Friday, April 17, 2009
Project Visualization: Sounds Samples
OM, the sound of the Universe, the sound vibrating within each living thing. For the sound element of my project, I would like the dancers to come closer and closer to OM, the purest, most basic sound, as they approach each other. In their longing to connect, they are actually connecting to their own inner selves, their true essence, and they gain clarity through sound. As they move away from each other and their true essence, the noise becomes garbled, fuzzy, and chaotic. I have chosen to use industrial music to represent this quality of fragmentation.
Map Ten: Synchronicity in Nature & Dance
Synchronicity
The idea of synchronicity is that the conceptual relationship of minds, defined as the relationship between ideas, is intricately structured in its own logical way and gives rise to relationships that are not causal in nature. These relationships can manifest themselves as simultaneous occurences that are meaningfully related—the cause and the effect occur together.
Jung coined the word to describe what he called "temporally coincident occurrences of acausal events." Jung variously described synchronicity as an "acausal connecting principle", "meaningful coincidence" and "acausal parallelism". It was a principle that Jung felt gave conclusive evidence for his concepts of archeptypes and the collective unconscious, in that it was descriptive of a governing dynamic that underlies the whole of human experience and history—social, emotional, psychological, and spiritual. Events that happen which appear at first to be coincidence but are later found to be causally related are termed as "incoincident".
One of Jung's favourite quotes on synchronicity was from Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll in which the White Queen says to Alice: "It's a poor sort of memory that only works backwards".In Nature
We see examples out synchronicity in nature so frequently that they seem ordinary. For example, look up into the sky and see how a flock of birds fly in formation. When they change direction, they all execute the same motions in sync. While they include hundreds of individuals, they move in harmony without an obvious leader. They never bump into each other. Physicists have been working for years to understand the properties that guide the movements of birds and so far they have been unsuccessful.
In Movement
Since I am basing my work this quarter on improvisational movement, I wanted to explore contact improv as a complex interactivity for the survey project. I am intrigued by the parallels between collective animal behavior/movement and contact improv dance, particularly as they both exhibit qualities of synchronicity. This is a concept that will inform my final project.
Not Until Now - "The film documents two dancers as they strive and sometimes struggle to create intimate connection both physically and emotionally. Using the form contact improvisation as their focus. The music, instrumental and skillfully composed, along with serene images of nature, set the stage for the dance to unfold."
What is Contact Improvisation?
This quote from Nancy Smith's Caught Falling: The Confluence of Contact Improvisation
explains well this complex interactivity:
"Contact Improvisation is a dance form, originated by American choreographer Steve Paxton in 1972, based on the communication between two or more moving bodies that are in physical contact and their combined relationship to the physical laws that govern their motion—gravity, momentum, inertia.
The body, in order to open to these sensations, must learn to release excess muscular tension and abandon a certain quality of willfulness to experience the natural flow of movement. Practice includes rolling, falling, being upside down, following a physical point of contact, supporting and giving weight to a partner.
Contact improvisations are spontaneous physical dialogues that range from stillness to highly energetic exchanges. Alertness is developed in order to work in an energetic state of physical disorientation, trusting in one’s basic survival instincts. It is a free play with balance, self-correcting the wrong moves and reinforcing the right ones, bringing forth a physical/emotional truth about a shared moment of movement that leaves the participants informed, centered, and enlivened."
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Map Nine: Collective Animal Behavior & Simulations/Art
Flocking is the collective motion of a large number of self-propelled entities and is a collective animal behavior exhibited by many living beings such as birds, fish, bacteria, and insects. It is considered an emergent behavior arising from simple rules that are followed by individuals and does not involve any central coordination. As a common demonstration of emergence and emergent behavior, it was first simulated on a computer in 1986 by Craig Reynolds with his simulation program, Boids. This program simulates simple agents (boids) that are allowed to move according to a set of basic rules. The result is akin to a flock of birds, a school of fish, or a swarm of insects.The simplest mathematical models of animal aggregations generally instruct the individual animals to follow three rules:
1. Separation - avoid crowding neighbours (short range repulsion)2. Alignment - steer towards average heading of neighbours
3. Cohesion - steer towards average position of neighbours (long range attraction)
With these three simple rules, the flock moves in an extremely realistic way, creating complex motion and interaction that would be extremely hard to create otherwise.
Collective Animal Behavior describes the coordinated behavior of large groups of similar animals and the emergent properties of these groups. Facets of this topic include the costs and benefits of group membership, the transfer of information across the group, the group decision-making process, and group locomotion and synchronization. Studying the principles of collective animal behavior has relevance to human engineering problems through the philosophy of biomimetics. For instance, determining the rules by which an individual animal navigates relative to its neighbors in a group can lead to advances in the deployment and control of groups of swimming or flying micro-robots such as UAVs (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles).
(From Wikipedia)

Map Eight: Visualizing Language
My short investigation into word clouds led me to Wordle, a website that generates word clouds from text that you provide, giving greater prominence to words that appear more frequently in the source text. This sparked my curiosity regarding cultural texts and the prominence of certain words over others. This is a great mechanism for sifting out themes, uncovering like gems out of the silt. This digital visualization is useful in understanding the key messages in different texts, both popular and personal. On a large scale, popular texts, such as an inaugural speech, influence collective consciousness, so it is important to see the main ideas being relayed. On a personal level, it would be interesting to visualize your own private diary, or a paper that you wrote, and to see the main ideas that you are communicating either to yourself or others.
To create my first word cloud on this site, I entered my paper, Taking Back the Tech: Contemporary Applications of Cyberfeminist Practices Online, which explores the relevancy of cyberfeminism today. Dominant themes include technology, feminism, gender newness, and movement. The second word cloud is created from President Obama's inaugural speech. Dominant themes include the nation, newness, today, generation, less, common, power, economy, women, and the earth. Finally, I created a cloud based on my blog to glean themes for my final project.
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Map Seven: Chakras & Dance

Just as a musician must know the notes of his instrument without having to think about them so the music can flow from source to fingertips unimpeded, so should the dancer know the notes of her body so energy can flow through her as fast as she channels it.
The Chakras are thought to be spirals of light that bring energy into the body through specific energy centers. There are many energy centers within our body, but there are seven (7) major ones that most holistic health practitioners use. Chakra is a Sanskrit word that means "wheel of light". Dr Carl G Jung referred to the chakras as the "gateways of consciousness". Lying along the spine, each chakra has it's own purpose, association and connection. When the energy of each chakra is in balance with each other, we experience peace and health, indicating there is an even flow of energy through all the chakras. An imbalance at one point in the system will likely create an imbalance somewhere else. Each chakra relates to different parts of the body. Our three lower chakras, the Sex chakra, Hara and Solar plexus, through our feet connect us to the earth, our roots. Our three higher chakras, the Crown, Third eye and Throat chakra connect us to the energies of the sun and heaven, our wings. It is only natural to initiate both hands and both feet in order to connect to the earth and sky. The meeting of these energies create an inner dance.
Chakra Dance is described as a creative dance therapy which works by stimulating the body's seven major chakras (centres of spiritual power) through music and dance. Teacher Douglas Channing says chakra dance works in a similar way to yoga in that it creates energy flows through the body. There are no specific steps that you are doing, you are just guided by the music,'' he says. "Each type of music is resonating to each of the chakra's frequency. It's almost like a dynamic form of mediation.'' Chakra dance was developed eight years ago by an Australian, Natalie Southgate, who wanted to combine her work in psychology and chakra healing with her strong interest in dance.
Monday, April 13, 2009
Map Six: Digital Technology as Performance Partner
An installation made by CoMA Yorkshire(Contemporary Music-Making for Amateurs) using samples of extended gamelan techniques. The sounds are activated as the dancers trigger the Soundbeams' ultrasonic motion sensors. This was performance took place in York in May 2008.
Arduino - Physical computing/electronics toolkit for interactive objects and installations
Arduino is a physical computing platform based on a simple I/O board and a development environment that implements the Processing/Wiring language. Arduino can be used to develop stand-alone interactive objects or can be connected to software running on a computer (e.g., Adobe Flash, Processing, Max/MSP, Pure Data, SUperCollider). Currently shipping versions can be purchased pre-assembled; hardware design information is available for those who would like to assemble an Arduino by hand.

Max/MSP programming language for interactive mediaMax is a graphical development environment for music and multimedia developed and maintained by San Francisco-based software company Cycling '74. During its 15 year history, it has been primarily used by composers, performers, software designers, researchers and artists for creating interactive software.
Processing (programming language) an open source project used for many interactive art projects
Processing is a programming language and integrated development environment (IDE) built for the electronic arts and visual design communities, which aims to teach the basics of computer programming in a visual context, and to serve as the foundation for electronic sketchbooks. Processing has spawned another project, Wiring, which uses the Processing IDE together with a simplified version of the C programming language as a way to teach artists how to program microcontrollers. There are now two separate hardware projects, Wiring and Arduino, using the Wiring environment and language.
Map Five: Office Culture & Hyperconnectivity

I surveyed my co-workers to see, on average, how many different interactions they have at work in one day (emails, phone conversations, etc.) I created a word cloud based on the number of different types of interactions they had on an average day, making each word proportional to the number of times its corresponding communication was used. Unsurprisingly, emails dwarfs all other forms of communication. Intercom communication comes in second despite the fact that people in my office are able to speak face to face if they so desire. Snail mail is barely legible because it is used so infrequently, thus antiquating the paper communication trail.
It makes me wonder to what extent should we sacrifice face to face interactions in the name of expediency and convenience. In my experience, often a living breathing, in-person interaction can transmit more information in real time and conveys what can be lost in purely technological interaction: emotion, intonation, depth... This map is a reflection of my office's hyper-connectivity and how communicative prostheses are replacing human interaction.
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Map Four: Dance & Interactive Performance Space
An interactive dance and media performance conceived and directed by Klaus Obermaier, in collaboration with the Ars Electronica Futurelab, featuring Desirée Kongerød and Matthew Smith. APPARITION takes interactive performance to another level through the creation of a unique stage work integrating live performance, sound, projection and an interactive system comprising real-time image generation and computer vision.
Computational processes that model and simulate real-world physics create a kinetic space where the beauty and dynamics of the human body and its movement quality are extended and transferred into the virtual world. These two main areas of research, the interactive digital system as performance partner and the creation of an immersive kinetic space, form the artistic framework for APPARITION.
The objective of this experiment was to provide dancers with a space in which to make music based on motion and color. I wanted dancers to be able to create their own music instead of dance to a preset track. This demonstration features a dance space in which dancers create patterns of music using different colored umbrellas. Through a video interface connected to a program I wrote, the space is sectioned into a 4x4 grid, making 16 empty patterns available for the dancers, each linked to a separate sound patch. These patterns vary in length and octave range. This essentially turns the dance space into a sound creation canvas. The dancers use colored umbrellas to "paint" this sound canvas with sound.
re(PER)curso shows that experience and meaning offer a continuous stream of interpretation and re-interpretation that can be deconstructed and reconstructed in different realities and dimensions. The performance combines art and technology. Narrative, music and dance will interact and fuse with real time synthetic music composition, video art, 3D computer graphics, animated characters and landscapes.
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Map Three: Designing Social Connections

"The Chart" on the series L Word maps out the social web of lesbians in Los Angeles. The character Alice keeps a running digital and paper log of each hookup within the lesbian community. It visualizes the interconnectivity of these women and shows just how closely linked they are to everyone else. I'm fascinated by this concept of illustrating a social phenomenon and the connections between people who share a common thread. The L Word show eventually created Our Chart (now inactive), a real life lesbian chart online akin to the show's chart, demonstrating how life sometimes imitates art. The L Word chart exemplifies an intriguing map concept that I would like to investigate further. It evokes fascinating themes relevant to tecnoculture: desire to connect, transference of the real life social world into the virtual realm, and digital imaging of social phenomena. I will continue to explore these themes in my work with interactive art.
The Nexus Friend Grapher taps into your Facebook social connections and maps them out spatially. The Grapher uses the nature of you and your friends' connections to one another to chart out how closely you're interconnected.
The March/April issue of Technology Review has an interesting piece on visualizing social networks. This one adds color to a social network chart to illustrate comment activity. The layout is typical social network analysis—hubs and spokes. But the Comment Flow visualization is based on communication. These images are created by tracking where and how often users left comments for other users; connections are based on these patterns, rather than on whether people have named each other as "friends." As the time since the last communication grows, the visual connection begins to fade.
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Map Two: Mind Body Connection
The whole person model shown below is a way of illustrating how connected we are as human beings. Each of us has a deep, inner self ("I am") that is expressed outwardly through mind, body, spirit, relationship and the way we interact with the environment.
Relationship to HealthMechanism Behind Mind-body Connection Discovered: Immune cells (stained blue) end in protective caps called telomeres (stained yellow) that are shorter in the elderly -- and in persons suffering chronic stress. A new UCLA study suggests cortisol is the culprit behind premature aging of the immune system and in stressed-out people. (UCLA/Effros lab)

Meditation as Mind-Body Practice & Stress Relief
Meditation is a mental discipline by which one attempts to get beyond the reflexive, "thinking" mind into a deeper state of relaxation or awareness. Meditation often involves turning attention to a single point of reference. It is recognized as a component of many religions, and has been practiced since antiquity. It is also practiced outside religious traditions. Different meditative disciplines encompass a wide range of spiritual and/or psychophysical practices which may emphasize different goals -- from achievement of a higher state of consciousness, to greater focus, creativity or self-awareness, or simply a more relaxed and peaceful frame of mind.
I'm interested in exploring how mind-body awareness and practice can be incorporated into a hyper-techno era in which the desire to connect to oneself and to others is stronger than ever, and yet we are becoming more and more disembodied. How can we embody our physical and technological selves simultaneously? I am interested in the intersections between mind-body awareness, health, meditation, expanded awareness, and creativity.
