Wednesday, December 3, 2008

The Red Project

The Red Project

The Red Project refers to the practice of “redlining” which was once a common practice where mortgage companies would refuse to invest in certain sections considered to be poor, mostly of minority based populations. This created segregation in the US for many years, and was deemed to be “good business”

This project, with its red design for the areas of wireless access, resonates this idea. The interesting thing about this project is the interactive embedded map in which the viewer can look up any area in the world as see the amount of WiFi networks (I have it set right now on Milwaukee). I was disappointed, however, to read that this is not an accurate rendering of WiFi networks but only a estimation (a very well researched one, however, as a team of students traveled around for almost a year collected data from various places).

I don’t know yet what to make of this project in the Milwaukee area. I’m looking at the map right now, seeing the vast amounts of red all throughout the city, not really knowing what to make of the information. I guess this isn’t really my field – geography and cartography and anthropology, so the actual information does not really interest or make sense to me. But the concept is interesting, and I think this is information that should be documented and researched by someone more interested in this field than I am. These artists are pioneers, being the first to create a map like this. Hopefully there will be more to come, and more people to interpret this data.

Deliberative Democracy and Difference

Deliberative Democracy and Difference

This project, I feel, doesn’t really fit in or belong in this site. Not that I think that it is poorly made or didn’t like the project. On the contrary – I think this is brilliantly created and very easy to use and helpful. What has been created with this project is a brilliant way to navigate text on the web very easily (much easier than most HTML webpages). I truly love this project and how they created everything very easy to read and navigate.

I do not agree with the Designer’s Statement (Alessandro Ceglia) when he refers to the project as a “relatively sophisticated system of interaction,” however. I do not believe this project is any more interactive then a book is. The ability to click on a link does not make something “interactive.” In the case of this project, it makes it convenient. Instead of having to turn the page of a book to a certain chapter or look up a reference inside the text is very convenient, and I believe this project is very well structured. But interactivity must engage the viewer in the medium. The project, on the other hand, gives the viewer less of a sense of the medium in its ability to navigate so easily.

In the Designer’s Statement, he also talks about how the project is loosely based on “Dungeons and Dragons,” and refers to the project as a “simulation.” Though I am not a huge fan of Dungeons and Dragons, I do not see the similarity, or how this project could be described as a “simulation.” I feel the designer has tried to make this project more than it is – which is a brilliantly easy way to navigate text – in his attempt to simplify it as well as to make it like a “choose your own adventure style simulation.”

I’m not discussing the text in this project for the fact that it has nothing to do with media of any kind – and is really about the philosophy of democracy – as interesting as that is. Fascinating article that I suggest reading. I do believe that the way it is presented is great. The design definitely compliments the article, and I’m glad the designer did not go through lengths to make the piece “interactive,” though I wish he would not have presented it like such, because it is not. Reading and navigation through the piece in this format rather than through adobe reader or a tradition webpage was much easier and more enjoyable, but as the liquid crystals in my flat-screen monitor strain my eyes, I would still rather read this article in a book than the way it is presented. But fascinating article and fascinating design. I plan on reading more of this 45 page masterpiece when it is not so near the end of the semester.

Journal Responses

Just as a disclaimer of sorts, because of the comments of my journal responses from the last session I will go less into a summary of the journal and dive more into my reaction and bias and opinion of the journal. This said, I will be assuming that the reader of this blog is viewing the projects I am writing about, or at least has viewed it, so as to know what I am talking about.

Break in the Chain of Light

I went to the Experimental Tuesday of December 2nd, 2008. I will be commenting on all the showings briefly, then go more in depth into two of the showings.

The first show was Three Hours, Fifteen Minutes Before the Hurricane Struck, a silent 35mm film with still images and text. The next was Elements of Nothing, a 35mm film of assembled layers of imagery with very music over it (piano, bells, and other like instruments), captivating the audience with its imagery. Third was The Breath, a silent film of various shots of bamboo plants. Fourth was Brilliant Noise, a 16mm film that mixes NASA footage mixed with ambient sound (if you can call it “ambient”). Fifth was Observando el Cielo, which mixes seven years of field recordings of the sky with various sounds. Sixth was What the Water Said 4-6, which we saw in class.

Brilliant Noise was my favorite of the films we saw. The sound, as I said before, could be described as “ambient,” although that description falls sadly short from what it actually sounded like (though, like most ambient sounds, it is hard to describe the actual sound in much more specific terms). The sounds of the film I would describe as the sounds of the sun, if the sun did in fact have a “sound.” The film was very grainy and, exposing energetic particles and solar wind, which appeared as white noise on the screen. Interestingly enough, this footage was unaltered in this aspect, exposing what images look like before cleaned up by NASA. The sound fit the white noise-graininess of the film, using a lot of the same kind of sounds that would come from a television set that was not getting reception very well.

The sounds of this film had a lot of the same raw aesthetic feel to them as Aaron Ximm’s did when he presented his sounds in class. Glenn, though not really specifically addressing the issue of authenticity, is very important to him. The sound in this film could definitely be described as authentic, though it also has the feel of distortion to it. I think its very interesting that author of this piece chose to call it “Brilliant Noise.” The program for this showing says that the soundtrack was created by “directly translating the intensity of the brightness into audio manipulation.” It’s not completely clear to me what that means (or how you directly transfer brightness into sound), but the concept is very interesting. Obviously, sound is not an afterthought in this piece but is truly one with the images of the piece as the author goes through lengths to try to create sounds of the sun.

Three Hours, Fifteen Minutes Before the Hurricane Struck was a silent film. This film, and other silent films during this showing, reminded me of John Cage’s 4’33” piece from 1952 (in which Cage wrote a piece which informed the musician to play nothing for four minutes and thirty-three seconds). What I realized while I watched these films in silence in the Union theatre is that there is never really true silence unless you plug your ears. The sounds of the fans in the room, the sounds of people shuffling in their seats, and the sounds of my own breathing were only amplified in this environment. It became the symphony of the piece. I became very aware of the sounds (and self conscious of my own as I watched) while this piece was being shown. Glenn Bach talked about this in his lecture (and in the readings posted), about how we go through life numb to many of the sounds we hear because we filter them out, and that is really the point of sound art and the concept behind what Aaron Ximm does. Sound artists are trying to get the rest of the world to realize the sounds around them that they have grown numb to, to focus on the everyday mundane noises and find beauty in them.