Thanks Jim and thanks to all of you for this interesting experience and
sharing.
I felt sometimes very difficult to understand the issues that you have
approached
and therefore to answer but I have grabed a few ideas that will enrich
my
work.
I wish I was more active for the posts but once again my works speak
better
than me and I have spent the last few days working nights and days on
a new
piece, a remix of the shower scene in "Psycho" (Hitchcock) where I kept
thinking of a few comments that were brought in this march
conversation.
I'll keep you informed when I'll release it (soon).
I wish you all the best
Nicolas Clauss
ps: some last links that you might know already but which I often go :
thanks to barbara lattanzi and nicolas clauss for sharing their
insights
on
video and interactivity in march.
that wraps up march on empyre.
here are some worthwhile links concerning interactive video for the
web
that
haven't been mentioned this month.
http://www.abstraction-now.at/the-online-project contains works
(primarily
shockwave and java) by a range of artists including META, Yugop,
Dextro,
Lia, James Tindall, Peter Luining, and Mark Napier. i was particularly
taken
with the beauty of META's piece "Sol" at
http://www.abstraction-now.at/the-online-project/?a=meta . these works
appeared in the 'Abstraction Now' project curated by Norbert
Pfaffenbichler
and Sandro Droschl.
Germany's Reiner Strasser has works at
http://netartefact.de/repoem/creations in interactive video.
'Structural
Walk' comes to mind, in this regard.
Canada's Jhave Johnston is working on a piece at www.etay.ca that
offers
an
interesting look into an artist residency.
Janet Cardiff, if I'm not mistaken, did http://eyesoflaura.org ,
which is
set at the Vancouver Art Gallery. Like Jhave's project, this uses
webcams.
thanks to all.
ja
http://vispo.com
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