Archive | July 15, 2010

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS – YouTube Play: A Biennial of Creative Video



If you’re an artist working with video, be sure to check out YuTube’s latest collaboration with the Guggenheim Museum: YouTube Play: A Biennial of Creative Video

YouTube is looking for “amazing animation, motion graphics, narrative, non-narrative, or documentary work, music videos and entirely new art form”s to showcase at the Guggenheim in New York City, and throughout the Guggenheim network of museums in Bilbao, Venice and Berlin.

The deadline to submit videos to YouTube Play is rapidly approaching: July 31, 2010. Click here for more info.

Read full story Comments { 3 }

Facadeprinter – An Introduction



Facadeprinter_FP2_011.jpg

facadeprinter.org – three stones from Facadeprinter on Vimeo.

facadeprinter.org – 5°Asalto Zaragoza from Facadeprinter on Vimeo.

facadeprinter_091014_ThreeS.jpg

The Facadeprinter is a simple, software controlled robot. It consits of a two axis turn table and an airpressure printhead. The printer shoots the artwork from a distanced position dot by dot onto the chosen area. Using this method, inaccessible and also uneven surfaces can be printed on. Buildings can be displayed without costly scaffolding.

The Facadeprinter is a large scale communication tool. Print-aesthetics and method are distinguishly different from conventional print- and advertising techniques. Artworks are applied directly onto walls, like the drawings of a ‘magic pen’. At present, the maximum print distance is 12 meters, the maximum print height is around 8 meters. The shooting frequency is up to 5 dots per second.

The printer is equipped with an industrial PC which is running the specially programmed printing software. The machine is operated by touchscreen. Artworks can be loaded from USB-devices in the file format SVG. With an integrated camera photos of the printing area can be taken and overlayered with a printing preview. This way position and scaling can be adjusted optimally on site. The distance to the wall is measured by infrared-meter and entered manually. The printing software calculates the driving coordinates regarding both the perspective and the ballistic distortion.

A paintball system was converted into a printhead to shoot the colour balls onto the wall. The two axis turn table places the paintball marker by steppermotors and gears. Before printing an integrated laser displays a bounding box of the artwork to verify the precise position on the wall. In case of malfunction or danger printing can be paused anytime.

A balltower conveys the gelatine encapsulated colour balls to the marker. Here they are accelerated to a speed of 200km/h and finally burst on contact with the wall, leaving their coloured contents. A colour dot of 5 to 10 cm diameter occurs on the wall. The busted gelatine shell falls down to the ground where it can be removed, or left to decompose naturally by the rain without residue. The colour qualities differ from each other gravely considering UV stability or dripping characteristics. So colours can be chosen which bleach out within a few hours or remains visible for several months.

More here.

Read full story Comments { 2 }

Fresh Stuff From Nick Walker in Brooklyn



Nickphotomar.jpg

Read full story Comments { 0 }

Vhils in San Diego

D3S_7961.jpg

Our friend Geoff Hargadon is currently in San Diego for this week’s opening of the epic Viva la Revolución: A Dialogue with the Urban Landscape exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD)

Over the coming days we’ll be showcasing more of Geoff’s terrific photos from San Diego.

Read full story Comments { 0 }

FIRST LOOK: Dan Witz’s “WHAT THE %$#@? (WTF)” Series

gimp-van-wyck-2-view-vert.jpg

suicide-girl-van-wyck-expy-.jpg

monkey-boy-van-wyck-2-view-.jpg

“For this summer’s street art project I’m installing my Dark Doings imagery on highway interchanges, in heavily trafficked bottleneck locations. The idea is that each day, thousands of people stuck in traffic, captive in their cars, roll by my pieces at 2 miles an hour. Almost to a person, the immediate reaction to the pieces seems to be, “WHAT THE FUCK?”, so I’m calling the series, WHAT THE %$#@? (WTF)”… Dan Witz

Be sure to check out Dan’s new book, In Plain View, now out from Ginko Press. It’s terrific.

Read full story Comments { 1 }