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I took these images in September of 2010. Decided to re-visit them with a different post process.

Transparent screen hack

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

A variation on my Cubicubicubic image. Structure Synth and Sunflow. Sunsky shader for the sky dome, Phong shader for the ground plane. I'm loving the glass shader, to. (eta=1.9). Reflection and refraction trace depth of 8 for each. Adaptive anti-aliasing of 1 2.

 

Better large to see all the detail.

 

©2009 David C. Pearson, M.D.

*******************************************************************************

This image and its name are protected under copyright laws.

All their rights are reserved to my own and unique property.

Any download, copy, duplication, edition, modification,

printing, or resale is stricly prohibited.

*******************************************************************************

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

Quoting from the official pamphlet:

 

FAST LIGHT • May 7 + 8, 2011, 7 pm - 10 pm

 

Contemporary pioneers in art, science, and technology have come together at MIT to create one of the most exhilarating and inventive spectacles metro Boston has ever seen. On May 7 and 8, 2011, visitors can interact with 20+ art and architectural installations illuminating the campus and the Charles River along Memorial Drive at MIT.

 

arts.mit.edu / fast

 

Installations scattered around campus (we didn't quite see all of them), again pasting from the official flyer:

 

• aFloat

MIT Chapel • Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Inspired by water in the Saarinen Chapel's moat, a touch releases flickers of light before serenity returns as a calm ripple.

By Otto Ng, Ben Regnier, Dena Molnar, and Arseni Zaitsev.

 

• Inflatables

Lobby 7, Infinite Corridor

A dodecahedron sculpture made of silver nylon resonates with gusts of air, heat from light bulbs, and the motions of passersby.

By Kyle Barker, Juan Jofre, Nick Polansky, Jorge Amaya.

 

• (now(now(now)))

Building 7, 4th Floor

This installation nests layers of the past into an image of the present, recursively intertwining slices of time.

By Eric Rosenbaum and Charles DeTar.

 

• Dis(Course)4

Building 3 Stair, Infinite Corridor

A stairwell transformed by a shummering aluminum conduit inspired by the discourse between floors and academic disciplines.

By Craig Boney, Jams Coleman and Andrew Manto.

 

• Maxwell's Dream

Building 10 Community Lounge, Infinite Corridor

An interactive mural created by magnetic fields that drive patterns of light, Maxwell's Dream is a visually expressive cybernetic loop.

By Kaustuv De Biswas and Daniel Rosenberg.

 

• Mood Meter

Student Center & Building 8, Infinite Corridor

Is the smile a barometer of happiness? Mood Meter playfully assesses and displays the mood of the MIT community onsite and at moodmeter.media.mit.edu

By Javier Hernandez and Ehsan Hoque.

 

• SOFT Rockers

Killian Court

Repose and charge your electronic devices using green solar powered technology

By Shiela Kennedy, P. Seaton, S. Rockcastle, W. Inam, A. Aolij, J. Nam, K. Bogenshutz, J. Bayless, M. Trimble.

 

• LightBridge

The Mass. Ave Bridge

A dynamic interactive LED array responds to pedestrians on the bridge, illustrating MIT's ties to both sides of the river. Thanks to Philips ColorKinetics, CISCO, SparkFun Electronics.

By Sysanne Seitinger.

 

• Sky Event

Killian Court, Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Immense inflatable stars soar over MIT in celebration of the distinctive symbiosis among artists, scientists and engineers.

By Otto Piene.

 

• Liquid Archive

Charles River

A floating inflatable screen provides a backdrop for projections that highlight MIT's history in science, technology, and art.

By Nader Tehrani and Gediminas Urbonas.

 

• Light Drift

Charles River

Ninety brightly glowing orbs in the river change color as they react to the presence of people along the shore.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• Unflat Pavilion

Building 14 Lawn

This freestanding pavilion illuminated with LEDs flexes two dimensions into three. Flat sheets are bent and unfurl into skylights, columns, and windows.

By Nick Gelpi

 

• Gradated Field

Walker Memorial Lawn

A field of enticing mounts create a landscape that encourages passersby to meander through, or lounge upon the smooth plaster shapes.

By Kyle Coburn, Karina Silvester and Yihyun Lim.

 

• Bibliodoptera

Building 14, Hayden Library Corridor

Newly emerged from the chrysalis of MIT's diverse library pages, a cloud of butterflies flutters above, reacting to the movement of passersby.

By Elena Jessop and Peter Torpey.

 

• Wind Screen

Green Building Facade, Bldg 54

A shimmering curtain of light created by micro-turbines displays a visual register of the replenishable source of wind energy.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• String Tunnel

Building 18 Bridge

A diaphonous tunnel creates a sense of entry to and from the Infinite Corridor and frames the surrounding landscape.

By Yuna Kim, Kelly Shaw, and Travis Williams.

 

• voltaDom

Building 56-66 Connector

A vaulted passageway utilizes an innovative fabrication technique that creates complex double curved vaults through the simple rolling of a sheet of material.

By Skylar Tibbits.

 

• Night of Numbers

Building 66 Facade & E15 Walkway

A lighting installation enlivens MIT architectre with numbers that hold special or historical significance to the Institute. Can you decode them all?

By Praveen Subramani and Anna Kotova.

 

• Overliner

Building E-25 Stairwell

Taking cues from a stairwell's spiraling geometry, Overliner transforms a familiar and busy passageway into a moment of surprise and repose.

By Joel Lamere and Cynthia Gunadi.

 

• Chroma District

Corner of Ames and Main Streets.

Lanterns react to visitors by passing sound and color from one to another, increasing in intensity along the way and illuminating the path to MIT's campus.

By Eyal Shahar, Akito van Troyer, and Seung Jin Ham.

 

Second Take - same vr dog walk sequence of raw panoramic pics (the camera, like most in this fledgling category, auto-stiches two 180 degree images simultaneously shot from dual 180 lenses .... if anyone is wondering is Ricoh Theta S)

 

As outlined in other studio still shot with motion added - i wanted to see what would result from trying the same technique in after effects ... it is a projection method in which a virtual 'cage' or set of planes in 3d space (sky, floor, right, left, etc)

 

original image - or image sequence here - is basically chopped up while viewed through virtual camera in 3d - pieces are mapped onto the 3d planes. The same virtual camera can then be used to rotate, change depth of field, move around on timeline as w/ typical motion design / computer animation - then rendered out from that setup and POV.

 

Conceptually I find it really weird and intriguing this #strangeloop which i won't quite call recursive as is the nature of and difference between the idea of a 'strange loop' versus a feedback / recursive loop ... in seeming contradiction strange loop goes both ways - forward and backward (think #escher drawings and other so-called #impossiblegeometry - i did get the term from 'Godel, Escher, Bach' the excellent book en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%B6del,_Escher,_Bach by Douglas Hofstadter)

 

The process of re-visualizing and re-photographing in the computer what I have already used this device conceived of as a model of not just my eye but in this case extrapolating out from typical basic camera to capture and simulate reality and 3d space via radically distorted and stiched 360 image camera.

 

Then there is me conceptualizing the thing as a model of imagining the process, how I might throw some cool monkey wrenches into it :) even now as I type this I vaguely picture through some mental model each bit of this whole thing while seems off hand to be something like capturing feedback optical effect such as the double mirrors in which yu nop doubt have at omepoint glimpsed multitudes of yourself reflected into infinity - some how reversing that in post production, and finguring out a way to include same mirror effect live of the subject in VR space.

 

In VR I guess that means you are a ghost - I suspect none too many vr environments feature mirrors at this stage. That is the kind of situation I want to explore - not to achieve what seemed impossible through tricks but to reveal things about the self and how experiences in reality out there - whether virtual or not - treating outer and inner as essentially the same process / phenomena.

  

Much of my work these days explores in some way or another relates to this theme - reality, illusion, experience, contradition, dichotomy and the unity of opposites / fallacy of causality. In playful ways of course :)

 

Experimenting with applying the droste effect to stereographic panoramas.

And a bit more recursion applied to "recursive triangles 2" (Mathematica)

this is the summer edition. to commemorate three months of wearing the same thing.

Quoting from the official pamphlet:

 

FAST LIGHT • May 7 + 8, 2011, 7 pm - 10 pm

 

Contemporary pioneers in art, science, and technology have come together at MIT to create one of the most exhilarating and inventive spectacles metro Boston has ever seen. On May 7 and 8, 2011, visitors can interact with 20+ art and architectural installations illuminating the campus and the Charles River along Memorial Drive at MIT.

 

arts.mit.edu / fast

 

Installations scattered around campus (we didn't quite see all of them), again pasting from the official flyer:

 

• aFloat

MIT Chapel • Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Inspired by water in the Saarinen Chapel's moat, a touch releases flickers of light before serenity returns as a calm ripple.

By Otto Ng, Ben Regnier, Dena Molnar, and Arseni Zaitsev.

 

• Inflatables

Lobby 7, Infinite Corridor

A dodecahedron sculpture made of silver nylon resonates with gusts of air, heat from light bulbs, and the motions of passersby.

By Kyle Barker, Juan Jofre, Nick Polansky, Jorge Amaya.

 

• (now(now(now)))

Building 7, 4th Floor

This installation nests layers of the past into an image of the present, recursively intertwining slices of time.

By Eric Rosenbaum and Charles DeTar.

 

• Dis(Course)4

Building 3 Stair, Infinite Corridor

A stairwell transformed by a shummering aluminum conduit inspired by the discourse between floors and academic disciplines.

By Craig Boney, Jams Coleman and Andrew Manto.

 

• Maxwell's Dream

Building 10 Community Lounge, Infinite Corridor

An interactive mural created by magnetic fields that drive patterns of light, Maxwell's Dream is a visually expressive cybernetic loop.

By Kaustuv De Biswas and Daniel Rosenberg.

 

• Mood Meter

Student Center & Building 8, Infinite Corridor

Is the smile a barometer of happiness? Mood Meter playfully assesses and displays the mood of the MIT community onsite and at moodmeter.media.mit.edu

By Javier Hernandez and Ehsan Hoque.

 

• SOFT Rockers

Killian Court

Repose and charge your electronic devices using green solar powered technology

By Shiela Kennedy, P. Seaton, S. Rockcastle, W. Inam, A. Aolij, J. Nam, K. Bogenshutz, J. Bayless, M. Trimble.

 

• LightBridge

The Mass. Ave Bridge

A dynamic interactive LED array responds to pedestrians on the bridge, illustrating MIT's ties to both sides of the river. Thanks to Philips ColorKinetics, CISCO, SparkFun Electronics.

By Sysanne Seitinger.

 

• Sky Event

Killian Court, Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Immense inflatable stars soar over MIT in celebration of the distinctive symbiosis among artists, scientists and engineers.

By Otto Piene.

 

• Liquid Archive

Charles River

A floating inflatable screen provides a backdrop for projections that highlight MIT's history in science, technology, and art.

By Nader Tehrani and Gediminas Urbonas.

 

• Light Drift

Charles River

Ninety brightly glowing orbs in the river change color as they react to the presence of people along the shore.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• Unflat Pavilion

Building 14 Lawn

This freestanding pavilion illuminated with LEDs flexes two dimensions into three. Flat sheets are bent and unfurl into skylights, columns, and windows.

By Nick Gelpi

 

• Gradated Field

Walker Memorial Lawn

A field of enticing mounts create a landscape that encourages passersby to meander through, or lounge upon the smooth plaster shapes.

By Kyle Coburn, Karina Silvester and Yihyun Lim.

 

• Bibliodoptera

Building 14, Hayden Library Corridor

Newly emerged from the chrysalis of MIT's diverse library pages, a cloud of butterflies flutters above, reacting to the movement of passersby.

By Elena Jessop and Peter Torpey.

 

• Wind Screen

Green Building Facade, Bldg 54

A shimmering curtain of light created by micro-turbines displays a visual register of the replenishable source of wind energy.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• String Tunnel

Building 18 Bridge

A diaphonous tunnel creates a sense of entry to and from the Infinite Corridor and frames the surrounding landscape.

By Yuna Kim, Kelly Shaw, and Travis Williams.

 

• voltaDom

Building 56-66 Connector

A vaulted passageway utilizes an innovative fabrication technique that creates complex double curved vaults through the simple rolling of a sheet of material.

By Skylar Tibbits.

 

• Night of Numbers

Building 66 Facade & E15 Walkway

A lighting installation enlivens MIT architectre with numbers that hold special or historical significance to the Institute. Can you decode them all?

By Praveen Subramani and Anna Kotova.

 

• Overliner

Building E-25 Stairwell

Taking cues from a stairwell's spiraling geometry, Overliner transforms a familiar and busy passageway into a moment of surprise and repose.

By Joel Lamere and Cynthia Gunadi.

 

• Chroma District

Corner of Ames and Main Streets.

Lanterns react to visitors by passing sound and color from one to another, increasing in intensity along the way and illuminating the path to MIT's campus.

By Eyal Shahar, Akito van Troyer, and Seung Jin Ham.

 

Peer up at the pale blue sky, through a tangle of criss-crossing strands, green leaves, and red berries of a holly bush. Inspired by the intricate pattern of veins in butterfly wings, and reminiscent of stained glass windows, this visually engaging abstraction combines an organic feel with the boldness of graphic design.

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

Quoting from the official pamphlet:

 

FAST LIGHT • May 7 + 8, 2011, 7 pm - 10 pm

 

Contemporary pioneers in art, science, and technology have come together at MIT to create one of the most exhilarating and inventive spectacles metro Boston has ever seen. On May 7 and 8, 2011, visitors can interact with 20+ art and architectural installations illuminating the campus and the Charles River along Memorial Drive at MIT.

 

arts.mit.edu / fast

 

Installations scattered around campus (we didn't quite see all of them), again pasting from the official flyer:

 

• aFloat

MIT Chapel • Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Inspired by water in the Saarinen Chapel's moat, a touch releases flickers of light before serenity returns as a calm ripple.

By Otto Ng, Ben Regnier, Dena Molnar, and Arseni Zaitsev.

 

• Inflatables

Lobby 7, Infinite Corridor

A dodecahedron sculpture made of silver nylon resonates with gusts of air, heat from light bulbs, and the motions of passersby.

By Kyle Barker, Juan Jofre, Nick Polansky, Jorge Amaya.

 

• (now(now(now)))

Building 7, 4th Floor

This installation nests layers of the past into an image of the present, recursively intertwining slices of time.

By Eric Rosenbaum and Charles DeTar.

 

• Dis(Course)4

Building 3 Stair, Infinite Corridor

A stairwell transformed by a shummering aluminum conduit inspired by the discourse between floors and academic disciplines.

By Craig Boney, Jams Coleman and Andrew Manto.

 

• Maxwell's Dream

Building 10 Community Lounge, Infinite Corridor

An interactive mural created by magnetic fields that drive patterns of light, Maxwell's Dream is a visually expressive cybernetic loop.

By Kaustuv De Biswas and Daniel Rosenberg.

 

• Mood Meter

Student Center & Building 8, Infinite Corridor

Is the smile a barometer of happiness? Mood Meter playfully assesses and displays the mood of the MIT community onsite and at moodmeter.media.mit.edu

By Javier Hernandez and Ehsan Hoque.

 

• SOFT Rockers

Killian Court

Repose and charge your electronic devices using green solar powered technology

By Shiela Kennedy, P. Seaton, S. Rockcastle, W. Inam, A. Aolij, J. Nam, K. Bogenshutz, J. Bayless, M. Trimble.

 

• LightBridge

The Mass. Ave Bridge

A dynamic interactive LED array responds to pedestrians on the bridge, illustrating MIT's ties to both sides of the river. Thanks to Philips ColorKinetics, CISCO, SparkFun Electronics.

By Sysanne Seitinger.

 

• Sky Event

Killian Court, Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Immense inflatable stars soar over MIT in celebration of the distinctive symbiosis among artists, scientists and engineers.

By Otto Piene.

 

• Liquid Archive

Charles River

A floating inflatable screen provides a backdrop for projections that highlight MIT's history in science, technology, and art.

By Nader Tehrani and Gediminas Urbonas.

 

• Light Drift

Charles River

Ninety brightly glowing orbs in the river change color as they react to the presence of people along the shore.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• Unflat Pavilion

Building 14 Lawn

This freestanding pavilion illuminated with LEDs flexes two dimensions into three. Flat sheets are bent and unfurl into skylights, columns, and windows.

By Nick Gelpi

 

• Gradated Field

Walker Memorial Lawn

A field of enticing mounts create a landscape that encourages passersby to meander through, or lounge upon the smooth plaster shapes.

By Kyle Coburn, Karina Silvester and Yihyun Lim.

 

• Bibliodoptera

Building 14, Hayden Library Corridor

Newly emerged from the chrysalis of MIT's diverse library pages, a cloud of butterflies flutters above, reacting to the movement of passersby.

By Elena Jessop and Peter Torpey.

 

• Wind Screen

Green Building Facade, Bldg 54

A shimmering curtain of light created by micro-turbines displays a visual register of the replenishable source of wind energy.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• String Tunnel

Building 18 Bridge

A diaphonous tunnel creates a sense of entry to and from the Infinite Corridor and frames the surrounding landscape.

By Yuna Kim, Kelly Shaw, and Travis Williams.

 

• voltaDom

Building 56-66 Connector

A vaulted passageway utilizes an innovative fabrication technique that creates complex double curved vaults through the simple rolling of a sheet of material.

By Skylar Tibbits.

 

• Night of Numbers

Building 66 Facade & E15 Walkway

A lighting installation enlivens MIT architectre with numbers that hold special or historical significance to the Institute. Can you decode them all?

By Praveen Subramani and Anna Kotova.

 

• Overliner

Building E-25 Stairwell

Taking cues from a stairwell's spiraling geometry, Overliner transforms a familiar and busy passageway into a moment of surprise and repose.

By Joel Lamere and Cynthia Gunadi.

 

• Chroma District

Corner of Ames and Main Streets.

Lanterns react to visitors by passing sound and color from one to another, increasing in intensity along the way and illuminating the path to MIT's campus.

By Eyal Shahar, Akito van Troyer, and Seung Jin Ham.

 

Quoting from the official pamphlet:

 

FAST LIGHT • May 7 + 8, 2011, 7 pm - 10 pm

 

Contemporary pioneers in art, science, and technology have come together at MIT to create one of the most exhilarating and inventive spectacles metro Boston has ever seen. On May 7 and 8, 2011, visitors can interact with 20+ art and architectural installations illuminating the campus and the Charles River along Memorial Drive at MIT.

 

arts.mit.edu / fast

 

Installations scattered around campus (we didn't quite see all of them), again pasting from the official flyer:

 

• aFloat

MIT Chapel • Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Inspired by water in the Saarinen Chapel's moat, a touch releases flickers of light before serenity returns as a calm ripple.

By Otto Ng, Ben Regnier, Dena Molnar, and Arseni Zaitsev.

 

• Inflatables

Lobby 7, Infinite Corridor

A dodecahedron sculpture made of silver nylon resonates with gusts of air, heat from light bulbs, and the motions of passersby.

By Kyle Barker, Juan Jofre, Nick Polansky, Jorge Amaya.

 

• (now(now(now)))

Building 7, 4th Floor

This installation nests layers of the past into an image of the present, recursively intertwining slices of time.

By Eric Rosenbaum and Charles DeTar.

 

• Dis(Course)4

Building 3 Stair, Infinite Corridor

A stairwell transformed by a shummering aluminum conduit inspired by the discourse between floors and academic disciplines.

By Craig Boney, Jams Coleman and Andrew Manto.

 

• Maxwell's Dream

Building 10 Community Lounge, Infinite Corridor

An interactive mural created by magnetic fields that drive patterns of light, Maxwell's Dream is a visually expressive cybernetic loop.

By Kaustuv De Biswas and Daniel Rosenberg.

 

• Mood Meter

Student Center & Building 8, Infinite Corridor

Is the smile a barometer of happiness? Mood Meter playfully assesses and displays the mood of the MIT community onsite and at moodmeter.media.mit.edu

By Javier Hernandez and Ehsan Hoque.

 

• SOFT Rockers

Killian Court

Repose and charge your electronic devices using green solar powered technology

By Shiela Kennedy, P. Seaton, S. Rockcastle, W. Inam, A. Aolij, J. Nam, K. Bogenshutz, J. Bayless, M. Trimble.

 

• LightBridge

The Mass. Ave Bridge

A dynamic interactive LED array responds to pedestrians on the bridge, illustrating MIT's ties to both sides of the river. Thanks to Philips ColorKinetics, CISCO, SparkFun Electronics.

By Sysanne Seitinger.

 

• Sky Event

Killian Court, Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Immense inflatable stars soar over MIT in celebration of the distinctive symbiosis among artists, scientists and engineers.

By Otto Piene.

 

• Liquid Archive

Charles River

A floating inflatable screen provides a backdrop for projections that highlight MIT's history in science, technology, and art.

By Nader Tehrani and Gediminas Urbonas.

 

• Light Drift

Charles River

Ninety brightly glowing orbs in the river change color as they react to the presence of people along the shore.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• Unflat Pavilion

Building 14 Lawn

This freestanding pavilion illuminated with LEDs flexes two dimensions into three. Flat sheets are bent and unfurl into skylights, columns, and windows.

By Nick Gelpi

 

• Gradated Field

Walker Memorial Lawn

A field of enticing mounts create a landscape that encourages passersby to meander through, or lounge upon the smooth plaster shapes.

By Kyle Coburn, Karina Silvester and Yihyun Lim.

 

• Bibliodoptera

Building 14, Hayden Library Corridor

Newly emerged from the chrysalis of MIT's diverse library pages, a cloud of butterflies flutters above, reacting to the movement of passersby.

By Elena Jessop and Peter Torpey.

 

• Wind Screen

Green Building Facade, Bldg 54

A shimmering curtain of light created by micro-turbines displays a visual register of the replenishable source of wind energy.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• String Tunnel

Building 18 Bridge

A diaphonous tunnel creates a sense of entry to and from the Infinite Corridor and frames the surrounding landscape.

By Yuna Kim, Kelly Shaw, and Travis Williams.

 

• voltaDom

Building 56-66 Connector

A vaulted passageway utilizes an innovative fabrication technique that creates complex double curved vaults through the simple rolling of a sheet of material.

By Skylar Tibbits.

 

• Night of Numbers

Building 66 Facade & E15 Walkway

A lighting installation enlivens MIT architectre with numbers that hold special or historical significance to the Institute. Can you decode them all?

By Praveen Subramani and Anna Kotova.

 

• Overliner

Building E-25 Stairwell

Taking cues from a stairwell's spiraling geometry, Overliner transforms a familiar and busy passageway into a moment of surprise and repose.

By Joel Lamere and Cynthia Gunadi.

 

• Chroma District

Corner of Ames and Main Streets.

Lanterns react to visitors by passing sound and color from one to another, increasing in intensity along the way and illuminating the path to MIT's campus.

By Eyal Shahar, Akito van Troyer, and Seung Jin Ham.

 

talysis II revisted - added 6 new species, short video here

Quoting from the official pamphlet:

 

FAST LIGHT • May 7 + 8, 2011, 7 pm - 10 pm

 

Contemporary pioneers in art, science, and technology have come together at MIT to create one of the most exhilarating and inventive spectacles metro Boston has ever seen. On May 7 and 8, 2011, visitors can interact with 20+ art and architectural installations illuminating the campus and the Charles River along Memorial Drive at MIT.

 

arts.mit.edu / fast

 

Installations scattered around campus (we didn't quite see all of them), again pasting from the official flyer:

 

• aFloat

MIT Chapel • Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Inspired by water in the Saarinen Chapel's moat, a touch releases flickers of light before serenity returns as a calm ripple.

By Otto Ng, Ben Regnier, Dena Molnar, and Arseni Zaitsev.

 

• Inflatables

Lobby 7, Infinite Corridor

A dodecahedron sculpture made of silver nylon resonates with gusts of air, heat from light bulbs, and the motions of passersby.

By Kyle Barker, Juan Jofre, Nick Polansky, Jorge Amaya.

 

• (now(now(now)))

Building 7, 4th Floor

This installation nests layers of the past into an image of the present, recursively intertwining slices of time.

By Eric Rosenbaum and Charles DeTar.

 

• Dis(Course)4

Building 3 Stair, Infinite Corridor

A stairwell transformed by a shummering aluminum conduit inspired by the discourse between floors and academic disciplines.

By Craig Boney, Jams Coleman and Andrew Manto.

 

• Maxwell's Dream

Building 10 Community Lounge, Infinite Corridor

An interactive mural created by magnetic fields that drive patterns of light, Maxwell's Dream is a visually expressive cybernetic loop.

By Kaustuv De Biswas and Daniel Rosenberg.

 

• Mood Meter

Student Center & Building 8, Infinite Corridor

Is the smile a barometer of happiness? Mood Meter playfully assesses and displays the mood of the MIT community onsite and at moodmeter.media.mit.edu

By Javier Hernandez and Ehsan Hoque.

 

• SOFT Rockers

Killian Court

Repose and charge your electronic devices using green solar powered technology

By Shiela Kennedy, P. Seaton, S. Rockcastle, W. Inam, A. Aolij, J. Nam, K. Bogenshutz, J. Bayless, M. Trimble.

 

• LightBridge

The Mass. Ave Bridge

A dynamic interactive LED array responds to pedestrians on the bridge, illustrating MIT's ties to both sides of the river. Thanks to Philips ColorKinetics, CISCO, SparkFun Electronics.

By Sysanne Seitinger.

 

• Sky Event

Killian Court, Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Immense inflatable stars soar over MIT in celebration of the distinctive symbiosis among artists, scientists and engineers.

By Otto Piene.

 

• Liquid Archive

Charles River

A floating inflatable screen provides a backdrop for projections that highlight MIT's history in science, technology, and art.

By Nader Tehrani and Gediminas Urbonas.

 

• Light Drift

Charles River

Ninety brightly glowing orbs in the river change color as they react to the presence of people along the shore.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• Unflat Pavilion

Building 14 Lawn

This freestanding pavilion illuminated with LEDs flexes two dimensions into three. Flat sheets are bent and unfurl into skylights, columns, and windows.

By Nick Gelpi

 

• Gradated Field

Walker Memorial Lawn

A field of enticing mounts create a landscape that encourages passersby to meander through, or lounge upon the smooth plaster shapes.

By Kyle Coburn, Karina Silvester and Yihyun Lim.

 

• Bibliodoptera

Building 14, Hayden Library Corridor

Newly emerged from the chrysalis of MIT's diverse library pages, a cloud of butterflies flutters above, reacting to the movement of passersby.

By Elena Jessop and Peter Torpey.

 

• Wind Screen

Green Building Facade, Bldg 54

A shimmering curtain of light created by micro-turbines displays a visual register of the replenishable source of wind energy.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• String Tunnel

Building 18 Bridge

A diaphonous tunnel creates a sense of entry to and from the Infinite Corridor and frames the surrounding landscape.

By Yuna Kim, Kelly Shaw, and Travis Williams.

 

• voltaDom

Building 56-66 Connector

A vaulted passageway utilizes an innovative fabrication technique that creates complex double curved vaults through the simple rolling of a sheet of material.

By Skylar Tibbits.

 

• Night of Numbers

Building 66 Facade & E15 Walkway

A lighting installation enlivens MIT architectre with numbers that hold special or historical significance to the Institute. Can you decode them all?

By Praveen Subramani and Anna Kotova.

 

• Overliner

Building E-25 Stairwell

Taking cues from a stairwell's spiraling geometry, Overliner transforms a familiar and busy passageway into a moment of surprise and repose.

By Joel Lamere and Cynthia Gunadi.

 

• Chroma District

Corner of Ames and Main Streets.

Lanterns react to visitors by passing sound and color from one to another, increasing in intensity along the way and illuminating the path to MIT's campus.

By Eyal Shahar, Akito van Troyer, and Seung Jin Ham.

 

A set of 3 models, using EH paper.

 

I used the concept of "recursive folding" as used by Edward Mistretta.

 

Mixing tessellation grids and part of my older models. All of them from EH paper, 30x30 cm, 32 division grids.

   

From criss-crossing strands separating cells of colour emerges the figure of a walking man. Inspired by the intricate pattern of veins in butterfly wings, and reminiscent of stained glass windows, this visually engaging abstraction combines an organic feel with the boldness of graphic design.

browsing through recursive noise space and exploring glitches within volumeutils from toxiclibs

 

app+code: www.openprocessing.org/visuals/?visualID=17403

 

more shape/memory research: www.echoechonoisenoise.wordpres.com

*******************************************************************************

This image and its name are protected under copyright laws.

All their rights are reserved to my own and unique property.

Any download, copy, duplication, edition, modification,

printing, or resale is stricly prohibited.

*******************************************************************************

 

Sierpinski cube, depth level = 7

 

130 310 vertices

262 144 triangles

Quoting from the official pamphlet:

 

FAST LIGHT • May 7 + 8, 2011, 7 pm - 10 pm

 

Contemporary pioneers in art, science, and technology have come together at MIT to create one of the most exhilarating and inventive spectacles metro Boston has ever seen. On May 7 and 8, 2011, visitors can interact with 20+ art and architectural installations illuminating the campus and the Charles River along Memorial Drive at MIT.

 

arts.mit.edu / fast

 

Installations scattered around campus (we didn't quite see all of them), again pasting from the official flyer:

 

• aFloat

MIT Chapel • Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Inspired by water in the Saarinen Chapel's moat, a touch releases flickers of light before serenity returns as a calm ripple.

By Otto Ng, Ben Regnier, Dena Molnar, and Arseni Zaitsev.

 

• Inflatables

Lobby 7, Infinite Corridor

A dodecahedron sculpture made of silver nylon resonates with gusts of air, heat from light bulbs, and the motions of passersby.

By Kyle Barker, Juan Jofre, Nick Polansky, Jorge Amaya.

 

• (now(now(now)))

Building 7, 4th Floor

This installation nests layers of the past into an image of the present, recursively intertwining slices of time.

By Eric Rosenbaum and Charles DeTar.

 

• Dis(Course)4

Building 3 Stair, Infinite Corridor

A stairwell transformed by a shummering aluminum conduit inspired by the discourse between floors and academic disciplines.

By Craig Boney, Jams Coleman and Andrew Manto.

 

• Maxwell's Dream

Building 10 Community Lounge, Infinite Corridor

An interactive mural created by magnetic fields that drive patterns of light, Maxwell's Dream is a visually expressive cybernetic loop.

By Kaustuv De Biswas and Daniel Rosenberg.

 

• Mood Meter

Student Center & Building 8, Infinite Corridor

Is the smile a barometer of happiness? Mood Meter playfully assesses and displays the mood of the MIT community onsite and at moodmeter.media.mit.edu

By Javier Hernandez and Ehsan Hoque.

 

• SOFT Rockers

Killian Court

Repose and charge your electronic devices using green solar powered technology

By Shiela Kennedy, P. Seaton, S. Rockcastle, W. Inam, A. Aolij, J. Nam, K. Bogenshutz, J. Bayless, M. Trimble.

 

• LightBridge

The Mass. Ave Bridge

A dynamic interactive LED array responds to pedestrians on the bridge, illustrating MIT's ties to both sides of the river. Thanks to Philips ColorKinetics, CISCO, SparkFun Electronics.

By Sysanne Seitinger.

 

• Sky Event

Killian Court, Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Immense inflatable stars soar over MIT in celebration of the distinctive symbiosis among artists, scientists and engineers.

By Otto Piene.

 

• Liquid Archive

Charles River

A floating inflatable screen provides a backdrop for projections that highlight MIT's history in science, technology, and art.

By Nader Tehrani and Gediminas Urbonas.

 

• Light Drift

Charles River

Ninety brightly glowing orbs in the river change color as they react to the presence of people along the shore.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• Unflat Pavilion

Building 14 Lawn

This freestanding pavilion illuminated with LEDs flexes two dimensions into three. Flat sheets are bent and unfurl into skylights, columns, and windows.

By Nick Gelpi

 

• Gradated Field

Walker Memorial Lawn

A field of enticing mounts create a landscape that encourages passersby to meander through, or lounge upon the smooth plaster shapes.

By Kyle Coburn, Karina Silvester and Yihyun Lim.

 

• Bibliodoptera

Building 14, Hayden Library Corridor

Newly emerged from the chrysalis of MIT's diverse library pages, a cloud of butterflies flutters above, reacting to the movement of passersby.

By Elena Jessop and Peter Torpey.

 

• Wind Screen

Green Building Facade, Bldg 54

A shimmering curtain of light created by micro-turbines displays a visual register of the replenishable source of wind energy.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• String Tunnel

Building 18 Bridge

A diaphonous tunnel creates a sense of entry to and from the Infinite Corridor and frames the surrounding landscape.

By Yuna Kim, Kelly Shaw, and Travis Williams.

 

• voltaDom

Building 56-66 Connector

A vaulted passageway utilizes an innovative fabrication technique that creates complex double curved vaults through the simple rolling of a sheet of material.

By Skylar Tibbits.

 

• Night of Numbers

Building 66 Facade & E15 Walkway

A lighting installation enlivens MIT architectre with numbers that hold special or historical significance to the Institute. Can you decode them all?

By Praveen Subramani and Anna Kotova.

 

• Overliner

Building E-25 Stairwell

Taking cues from a stairwell's spiraling geometry, Overliner transforms a familiar and busy passageway into a moment of surprise and repose.

By Joel Lamere and Cynthia Gunadi.

 

• Chroma District

Corner of Ames and Main Streets.

Lanterns react to visitors by passing sound and color from one to another, increasing in intensity along the way and illuminating the path to MIT's campus.

By Eyal Shahar, Akito van Troyer, and Seung Jin Ham.

 

Point Reyes Lighthouse in California.

Quoting from the official pamphlet:

 

FAST LIGHT • May 7 + 8, 2011, 7 pm - 10 pm

 

Contemporary pioneers in art, science, and technology have come together at MIT to create one of the most exhilarating and inventive spectacles metro Boston has ever seen. On May 7 and 8, 2011, visitors can interact with 20+ art and architectural installations illuminating the campus and the Charles River along Memorial Drive at MIT.

 

arts.mit.edu / fast

 

Installations scattered around campus (we didn't quite see all of them), again pasting from the official flyer:

 

• aFloat

MIT Chapel • Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Inspired by water in the Saarinen Chapel's moat, a touch releases flickers of light before serenity returns as a calm ripple.

By Otto Ng, Ben Regnier, Dena Molnar, and Arseni Zaitsev.

 

• Inflatables

Lobby 7, Infinite Corridor

A dodecahedron sculpture made of silver nylon resonates with gusts of air, heat from light bulbs, and the motions of passersby.

By Kyle Barker, Juan Jofre, Nick Polansky, Jorge Amaya.

 

• (now(now(now)))

Building 7, 4th Floor

This installation nests layers of the past into an image of the present, recursively intertwining slices of time.

By Eric Rosenbaum and Charles DeTar.

 

• Dis(Course)4

Building 3 Stair, Infinite Corridor

A stairwell transformed by a shummering aluminum conduit inspired by the discourse between floors and academic disciplines.

By Craig Boney, Jams Coleman and Andrew Manto.

 

• Maxwell's Dream

Building 10 Community Lounge, Infinite Corridor

An interactive mural created by magnetic fields that drive patterns of light, Maxwell's Dream is a visually expressive cybernetic loop.

By Kaustuv De Biswas and Daniel Rosenberg.

 

• Mood Meter

Student Center & Building 8, Infinite Corridor

Is the smile a barometer of happiness? Mood Meter playfully assesses and displays the mood of the MIT community onsite and at moodmeter.media.mit.edu

By Javier Hernandez and Ehsan Hoque.

 

• SOFT Rockers

Killian Court

Repose and charge your electronic devices using green solar powered technology

By Shiela Kennedy, P. Seaton, S. Rockcastle, W. Inam, A. Aolij, J. Nam, K. Bogenshutz, J. Bayless, M. Trimble.

 

• LightBridge

The Mass. Ave Bridge

A dynamic interactive LED array responds to pedestrians on the bridge, illustrating MIT's ties to both sides of the river. Thanks to Philips ColorKinetics, CISCO, SparkFun Electronics.

By Sysanne Seitinger.

 

• Sky Event

Killian Court, Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Immense inflatable stars soar over MIT in celebration of the distinctive symbiosis among artists, scientists and engineers.

By Otto Piene.

 

• Liquid Archive

Charles River

A floating inflatable screen provides a backdrop for projections that highlight MIT's history in science, technology, and art.

By Nader Tehrani and Gediminas Urbonas.

 

• Light Drift

Charles River

Ninety brightly glowing orbs in the river change color as they react to the presence of people along the shore.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• Unflat Pavilion

Building 14 Lawn

This freestanding pavilion illuminated with LEDs flexes two dimensions into three. Flat sheets are bent and unfurl into skylights, columns, and windows.

By Nick Gelpi

 

• Gradated Field

Walker Memorial Lawn

A field of enticing mounts create a landscape that encourages passersby to meander through, or lounge upon the smooth plaster shapes.

By Kyle Coburn, Karina Silvester and Yihyun Lim.

 

• Bibliodoptera

Building 14, Hayden Library Corridor

Newly emerged from the chrysalis of MIT's diverse library pages, a cloud of butterflies flutters above, reacting to the movement of passersby.

By Elena Jessop and Peter Torpey.

 

• Wind Screen

Green Building Facade, Bldg 54

A shimmering curtain of light created by micro-turbines displays a visual register of the replenishable source of wind energy.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• String Tunnel

Building 18 Bridge

A diaphonous tunnel creates a sense of entry to and from the Infinite Corridor and frames the surrounding landscape.

By Yuna Kim, Kelly Shaw, and Travis Williams.

 

• voltaDom

Building 56-66 Connector

A vaulted passageway utilizes an innovative fabrication technique that creates complex double curved vaults through the simple rolling of a sheet of material.

By Skylar Tibbits.

 

• Night of Numbers

Building 66 Facade & E15 Walkway

A lighting installation enlivens MIT architectre with numbers that hold special or historical significance to the Institute. Can you decode them all?

By Praveen Subramani and Anna Kotova.

 

• Overliner

Building E-25 Stairwell

Taking cues from a stairwell's spiraling geometry, Overliner transforms a familiar and busy passageway into a moment of surprise and repose.

By Joel Lamere and Cynthia Gunadi.

 

• Chroma District

Corner of Ames and Main Streets.

Lanterns react to visitors by passing sound and color from one to another, increasing in intensity along the way and illuminating the path to MIT's campus.

By Eyal Shahar, Akito van Troyer, and Seung Jin Ham.

 

***Tramando una sorpresa para mi misma***

Something strange happened last night (maybe I was dreaming)...

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

Structure Synth / Sunflow

 

I wrote a short ruby script to generate the structure synth eisenscript rules for this image.

 

After showing this image to my wife, she pointed it out it looked like an inflatable arm flailing tube man :)

1. Tunnels of Time, 2. Doyle Spiral+Inversion, 3. Another fake reflection, 4. Slide-together : now with cards, 5. 16+1 polyhedron models, 6. Red Sun, 7. First Playmobil on the Moon, 8. I don't live near a lake,

 

9. Fly to the Moon, 10. Northern Lands, 11. Build your own one, 12. Inside the Riemann Sphere, 13. Fake sunset, fake birds, funny manips, 14. arizona flag effect, 15. swedish moon, 16. Quasi Doyle Spiral,

 

17. Blueing the sky, 18. Playing cards polyhedra, 19. Virtual slide-together on a snub icosidodecahedron with playing cards on the wrong side, 20. Moon Eclipse (last one), 21. Lautrec, 22. Spiral again, 23. Infinite staircase, 24. Manhole cover variation,

 

25. Silk Maze, 26. cardioid, 27. Doyle Flushing, 28. Doyle spiral + Mobius transform, 29. Mobius Transform of a regular circle packing, 30. Spiral space, 31. Passage, 32. Strong Wind today in Virtual Land,

 

33. Sphere packing, 34. Moon shifting, 35. A coumpound of five hamiltonian circuits of a rhomb-icosi-dodecahedron with the same symmetry as the compound of five tetrahedra this time I blow up the record of the longest title, 36. Santa Claus involved in a traffic accident : one wounded, 37. San Marino, 38. Olive oil bubble variations, 39. Counterlit Papaver, 40. Hexa Fractal,

 

41. Red Sun big, 42. Sanguine sunset, 43. FIFA FCC Packing, 44. From Babel with love, 45. Olive oil bubble variations, 46. Hell's Pit, 47. Caustic light, 48. The name of God,

 

49. Devil's tower, 50. alhambra, 51. From the Black Hole, 52. Wet Web, 53. Castres, 54. 72 pencils : finished, 55. Hypnotic tiling, 56. jm03symetrique,

 

57. Sunset Mandala through a Glass Magnifier, 58. Traces in the sand, 59. Police brutality against cultural symbol, 60. Orange lift wall through conformal mapping 1/(z*z), 61. Tracks in brown, 62. Druillet-like, 63. Recursive Chessboard, 64. Sun set sunspot,

 

65. indraDoyle, 66. Modular Origami : C240 finished, 67. Ring macro leds, 68. Infinite staircase revisited, 69. First steps on the Moon, 70. Alone on the keyboard, 71. Part of Moon's Corona, 72. icosidodecadodecahedron

 

Created with fd's Flickr Toys

Quoting from the official pamphlet:

 

FAST LIGHT • May 7 + 8, 2011, 7 pm - 10 pm

 

Contemporary pioneers in art, science, and technology have come together at MIT to create one of the most exhilarating and inventive spectacles metro Boston has ever seen. On May 7 and 8, 2011, visitors can interact with 20+ art and architectural installations illuminating the campus and the Charles River along Memorial Drive at MIT.

 

arts.mit.edu / fast

 

Installations scattered around campus (we didn't quite see all of them), again pasting from the official flyer:

 

• aFloat

MIT Chapel • Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Inspired by water in the Saarinen Chapel's moat, a touch releases flickers of light before serenity returns as a calm ripple.

By Otto Ng, Ben Regnier, Dena Molnar, and Arseni Zaitsev.

 

• Inflatables

Lobby 7, Infinite Corridor

A dodecahedron sculpture made of silver nylon resonates with gusts of air, heat from light bulbs, and the motions of passersby.

By Kyle Barker, Juan Jofre, Nick Polansky, Jorge Amaya.

 

• (now(now(now)))

Building 7, 4th Floor

This installation nests layers of the past into an image of the present, recursively intertwining slices of time.

By Eric Rosenbaum and Charles DeTar.

 

• Dis(Course)4

Building 3 Stair, Infinite Corridor

A stairwell transformed by a shummering aluminum conduit inspired by the discourse between floors and academic disciplines.

By Craig Boney, Jams Coleman and Andrew Manto.

 

• Maxwell's Dream

Building 10 Community Lounge, Infinite Corridor

An interactive mural created by magnetic fields that drive patterns of light, Maxwell's Dream is a visually expressive cybernetic loop.

By Kaustuv De Biswas and Daniel Rosenberg.

 

• Mood Meter

Student Center & Building 8, Infinite Corridor

Is the smile a barometer of happiness? Mood Meter playfully assesses and displays the mood of the MIT community onsite and at moodmeter.media.mit.edu

By Javier Hernandez and Ehsan Hoque.

 

• SOFT Rockers

Killian Court

Repose and charge your electronic devices using green solar powered technology

By Shiela Kennedy, P. Seaton, S. Rockcastle, W. Inam, A. Aolij, J. Nam, K. Bogenshutz, J. Bayless, M. Trimble.

 

• LightBridge

The Mass. Ave Bridge

A dynamic interactive LED array responds to pedestrians on the bridge, illustrating MIT's ties to both sides of the river. Thanks to Philips ColorKinetics, CISCO, SparkFun Electronics.

By Sysanne Seitinger.

 

• Sky Event

Killian Court, Saturday, May 7th ONLY

Immense inflatable stars soar over MIT in celebration of the distinctive symbiosis among artists, scientists and engineers.

By Otto Piene.

 

• Liquid Archive

Charles River

A floating inflatable screen provides a backdrop for projections that highlight MIT's history in science, technology, and art.

By Nader Tehrani and Gediminas Urbonas.

 

• Light Drift

Charles River

Ninety brightly glowing orbs in the river change color as they react to the presence of people along the shore.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• Unflat Pavilion

Building 14 Lawn

This freestanding pavilion illuminated with LEDs flexes two dimensions into three. Flat sheets are bent and unfurl into skylights, columns, and windows.

By Nick Gelpi

 

• Gradated Field

Walker Memorial Lawn

A field of enticing mounts create a landscape that encourages passersby to meander through, or lounge upon the smooth plaster shapes.

By Kyle Coburn, Karina Silvester and Yihyun Lim.

 

• Bibliodoptera

Building 14, Hayden Library Corridor

Newly emerged from the chrysalis of MIT's diverse library pages, a cloud of butterflies flutters above, reacting to the movement of passersby.

By Elena Jessop and Peter Torpey.

 

• Wind Screen

Green Building Facade, Bldg 54

A shimmering curtain of light created by micro-turbines displays a visual register of the replenishable source of wind energy.

By Meejin Yoon.

 

• String Tunnel

Building 18 Bridge

A diaphonous tunnel creates a sense of entry to and from the Infinite Corridor and frames the surrounding landscape.

By Yuna Kim, Kelly Shaw, and Travis Williams.

 

• voltaDom

Building 56-66 Connector

A vaulted passageway utilizes an innovative fabrication technique that creates complex double curved vaults through the simple rolling of a sheet of material.

By Skylar Tibbits.

 

• Night of Numbers

Building 66 Facade & E15 Walkway

A lighting installation enlivens MIT architectre with numbers that hold special or historical significance to the Institute. Can you decode them all?

By Praveen Subramani and Anna Kotova.

 

• Overliner

Building E-25 Stairwell

Taking cues from a stairwell's spiraling geometry, Overliner transforms a familiar and busy passageway into a moment of surprise and repose.

By Joel Lamere and Cynthia Gunadi.

 

• Chroma District

Corner of Ames and Main Streets.

Lanterns react to visitors by passing sound and color from one to another, increasing in intensity along the way and illuminating the path to MIT's campus.

By Eyal Shahar, Akito van Troyer, and Seung Jin Ham.

 

  

www.fashioningtech.com/profiles/blogs/kasia-molga-interview

 

V2_Institute for the Unstable Media hold an annual “Summer Session” in which designers and artists are invited to develop a work under one of the three current research themes at V2_Lab: Wearable Technology; Augmented Reality and Ecology. This summer five projects were developed over a six week period which explore the future of these fields. The Summer Session projects were showcased at the 17th International Symposium on Electronic Art held this year in Istanbul, September 14-21, 2011 during one of V2_’s Test_Lab events.

 

Below is an interview with Kasia Molga who participated in the V2_ Summer Sessions 2011 with the work "Oil Compass":

 

- Kasia Molga, "Oil Compass" -

 

“Oil Compass,” done in collaboration with Sey Min, is a screen-based data-visualization interface, which lets users become aware of real-time oil spills on a global scale. Through the interface we are able to search and get close up views of locations, as well as view the history and data pertinent to the events. Through these we are able to consider the impact of continuous and largely under-reported cases of oil pollution in our global waters as well as ponder solutions for the prevention and de-contamination.

 

Everyday each tanker and each rig releases 600 litters of oil into the sea, not mentioning that we also have a "regular" vessels which use oil as a fuel.

 

One of the questions that you ask as is if we can “really connect with the complex subject of oil spills and understand its environmental impact?” via a real-time data visualization. What are your conclusions after this time? How can the visualization tangibly make a difference?

 

Like everything in the nature—an action causes reaction or/and provoke a chain of events causing imbalance. Everyday each tanker and each rig releases 600 litters of oil into the sea, not mentioning that we also have a "regular" vessels which use oil as a fuel. Although the vastness of the water covering our planet might seems almost infinite, within those areas where spills happen the local biodiversity is affected thus affecting us. "Oil Compass" through containing past and present data, as well as live data, gives a picture of the scale of that problem, because oil spills don't happen ONLY when it is broadcasted on the news, but they happens everyday.

 

The crucial and most interesting features of this work, in my opinion, is a live data visualization of oil tankers—updated every 10 minutes. It is also interesting to see (although not surprising) that most of them are around Europe and North America—places where the level of energy consumption is the highest. One of the maps which I produced while working on "Oil Compass" was a visualization of Earth at Night. North America and Europe are full of light compared to the rest of the world, and obviously there are a lot of tankers and that is where the biggest spills have happened.

 

Places like Africa or Asia—which are heavily explored for their oil, seem very dark in comparison. Africa didn't register any huge spills except in South Africa.It was not easy to get data on the position of oil rigs and we are still working on this. But I have noticed that often rigs and platforms are planted in places which don’t seem to be so well lit-up…such as Angola for example. I don’t want to jump to false conclusions—as “Oil Compass” is ever-evolving project which demands to be constantly updated, but while working on it I couldn't help thinking how big chunks of oil are taken from places with very limited access to energy/electricity and then transported to places which use it like there is no tomorrow.

 

I hope that I can make people to gain a distance—to see it in its entirety—so that perhaps a bigger emotional bond can be created.

 

I hope that "Oil Compass" can act as an objective and easy to understand a picture of the situation. By using a tool such as Google Earth—everybody can access it and contribute to it. At the same time by using the image of the globe—our planet—giving a viewer a point of view of an "astronaut" and some control of how to navigate/spin/move that virtual sphere—I hope that with that I can make people to gain a distance—to see it in its entirety—so that perhaps a bigger emotional bond can be created. It has been an interesting experience as this object which I call "Oil Compass" had to fulfill two, quite contradictory roles—it had to be very informative and objective about all facts on the subject but at the same time it had to evoke some emotions on viewers.

 

"Protei" is aimed to be a low-cost device that semiautonomously sails upwind, intercepting oil going downwind.

 

“Oil Compass” is also a modeling too to explore the potential of another work called “Protei” an Open Source Sailing Drone also developed at V2_. Can you tell us more about the “Protei” project, and is this research recursive, can it be applied to other environmental mappings?

 

“Protei” is a shape-shifting sailing robot that collects pollution—and it is a brainchild of artist/designer Cesar Harada. "Protei" would operate as a fleet and is developed as open hardware. The current version is “Protei_Oil_Spill” for collecting spilled oil at sea. It is aimed to be a low-cost device that semiautonomously sails upwind, intercepting oil going downwind. “Protei” is using existing technologies in an innovative design which can be implemented in the short term to address a crisis. Being an open source project, other versions may be designed in the future for other purposes: “Protei” for the North Pacific plastic garbage patch, heavy metals in coastal areas, fishery monitoring, physical oceanography, climate change studies...

 

"Oil Compass" in this context has 3 functions:

 

1) Educational/Didactic: for everyone concerning past major oil spills as well as everyday spills (which depends on the volume of tanker vessels around the world and oil rigs). The plan is be keep updating the data with other less "famous" spills as well as information how the spills were managed and dealt with. This will also help in assessments when and where another disaster might happen.

 

2) Navigational: tracking the traffic of vessels and therefore spills; keeping updated maps with position of all oil rigs—so that it can become as a centralized informative hub; keeping updated maps not only with oil spills situations, but other issues/problems which waters are facing today, i.e.: plastic debris, radioactive spills etc. Ideally I also would like to be able to update all of it with currents and weather forecasts—but that is all a long shot. A better funding structure would be very needed to achieve that.

 

3) “Protei” Locations: based on the navigational function of "Oil Compass" we can asses where “Protei” drones are the most needed, how to navigate them around other vessels, rigs etc; obviously tracking “Protei” and informing what function drones have in what areas.

 

- Kasia Molga, "Oil Compass" -

 

Of course we are all political—whether consciousness or unconscious of it. We are all involved in some relations with other people and/or environment and nature.

 

When looking at eco-art I am struck by how for a number of years now we have engaged in “causes” in the arts from feminism, cultural identity, to AIDS, etc. Why do you think that artists are invested in the political? Is it endemic of society being in need of more “political” players? Or is it more of a crisis in terms of art’s role in society?

 

But aren't we all "political?" The concept of evolution is political. Of course we are all political—whether consciousness or unconscious of it. We are all involved in some relations with other people and/or environment and nature. We are all engaged in some kind of dialogue with our surroundings. I am not sure if the engagement in politics/social or environmental issues are the result of a crisis. Alain de Botton once said that (and I am paraphrasing not quoting) we, humans, when we are around something/some situation for a bit too long, we stop to notice it. The role of artists and what artists can do is to remind us about those forgotten/taken for granted/unnoticed things.

 

I am rather a facilitator who creates a platform for people to explore certain issues in alternative ways and learn about them and form opinion for themselves.

 

So I guess it is not about the crisis of art’s role. It is just that artists often can see sharper and clearer and deeper and spot alternative/forgotten/hidden situations, matters, connections and thus also respond to the zeitgeist. It is often a commentary on existing situations. On a personal level, as an artist/designer who engages often (but not always) in environmental issues, sometimes I feel that I don't create just an artwork—a subjective transformation of my opinion/view of the world. I am rather a facilitator who creates a platform for people to explore certain issues in alternative ways and learn about them and form opinion for themselves. In “Oil Compass”—I think I had a difficult task of trying to be objective about the subject—not to get carried away with too much emotions...

 

We often forget to perceive ourselves as a part of nature and we often make that disassociation even when we speak of "we" and "nature."

 

How do you relate your work to earthworks of the late 60s early 70s such as Robert Smithson’s "Spiral Jetty" which celebrated nature while also aestheticizing it? Are we now aestheticizing nature through politics instead of structural compositions?

   

I would turn that question around a bit to speak here about the concept of beauty—whether it lies in pure visual harmonies of colors and shape or is in fact encapsulated in the content/the emanating/the message. Both are important—the capturing of fragments of ephemeral sublime moments to convey that feeling of awe—the fact that we are part of this amazing creation as nature—we are its fruits, therefore what we do shall be integral to it. However, for some reason sometimes is not.

 

We often forget to perceive ourselves as a part of nature and we often make that disassociation even when we speak of "we" and "nature." While nature/environment/climate is a part of a human narrative, I think many of the earth/land artists of the late 60s and early 70s explored nature in that way. Hopefully having that in common with people such as Robert Smithson, I don't work with the landscape as such, but with its digital representation. I also often use a "bigger picture" in my work—whether it is a map of the entire city or a whole globe; or an interactive live data feed. The immediacy of time, possibility to witness concurrent events at once—that concept of liveness and presence is more important in my work…

 

Istanbul, September 2011

Tags: Kasia Molga, V2_, Valerie Lamontagne, environment, oil, protei

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d 1.8.8

A new flower using recursive petal textures..

"... the fundamentally recursive character of observation -- namely, that stabbing is best witnessed, rather than experienced." - T.A. Wilson, excerpt from Plastic Tub Phrenologist (1920)

 

[hipstamatic portraiture - folded, spindled & mutilated]

Jun 21 2012

Weyland-Yutani

I just got this shirt from TeeFury today, but I wasn't intending it to be the focus of today's photo. What I wanted to do for the selfie squared topic was to do a recursive photo, but when I pulled out the frame to use, this photo was in it! I couldn't resist. So, yeah, you have to deal with another Alien photo. Sorry.

 

For WH: Selfie Squared

*******************************************************************************

This image and its name are protected under copyright laws.

All their rights are reserved to my own and unique property.

Any download, copy, duplication, edition, modification,

printing, or resale is stricly prohibited.

*******************************************************************************

A new flower featuring recursive petals. (high res image)

 

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