.com/8528527@N02

 

+++

 

Fairytale Fashion Show

2010-02-24

7pm - 9pm

Eyebeam

 

Diana Eng presented the Fairytale Fashion Collection in a technology fashion show on Wed., February 24, 7PM, at Eyebeam. Models hit the runway while an orchestra of circuit bending DJ’s create music from hacked video game consoles.

 

The Fairytale Fashion Collection uses technology to create magical clothing in real life. Electronics, mechanical engineering, and mathematics are used to create clothing with blooming flowers, changing colors and transforming shapes. Research and development for the Fairytale Fashion collection are shared online at FairytaleFashion.org as an educational tool that teaches about science, math, and technology through fashion. Fairytale Fashion was created with the support of Eyebeam Art and Technology Center, the leading not-for-profit art and technology center in the United States.

 

Diana Eng is a fashion designer who specializes in technology, math, and science. Her designs range from inflatable clothing to fashions inspired by mechanical engineering. She is a designer from Bravo’s Emmy nominated TV show, Project Runway season 2 and author of Fashion Geek: Clothes, Accessories, Tech. Diana is cofounder of NYC Resistor hacker group. Diana is currently a resident artist at Eyebeam.

 

eyebeam.org/events/fairytale-fashion-show

fairytalefashion.org

   

Circuit Bent WJ-Ave5. A new audio reactive model equipped with:

 

-12 jack mono plugs: 6 (B channel) + 2 Wipe & S.Impose control, 4 (A-channel)

 

-10 metal button (various glitch effects);

 

-2 switches (Horizontal Slide+ B&N);

 

-2 variable resistors (Wipe & S.Impose audio reaction adjust);

This is a circuit that will cause the Radio Shack 9V Recording Module (part number: 276-1323) to loop.

 

Basically when the circuit is turned on by S1, the transistor turns the relay on. When the relay turns on, it causes the two button pins to make contact, which turns on the playing mechanism of the recording module. The transistor then reads the speaker, and when it detects power, cuts off power to the relay. As soon as the sound stops, the transistor then re-engages the relay, starting the sound, cutting off the relay.....continues indefinitely.

 

A solid state relay would cut down on the noise, but I didn't have one on hand, I had this one, and it works really well due to it's low activating current. You also can't hear the relay in the audio output, which is all I care about.

 

I used this for a circuit bent guitar I made. I wanted to have some sort of looping mechanism, but wasn't willing to pay $45. This solution cost about $12, and gives 20 seconds of decent sound. The guitar doesn't make a quality sound, so the quality of the recorded sound wasn't as important. I got the idea from a light sensor that would turn on when the light goes out.

Arduino and eight solenoids, tapping out a rhythm. The driver chip is a ULN2803. Photo by David Henshall.

The orgasm bended machine to plug a jack in. 100 €

 

El orgasmatrón para enchufar. 100 €

Performance by Martin Campillo at Erg (École de Recherche Graphique), Brussels, October 20, 2016.

 

Erg (École de Recherche Graphique), Arts Numériques-Atelier, 2016-2017.

Professor : Marc Wathieu.

TI Speak & Math I circuit-bent over xmas vacation. I'm not big on the typical circuit bent paint job thing, I prefer to keep the original cosmetics wherever possible so...

My favorite form of circuit bending, because it's the easiest, is what I call circuit starving: stick a potentiometer into the battery connection so you can turn down the voltage until the circuit has just barely enough power to work. That's where interesting stuff starts to happen.

 

You don't need to open the toy's case, solder, or cut anything for circuit starving. Make a sandwich with a piece of paper between two scraps of aluminum foil attached to the leads of the potentiometer. Insert it between one of the batteries and its spring contact, and the potentiometer becomes part of the power circuit. Then you can tweak the pot, in very tiny increments, until the weirdness happens.

My friend Tom spent time with Reed Ghazala to learn about circuit bending.

 

This is one of the fruits of that time.

Michael Shaw

Loop #031 2009

Travelcards, Bell & Howell Language Master, Busking Amp, Tape, Hat

Dimensions variable

 

For this Loop I collected travel cards and train tickets from the visitors to the gallery starting at the private view and built up the loop threw out the duration of the exhibition. Photo from private view.

 

Photo from:

The Museum of the People

Utrophia Project Space

17th July 2009- 31st July 2009

 

Press release:

The inaugural exhibition of the Museum of the People is a group show and will feature elements of the Museum’s current collection along with an electronic music symposium DJ Tendraw and performance from Coco Banks on the opening.

 

“History is who we are and why we are the way we are” David C. McCullough....

 

The Museum of the People is a museum collection made by ordinary people and artists for the people. The museum collection will allow spectators to access historical and contemporary events through visual art, sculpture, performance, and audio recordings.

 

This unique museum relates directly to peoples’ own history and experience offering personal, independent and idiosyncratic aspects of the history of our world.

 

"All history is contemporary history" - Benedetto Croce....

 

Essentially the Museum of the People exists to explore hidden histories, challenge notions of objectivity and re-interpret historical events from a contemporary perspective.

 

For the museum’s first exhibition the themes explored will include: ‘The People and the Law,’ ‘The People and the Land,’ ‘The People on Your Street’.

 

The Museum of the People invites spectators to participate in the creation of contemporary legacies and contribute their own record of contemporary events for posterity.....

 

Curator: Evie Manning

 

Featured artists (the People): Jono Allen, Stephen Molyneux, Ruth Fettis, Christina Mitrentse, Garry Cook, Michelle Wren, Emma Grant, Thom Shaw, Ryan Ormonde, Ben Cummins, Michael Shaw, Eva Datta, Rachel Johnston, Matt Smith, Rob Bidder, Andrew Kerr, Karin Van Der Plass, Naomi Smyth, Jason Beech, Amy Ferguson, Astrid Sarkissian, Amy Clarkson, Giuliana Sommantico, Katarzyna Perlak, Sam Pullin, Coco Banks, Kate Guscott and Yvie Mason.

 

Brenda Ramirez, Diana Garcia and Naiyu Chen of the T.A.C.O. Team with circuit bending display at the 18th Annual UC Irvine Undergraduate Research Symposium (05/14/2011)

conceptlab.com/circutbending/

Brenda Ramirez, Diana Garcia and Naiyu Chen of the T.A.C.O. Team with circuit bending display at the 18th Annual UC Irvine Undergraduate Research Symposium (05/14/2011)

conceptlab.com/circutbending/

Brenda Ramirez, Diana Garcia and Naiyu Chen of the T.A.C.O. Team with circuit bending display at the 18th Annual UC Irvine Undergraduate Research Symposium (05/14/2011)

conceptlab.com/circutbending/

Brenda Ramirez, Diana Garcia and Naiyu Chen of the T.A.C.O. Team with circuit bending display at the 18th Annual UC Irvine Undergraduate Research Symposium (05/14/2011)

conceptlab.com/circutbending/

Brenda Ramirez, Diana Garcia and Naiyu Chen of the T.A.C.O. Team with circuit bending display at the 18th Annual UC Irvine Undergraduate Research Symposium (05/14/2011)

conceptlab.com/circutbending/

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