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This is a movie documentation for a Ferchau commercial. It was made in St. Peter-Ording, Nordsee, Germany. Agency: MSH AND MORE (http://www.msh.net), Cologne.
A composition blending electro-pop and downtempo, based on a repetitive rhythmic structure and a spacious, synthetic texture. The track develops in a linear fashion, without the classic verse-chorus structure, gradually layering additional sound elements. Against the backdrop of a pulsating beat and soft synthesizers, ornamental flute passages stand out, adding an organic and narrative dimension. The production is clear and well-balanced, giving the track a contemplative yet dynamic character.
FOLLOWING BIT is a reenactment of Vito Acconci's FOLLOWING PIECE, originally performed in New York City between October 3 and 25, 1969. FOLLOWING PIECE was part of “Street Works IV”, a series of performances and conceptual events sponsored by the Architectural League of New York between October 1-31, 1969. Acconci followed a person for a few minutes, if that person entered into a private space or a car, or for several hours, if the person went to a cinema or restaurant. Acconci carried out this performance everyday for a month. He typed up an account of each 'pursuit', and, the following month, he sent a report to a different member of the art community.
Coll.eo’s FOLLOWING BIT is presented today to a broader audience via different media, in the form of tweets, machinima, digital photographs, prints, maps, and diagrams. The month-long performance generated an enormous set of data, consisting of 23 digital videos in high definition over 118 GB in size; 13300+ digital photos; 60 digital prints; 23 written accounts sent in Tweet form (archived), plus several typewritten pages of notes, framed, and mounted to wall and to a board.
This folder documents a following bit took place in the streets of Liberty City on July 23 2013. The episode lasted a few hours. The photographic documentation was automated. The computer camera took pictures every three seconds. The result: approximately 5 GB of screenshots. This is a selection.
For more information visit colleo.org.
September 1, 2013
FOLLOWING BIT is a reenactment of Vito Acconci's FOLLOWING PIECE, originally performed in New York City between October 3 and 25, 1969. FOLLOWING PIECE was part of “Street Works IV”, a series of performances and conceptual events sponsored by the Architectural League of New York between October 1-31, 1969. Acconci followed a person for a few minutes, if that person entered into a private space or a car, or for several hours, if the person went to a cinema or restaurant. Acconci carried out this performance everyday for a month. He typed up an account of each 'pursuit', and, the following month, he sent a report to a different member of the art community.
Coll.eo’s FOLLOWING BIT is presented today to a broader audience via different media, in the form of tweets, machinima, digital photographs, prints, maps, and diagrams. The month-long performance generated an enormous set of data, consisting of 23 digital videos in high definition over 118 GB in size; 13300+ digital photos; 60 digital prints; 23 written accounts sent in Tweet form (archived), plus several typewritten pages of notes, framed, and mounted to wall and to a board.
This folder documents a following bit took place in the streets of Liberty City on July 23 2013. The episode lasted a few hours. The photographic documentation was automated. The computer camera took pictures every three seconds. The result: approximately 5 GB of screenshots. This is a selection.
For more information visit colleo.org.
September 1, 2013
Each package of seeds carries a unique code that identifies the species, the location and date of the collection by Joyce Maschinski
Photo documentation from the opening of "Somnambulist" at Zhou B Art Center, September 17th, 2010. Curators: Jenny Lam and Robin M. Rios, Owner and Director of 4Art Inc Gallery.
I am going to be slowly updating all of the images that I took of all of my purchases from 1/22/02-4/22/04. This documentation used to be on my website www.obsessiveconsumption.com, but has long since been taken down. I am revisiting these images in order to create new images. I am searching for where the object is now and if still around, I plan on documenting the history it has had over the past few years.
Flickr is going to be my organization buddy in this process.
Most of these images were taken in Lincoln, Nebraska when I was in graduate school.
I am going to be slowly updating all of the images that I took of all of my purchases from 1/22/02-4/22/04. This documentation used to be on my website www.obsessiveconsumption.com, but has long since been taken down. I am revisiting these images in order to create new images. I am searching for where the object is now and if still around, I plan on documenting the history it has had over the past few years.
Flickr is going to be my organization buddy in this process.
Most of these images were taken in Lincoln, Nebraska when I was in graduate school.
Today's museum of genocide displays walls and walls of pictures of the victims who were detained, interrogated, tortured and killed either here or sent off to the killing fields on the edge of town.
This is Seong Wook and Thomas who was in the documentation group (which includes me, Do Gyun). They are talking what is happening now in documentation group.