#define LED 9
#define LED2 10
int val = 0;
void setup() {
pinMode(LED, OUTPUT);
pinMode(LED2, OUTPUT);
}
void loop() {
val = analogRead(0);
if (val>800){
digitalWrite(LED, HIGH);}
else{
digitalWrite(LED, LOW);}
if (val>800){
digitalWrite(LED2, HIGH);}
else{
digitalWrite(LED2, LOW);}
}
Sunday, December 19, 2010
objectives
to provide a platform for the exchange of ideas
to address issues of “institutional confinement”
to accelerate the creative process
to establish a physical presence within the community
Allow anyone to create art regardless of institutional standards
nomadic and seamless exchange
simple user friendly interface
designed to contrast institutions
Project 3 revisions
Keep all mechanisms inclosed
Drawing surface on top of mechanism
Previous drawing surface becomes sign and instructions
Shiny new supply holder
Slots positioned in front
and
Camera attached to take pictures and upload to website
this changes the whole programing, now there are two arduinos with a relay and photosensors
so you insert paper, it feeds back, blocks light, snaps picture, feeds new paper out
Keep all mechanisms inclosed
Drawing surface on top of mechanism
Previous drawing surface becomes sign and instructions
Shiny new supply holder
Slots positioned in front
and
Camera attached to take pictures and upload to website
this changes the whole programing, now there are two arduinos with a relay and photosensors
so you insert paper, it feeds back, blocks light, snaps picture, feeds new paper out
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
so, a portable machine that can exchanges artwork sets the purpose of art as something to be shared and that is equal amongst all art. it also allows art to leave a specific place, it can be anywhere. exchanging drawings, sketches or ideas. each as equal as a masterpiece. exchange of knowledge or ideas as much as somebody can put on a 5x7 piece of paper, it also allows for those ideas to be tactile and permanent objects.
Douglas Crimp quotes and concepts
the museum as an "institution of confinement"
"The museum's history was written much like art's, as a continuous evolution from ancient times."
"What is at issue is the contemporary art of exhibition: the construction of new museums and the expansion and reorganization of existing ones to create a conflict-free representation of art history, and, concurrently,
the effacement or co-optation of current adversary art practices.
from Bürger: "The concept'art as an institution'...refers to the productive and distributive apparatus and also to ideas about art that prevail at a given time and that determine the reception of works. The avant-garde turns against both- the distribution apparatus on which the work of art depends, and the status of art in bourgeois society as defined by the concept of autonomy. Only after art, in the nineteenth-century Aestheticism, has altogether detached itself from the praxis of life can the aesthetic develop 'purely.' But the other side of autonomy, art;s lack of social impact, also becomes recognizable. The avant-gardist protest, whose aim it is to reintegrate art into the praxis of life, reveals the nexus between autonomy and he absence of any consequences."...............Bürger locates the failure of the avant-garde in its inability to return art to social purpose and furthermore sees this failure as determined by the continuation of bourgeois hegemony........what Bürger referred to as changes at the level of the contents of individual works and changes in the way art functions in society. The former trend includes traditional artworks that take AID as subject matter- paintings, plays, novels, poems "about" AIDS; the latter consists of cultural participation in activist politics, most often using agitprop grapics and documentary video. uch works eludes the museum, not because it is never shown there but because it is made outside the institution's compass. Arising out of a collective movement, AIDS activist art practices articulate, actualy produce, the politics of that movement. Often anonymously and collectively made; appropriating techniques of "high art," popular culture, and mass advertising, aimed at and constituitve of specific constituencies; releveant only to local and transistory circumstances; useless for preservation and posterity- is this art not an example of the "sublation of art into the praxis of life"?
"Contemporary art's critique of the museum and the modern aesthetic it produces still "belongs" to the museum"
"The museum's history was written much like art's, as a continuous evolution from ancient times."
"What is at issue is the contemporary art of exhibition: the construction of new museums and the expansion and reorganization of existing ones to create a conflict-free representation of art history, and, concurrently,
the effacement or co-optation of current adversary art practices.
from Bürger: "The concept'art as an institution'...refers to the productive and distributive apparatus and also to ideas about art that prevail at a given time and that determine the reception of works. The avant-garde turns against both- the distribution apparatus on which the work of art depends, and the status of art in bourgeois society as defined by the concept of autonomy. Only after art, in the nineteenth-century Aestheticism, has altogether detached itself from the praxis of life can the aesthetic develop 'purely.' But the other side of autonomy, art;s lack of social impact, also becomes recognizable. The avant-gardist protest, whose aim it is to reintegrate art into the praxis of life, reveals the nexus between autonomy and he absence of any consequences."...............Bürger locates the failure of the avant-garde in its inability to return art to social purpose and furthermore sees this failure as determined by the continuation of bourgeois hegemony........what Bürger referred to as changes at the level of the contents of individual works and changes in the way art functions in society. The former trend includes traditional artworks that take AID as subject matter- paintings, plays, novels, poems "about" AIDS; the latter consists of cultural participation in activist politics, most often using agitprop grapics and documentary video. uch works eludes the museum, not because it is never shown there but because it is made outside the institution's compass. Arising out of a collective movement, AIDS activist art practices articulate, actualy produce, the politics of that movement. Often anonymously and collectively made; appropriating techniques of "high art," popular culture, and mass advertising, aimed at and constituitve of specific constituencies; releveant only to local and transistory circumstances; useless for preservation and posterity- is this art not an example of the "sublation of art into the praxis of life"?
"Contemporary art's critique of the museum and the modern aesthetic it produces still "belongs" to the museum"
The German word museal(museumlike) has unpleasant overtones. It describes objects to which the observer no longer has a vital relationship and which are in the process of dying. They owe their preservation more to historical respect than to the needs of the present. Museum and mausoleum are connected by more than phonetic association. Museums are the family sepulchers of works of art. - Theodore W. Adorno, "Valery Proust Museum"
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Sunday, September 19, 2010
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/JohnsonSolid.html
Geometry had always been a jumping off point for my work, so to combine that with my love of music and to create a physical and audible world in one should be perfected. I have experimented with how acoustics travel in polyhedron shapes and i have found that johnson solids, due to their equal sized faces, distribute sound evenly. one of the best shapes for directing sound and vibrations is the Sphenomegacorona.
Geometry had always been a jumping off point for my work, so to combine that with my love of music and to create a physical and audible world in one should be perfected. I have experimented with how acoustics travel in polyhedron shapes and i have found that johnson solids, due to their equal sized faces, distribute sound evenly. one of the best shapes for directing sound and vibrations is the Sphenomegacorona.
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