(See high-quality version here: http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=20703397032
The
(See high-quality version here: http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=20703397032 The YouTube version is shortened, Google Video allows full length but still low-quality: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4041398544389975217 )
'9 was 6 if' (2005) by Swedish artist Christian Andersson, filmed at Studio A, Otterndorf, Germany.
Sit back and let this film take its time.
(Please note that it is a true documentation of the art installation, no movie tricks or computer renderings.)
The construction and realization of this artwork grew into an insanely huge project, but the three of us had a wonderful time with it. How to make ordinary rigid physical objects change their appearance completely, to the point of merging into each other and change places in our minds, setting aside our conceptions of the physical world?
The starting point was an impossible idea with unknown potential. Various materials and techniques were examined for months at the Art & Technology department at Chalmers University of Technology, Göteborg, Sweden. Idea after idea was rejected after proving insufficient or unrealizable, and in this process the only practically possible solution emerged. In a mist of solvents, paint, glue, stress, madmanship, and the soothing music of Ulrich Schnauss, we then built the artwork - partly on location in Germany until the last second before opening. We never knew whether it would work or not, but it did. Lucky us!
Labour needed: approx 1 man-year. Total cost: 5-digit in any currency.
Research and construction by:
Christian Andersson ( http://www.christianandersson.net ) Svante Hermansson ( http://www.dillchip.com ) Mattias Rickardsson ( http://www.analogue.org/mr )
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Artwork info:
'9 was 6 if' (2005) by Christian Andersson
Copper plate, paper, thermochrome paint, heating/cooling system, hose, wood, carpet, electric lights
Shown at:
'A Whiter Shade Of Pale' Studio A, Otterndorf, Germany, 2005
Göteborg International Biennal for Contemporary Art Konstmuséet, Gothenburg, Sweden, 2005
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Added: 7 months ago
Views: 569
A stop motion animation of the construction of a x0xb0x - the DIY clone of the classic R
A stop motion animation of the construction of a x0xb0x - the DIY clone of the classic Roland TB-303 Bass Line synthesizer/sequencer, which started the whole acid movement.
The open source x0xb0x is available in kit form from Ladyada http://ladyada.net/make/x0xb0x and the movie was made by /mr http://www.analogue.org/mr/
Transistorize the world. Order a kit today. Happy soldering! :-)
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Added: 8 months ago
Views: 4,951
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