story at Wired News today about Artistic commentary on genomics and issues that arise from such work. Many will dismiss it, I’m sure. I think McLuhan was right though – artists are probes, and we disregard their work (whether sophisticated or naive) at our own peril.
Archives for 2000
Last night
was this perfect Montreal early summer night. A little chilly, but people were roaming the Main with a purpose. And as I sat at my regular watering hole – the Copacabana bar on St. Laurent just below Duluth, my mind turned to biodiversity. Extending the idea though – I’m not much of an ecology specialist.
What I was thinking about was the diversity of artistic technique. It was prompted by a chat I was having with this friend of mine who’s making a film now, a 10 minute dance film. I’m really interested in it cause when he made his proposal I made a CD-ROM for him showing off his work – all these little QuickTime clips using a browser interface. So he’s underwritten by the Canada Council for the Arts (Canuck NEA) and with the assistance of the National Film Board – it’s big stuff. And he was talking about this effect he wants to do – the standard rate to get this thing done is $2.40 a frame. Which, at 24 frames a second, means quite a bit of money.
Anyhow – he uses film, not video, and so he’s pretty retro just on that basis. And he knows how to do the effect optically – he’s well trained, and a good artist. But he went to the NFB and talked to them about it – and they said, “nah, we won’t do that optically – gotta go digital on that one.” Not “we can’t” do it, “we won’t” do it optically. And it occurred to me – what happens if people cease to be taught the optical techniques any more? It’s OK in this case, cause however they do this effect in the end, the filmmaker knows the alternative method and could do that if needed.
What if all we’re left with is people who know but one toolkit – not the other ways of doing things?
I like Heather’s idea too…
Heather made a proposal that makes a lot of sense. A Sundance for the web. Brig agreed. Think about this: a nice space to meet and work (lightly), an on-the-spot friendly contest (like the 5K, but in place), the year’s work, new ideas, new connections, new excitement… I can talk about it – you all are the ones who could make it happen. The trick is to start small enough that a core of completely committed people can kick it off with little fanfare, but still sustain an interesting moment to build on.
OK if you’re like me
you were frustrated that the stream of the Webby Awards was embedded without controls. So you can’t zip ahead to the good bits. This link – [WebbyCast!] will play the broadcast in RealPlayer (not embedded) so you can zoom ahead to: 02:51:30 and watch Café Utne win; 03:27:00 to watch Cocky Bastard win; or 04:37:00 to see him interviewed.
The corpo-rave
was fun. Mr Cynical was pretty blasé about the whole thing going in, but I was chatting with people I never chat with any more and drinking far too many free beers and generally enjoying the whole debauched scene. DJ Mouse was great and the whole thing was entirely anti-corpo. But not self-consciously so. My poor roommate, who’s a lawyer getting set to do her articles at the Federal Court of Appeals in Ottawa but working for us part time for the summer – she’s tainted now forever. She doesn’t want to work oustide the web/multimedia world any more.
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