Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Lev Manovich

What kind of cinema is appropriate for the age of Google and blogging? Automatic surveillance and self-guided missiles? Consumer profiling and CNN? To investigate answers to this question Lev Manovich - one of today’s most influential thinkers in the fields of media arts and digital culture – has paired with award-winning new media artist and designer Andreas Kratky to create the Soft Cinema project. They have also invited contributions from leaders in other cultural fields: DJ Spooky, Scanner, George Lewis and Jóhann Jóhannsson (music), servo and Andreas Angelidakis (architecture), Schoenerwissen/Office for Computational Design (data visualization), and Ross Cooper Studios (media design).
Lev Manovich is an author of books on new media theory, professor in Computer Science program at City University of New York, Graduate Center, U.S. and visiting professor European Graduate School in Saas-Fee, Switzerland. Manovich research and teaching focuses on digital humanities, new media art and theory, and software studies[1] His best known book is The Language of New Media, which has been widely reviewed and translated into eight languages.

Manovich's 8 definitions of "new media" (2001)


1. New Media versus Cyberculture
2. New Media as Computer Technology Used as a Distribution Platform
3. New Media as Digital Data Controlled by Software
4. New Media as the Mix Between Existing Cultural Conventions and the Conventions of Software
5. New Media as the Aesthetics that Accompanies the Early Stage of Every New Modern Media and Communication Technology
6. New Media as Faster Execution of Algorithms Previously Executed Manually or through Other Technologies
7. New Media as the Encoding of Modernist Avant-Garde; New Media as Metamedia
8. New Media as Parallel Articulation of Similar Ideas in Post-WWII Art and Modern Computing



Look, A Real Life Lichtenstein!!



Look, A Real Life Warhol!!



Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Outside the Portland Art Museum, April 2013.


From Portland, Sculptor, painter, and sketch artist, Mel Katz's work challenges what can be seen as 2d sculpture. Often flat from the front, and flat from the back, his work is playful, muscular, and almost always contradicting. Follow this link for a video on the artist and his process: Mel Katz

Monday, April 15, 2013

Killer Creature

Poster's made for the band Killer Creature, Richland, WA ( current up to April, 2013 )


Visit the Website for Killer Creature