Pixelspaces – ORIGIN https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en ORIGIN - ARS ELECTRONICA 2011 Mon, 27 Jun 2022 14:49:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.6 Pixelspaces Panel 1 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en/2011/08/01/pixelspaces-panel-1/ https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en/2011/08/01/pixelspaces-panel-1/#comments Mon, 01 Aug 2011 14:00:06 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/?p=813 Panel 1: [the next idea] in research


10:00 Horst Hörtner (Laboratory Director, Ars Electronica Futurelab / AT): Pixelspaces Welcome Address
10:30 Bernhard Böhm (Ars Electronica Futurelab / AT): Introduction
10:40 Gerard Rubio (Artist, blablabLAB / ES), Raul Nieves (Artist, Haberlandt / ES)
11:00 Elizabeth Otieno (Project Manager, Kibilight Project / KE)
11:20 James Burke (Information Architect, Experience Designer, P2P Foundation / NL/UK)
11:40 Roundup and Discussion

The objective of this panel is to shed some light on the new interrelationship among science, technology and society from practitioners’ perspectives and to go through a process of reflection about the present and future opportunities and risks associated with this development. In the first panel, we’ll showcase outstanding projects that were singled out for recognition in [the next idea] voestalpine Art and Technology Grant competition at this year’s Prix Ars Electronica. They have to do with energy, mobility and access, issues of enormous importance to humankind’s future.

Pixelspaces – Day 1: Changing the Research Paradigm

Having gotten its start with simple everyday objects and progressed all the way to highly complex scientific test assemblies, there doesn’t seem to be anything the “do-it-yourself” culture can’t do. People are eplicating scientific experiments in their own living room, opening up new market niches with the simplest of technologies, and delivering electricity to disadvantaged regions in developing countries. This trend is emblematic of a cultural orientation that proceeds under the assumption that technologies and professional expertise are not only to be produced in scientific laboratories or by large companies. The first day of the pixelspaces Symposium will take a closer look at what’s happening here.

Panel 1: [the next idea] in research

The objective of this panel is to shed some light on the new interrelationship among science, technology and society from practitioners’ perspectives and to go through a process of reflection about the present and future opportunities and risks associated with this development.

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Pixelspaces Panel 2 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en/2011/08/01/pixelspaces-panel-2/ Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:55:16 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/?p=818 Panel 2: Open Research!


13:30 Bernhard Böhm (AT), Roland Reiter (AT/Ars Electronica Futurelab): Introduction
13:40 Matthew Gardiner (AU/Artist and Researcher, Ars Electronica Futurelab)
14:00 Boris Debackere (NL/Manager, V2_Lab)
14:20 Joao Pequenao (POR/Research Specialist, CERN)
14:40 Ulrike Felt (AT/Professor of Science Studies, University of Vienna)
15:00 Roundup and Discussion

Panelists will consider the research paradigm shift going on right now from the point of view of artists and researchers working in an institutional context. The focus will be on the new link-up of scientific systems and previously excluded segments of society.

Pixelspaces – Day 1: Changing the Research Paradigm

Having gotten its start with simple everyday objects and progressed all the way to highly complex scientific test assemblies, there doesn’t seem to be anything the “do-it-yourself” culture can’t do. People are eplicating scientific experiments in their own living room, opening up new market niches with the simplest of technologies, and delivering electricity to disadvantaged regions in developing countries. This trend is emblematic of a cultural orientation that proceeds under the assumption that technologies and professional expertise are not only to be produced in scientific laboratories or by large companies. The first day of the pixelspaces Symposium will take a closer look at what’s happening here.

Panel 2: Open Research!

Panelists will consider the research paradigm shift going on right now from the point of view of artists and researchers working in an institutional context.

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Pixelspaces Panel 3 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en/2011/08/01/pixelspaces-panel-1-sonntag/ Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:50:10 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/?p=822 Panel 3: Creative Collisions


10:00 Christopher Lindinger (Director of Research and Innovations, Ars Electronica Futurelab / AT): Introduction
10:20 Ariane Koek (International Arts Development, Collide@CERN/ CERN / UK)
10:40 Lynn Scarff (Education and Outreach Manager, Science Gallery Dublin / IR)
11:00 Marcos Garcia (Head of Program, Media Lab Prado / ES)
11:20 David Edwards (Director Le Laboratoir Paris/ Professor, Harvard University / US)
11:40 Roundup and Discussion

What happens when media artists and scientists get together to inspire one another or even to collaborate? Panel 3 scrutinizes the potential of interdisciplinary link-ups. At the center of attention will be innovative art & science collaborations including the European platform StudioLab as well as the planned artist-in-residence program at the CERN research center in Switzerland that’s currently being planned in cooperation with the Ars Electronica Futurelab.

Pixelspaces Day 2: Art Meets Science / Art Makes Science

The time has come to set up new shared spaces that enable science and art to come out and “play.” Spaces in which each can observe the way the other works, in which each can learn from the other, and can do some collaborative tinkering on innovations for the society of the future. In addition to this paradigm of interdisciplinarity, Day 2 of the Pixelspaces Symposium will deal with another current trend: the expansion of the concept of research in the direction of gaining artistic insights. Artists are increasingly emancipating themselves and assuming the role of independent researcher. The increasing attention this is garnering will be illustrated during the panel with reference to new subsidy programs and artistic research projects. Which all goes to show that: Art Makes Science.

Panel 3: Creative Collisions

What happens when media artists and scientists get together to inspire one another or even to collaborate? Panel 3 scrutinizes the potential of interdisciplinary link-ups.

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Pixelspaces Panel 4 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en/2011/08/01/pixelspaces-panel-2-sonntag/ Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:45:24 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/?p=826 Panel 4: Re-Scripting the Stage


13:30 Roland Haring (Senior Research Lead – Interaction Ecologies, Ars Electronica Futurelab / AT): Introduction
13:40 Martina Mara (Researcher, Ars Electronica Futurelab / AT)
14:00 Klaus Obermaier (Media artist and “(St)Age of Participation” project leader / AT)
14:20 Louis-Philippe Demers (CA/SG) (Artist, Designer and Researcher, Associate Professor at Nanyang Technological University)
14:40 Johannes Birringer (US/UK) (Artist, Choreographer and Author, Professor at Brunel University London)
15:00 Roundup and Discussion

“St(Age) of Participation” is an artistic research project that the Ars Electronica Futurelab has launched in 2011 together with media artist and choreographer Klaus Obermaier (AT) to test new participative, multimedia forms of stage-based performance. In addition to presenting the project and its objectives, the panelist will be discussing the concepts of the theatrical stage and the dramatic performance, and what the future might bring in this context.

Pixelspaces Day 2: Art Meets Science / Art Makes Science

The time has come to set up new shared spaces that enable science and art to come out and “play.” Spaces in which each can observe the way the other works, in which each can learn from the other, and can do some collaborative tinkering on innovations for the society of the future. In addition to this paradigm of interdisciplinarity, Day 2 of the Pixelspaces Symposium will deal with another current trend: the expansion of the concept of research in the direction of gaining artistic insights. Artists are increasingly emancipating themselves and assuming the role of independent researcher. The increasing attention this is garnering will be illustrated during the panel with reference to new subsidy programs and artistic research projects. Which all goes to show that: Art Makes Science.

Panel 4: Re-Scripting the Stage

St(Age) of Participation is an artistic research project that the Ars Electronica Futurelab has launched in 2011 together with media artist and choreographer Klaus Obermaier (AT) to test new participative, multimedia forms of stage-based performance.

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Pixelspaces Panel 5 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en/2011/08/01/pixelspaces/ Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:40:43 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/?p=805 Panel 5: OHMI – The One-Handed Musical Instrument Project


16:00 Horst Hörtner (Laboratory Director, Ars Electronica Futurelab / AT): Introduction
16:10 Stephen Hetherington (Founder of the OHMI Project / UK)
16:30 Joe Paradiso (Director of the Responsive Environments, MIT MediaLab / US)
16:50 Peter Purkathofer (Associate Professor Vienna University of Technology / AT)
17:10 Nick Wilsdon (UK/Assistive Music Technology specialist at Drake Music; Sound Designer; Media Artist & Musician)
17:30 Roundup and Discussion – Moderation: Horst Hörtner (Laboratory Director, Ars Electronica Futurelab / AT)

There is presently no orchestral musical instrument that can be played with one hand. As a result millions of people across the world with impairment in one hand or arm are excluded from music making. We want to invent new instruments to open full and undifferentiated participation in musical life; whether at school, in the home, or in a professional ensemble. The technical difficulties of this challenge are considerable. It is now fairly straightforward to synthesize the sounds of orchestral instruments electronically, but this is a far cry from the subtlety and complexity of performance on a realorchestral wind or string instrument. The OHMI Project is trying to create musical equivalence, compatibility and the possibility of participation. Our success will have a profound impact not just on individuals, but also on society‘s relationship with disability, opening new realms of achievement and possibility.

The Ars Electronica OHMI Competition

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OKHct8tscW8
Stephen Hetherington introduces OHMI

The OHMI-Trust was formed by Stephen Hetherington and Martin Dyke in 2011 in response to Stephen’s attempts to find a musical instrument his hemiplegic daughter could play at school. Panel 5 on the One-Handed Musical Instrument Project in conjunction with Pixelspaces 2011 will officially launch the Ars Electronica OHMI Competition. The competition will then commence and the entry rules will be formally published. It is expected that each round of the competition will last two years. At the end of the first year
the best concepts and prototypes will be awarded funds to assist further development.

Actual performances will then be given on the new instruments at the end of the second year. It is planned that the winning instrument will get a special Prix Ars Electronica award and will perform as part of the Ars Electronica Festival before playing again with the City of Birmingham Orchestra in the UK.

Pixelspaces Day 2: Art Meets Science / Art Makes Science

The time has come to set up new shared spaces that enable science and art to come out and “play.” Spaces in which each can observe the way the other works, in which each can learn from the other, and can do some collaborative tinkering on innovations for the society of the future. In addition to this paradigm of interdisciplinarity, Day 2 of the Pixelspaces Symposium will deal with another current trend: the expansion of the concept of research in the direction of gaining artistic insights. Artists are increasingly emancipating themselves and assuming the role of independent researcher. The increasing attention this is garnering will be illustrated during the panel with reference to new subsidy programs and artistic research projects. Which all goes to show that: Art Makes Science.

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Horst Hörtner talking about Pixelspaces 2011 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/en/2011/07/19/1080/ Tue, 19 Jul 2011 14:13:44 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/origin/?p=1080 When you consider the Futurelab’s wide-ranging activities and endeavors these days, all you can say is: “Hats off!” This division of Ars Electronica was actually set up pursuant to business considerations as an in-house R&D lab responsible for developing the Center’s exhibits. After all, purchasing ready-made content eventually adds up to quite a bit of money in comparison to developing custom-tailored installations right here in Linz. And so it was. It was probably not part of the original plan that the Futurelab would ultimately do much more than “just” work for the Museum of the Future, but if you actually pay a call on this lab-atelier and get a feel for the enthusiasm with which the staff goes about its work, the unavoidable conclusion is that this step was definitely the smart thing to do. In the words of Horst Hörtner, media artist and head of this division ever since its inception in 1996: “What Ars Electronica is for me? Curiosity. It’s the Alma Mater of curiosity.”


Horst Hörtner is checking out a preview of the CERN-Exhibition-Layout. The exhibition is starting at August 4th 2011 in the Ars Electronica Center. Click on the picture to find the Flickr-Set of Pixelspaces 2011

Over the years, the Futurelab has been singled out for recognition with prizes and awards for lots of stuff staffers have come up with. They’re especially proud of the World Summit Award 2005 for “Gulliver’s World,” an interactive world designer that garnered rave reviews from critics at such prestigious media outlets as the BBC.

The Futurelab’s Pixelspaces series premiered in 2001 and was a big hit right from the start. Technical give-and-take and fascinating shoptalk bring top names at the nexus of art and technology to Linz, and 2011 will be no exception. Details about this year’s lineup are available here (link to program). The video features a few words from the boss himself, explaining just what is about to be thematically addressed, surgically dissected, brilliantly illuminated and possibly reassembled in an unexpected, innovative way.

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