Last week was the UCLAN MA Fine Art Interim show. This was an opportunity for all the artists who finsih in September 2012 to have a test run and see how their work is looking in the gallery space.
It was a great show and really well attended.
Those of us on the Site & Archive pathway aren’t required to show anything if we don’t want to and usually for the final degree show put up a small display of documenation relating to our project.
I showed 3 pieces of work that came about through the mapping of the space outside the Victoria building:
A Plan view of the space made up of individual paving slab photos – x marks indicating the locations of chewing gum splats
I made a screenprint using the cross marks and musical staves – which I hoped was a way for the audience to engage with the idea
Finally I made some sheet music based upon the position of the chewing gum in realtion to an imaginary piano keyboard along one axis of the space. the other axis becam the time and half a paving slab indicated 1 bar. This was displayed on a music stand facing out of the gallery towards the mapped space.
I got some interesting feedback about the work – many peope wanted to be able to hear the music. I was able to have a good convesation with Dan, who is helping out with some technical aspects, about different ways the mapped data could be interpreted and how we can set the space up to sense the presence of audience members and trigger sounds.
The screenprint seemed to be the least succesful of the three pieces, perhaps made redundant by the sheet music which was completed after the print.
Since the show I’ve been doing more research into Infra red sensors and also multi camera sensing – I came across the work of David Rokeby who has been using multi camera interactivity since the 90’s. more recently KMA have been making complex interactive zones with light projections.
I’m meeting a couple of guys tomorrow who work in UCLAN’s Computing and engineering dept, hopefully they will have some suggestions for how we can make the space interactive and handle the programming side of things.
At the end of June its the Lancashire Science festival and I have managed to secure provisional funding to have the piece installed for that weekend, this is dependant on the next few meetings and cost, but is looking good.
As for the music to be played on automatic piano or sequencer, thats progressing slowly. I managed to get a set of x,y values out of the illustrator document which maps the space. I’ve put these values into a spreadsheet and have been trying to figure out how to get them into a sequencer. I want to place them very accurately as I don’t want to disrupt the integrity of the mapping which is faithful to the chewing gum splats. For this reason I don’t want to quantise or round the coordinates up to the nearest 16th note.
I managed to make a rough version yesterday using some software which was designed for scanning piano rolls so that they can be restored. this involved changing my ai file into a 1bit bitmap. Converting this to a CIS file and then using that file to create a midi file – I’ll post a bit more of that process soon. Its certainly one solution but needs tinkering with.
I’m looking forward to finsihing that piece and being able to start experimenting with sounds for the interactive installation.