Author Archive

V and A at Dundee Building (2011) – Kengo Kuma

Kengo Kuma V&A at Dundee designArchitecture is not something that has been featured on The Medium of so far, but the recent competition held to pick the design of the new V&A at Dundee Building has produced a number of very exciting contemporary architectural designs. From an initial crop of over 120 design submissions from architects worldwide, just six designs made the shortlist. Those designs were by: Delugan Meissl Associated Architects, Kengo Kuma & Associates, REX, Snøhetta, Steven Holl Architects and Sutherland Hussey Architects.

The winning design, chosen by an international jury was that of Kengo Kuma & Associates.

Kengo Kuma V&A at Dundee design

The V&A at Dundee website describes the design as, “a striking building that will come to represent Dundee and has the potential to be one of Europe’s most iconic buildings. Once built, the building itself will appear to ‘float’ on the water.”

Kengo Kuma

The building includes a gallery and exhibition spaces, working and design spaces, offices, and social areas. An important part of the design brief issued to all designers was that the building should be both environmentally friendly and fully sustainable, something that the jury felt Kengo Kuma and Associates’ design fulfills entirely.

Below are some further images of the design:

Kengo Kuma V&A at Dundee design

Kengo Kuma - V&A at Dundee design

Kengo Kuma V&A at Dundee design

Kengo Kuma V&A at Dundee deisgn

For further information about the V&A at Dundee building competition, where you can see all the shortlisted designs and find more detail about the winning design, visit: http://vandaatdundee.com

For more information about Kengo Kuma Associates visit their website: http://kkaa.co.jp

Iddu (2007) – James P Graham

Feature sourced by: Sozita Goudouna, Artistic Director of Out of the Box Intermedia

James P GrahamIddu (meaning ‘Him’ in Sicilian dialect), is a 360 degree artwork realised on the landscape of the active volcano Stromboli. Made over a period of four years, this 15 minute film combines 360° and 180° panoramic multi-camera views. It is coupled with a soundtrack generated from the collaboration between James P Graham and celebrated sound artist Akio Suzuki who performed in situ on the volcano. The end result is a 12 screen “surround” installation within an enclosed circular space which immerses the viewer into the centre of a unique, and petrifyingly beautiful landscape.

Here is a virtual representation of Iddu, created for digital mediums:

IDDU – a 360 degree film installation from James P Graham on Vimeo.

Exhibitons of the installation have been held in a number of places since it’s completion:

2010: Busan Biennial – Busan, South Korea
2010: Volcano: from Turner to Warhol – Compton Verney, UK
2009: Searching for Empedocles – Islington Metalworks, London
2007: MUDAM Guest House – Musée d’Art Moderne, Luxembourg.

The project was funded by Arts Council of England, MUDAM, and NESTA Foundation.

If you would like to find out more about James P Graham and his work, please visit his website: www.jamespgraham.com

Sexy Pig (c.2009) – Robert Ford

Sexy Pig is a story about breaking and entering, flour, eggs and sex, or phone sex to be precise! This playful and surreal short film was screened during the Rushes Soho Shorts Festival 2011 which has been hosted over the last five days by the Institute of Contemporary Arts. Sexy Pig was listed in the Newcomer Category along with several other insteresting films, including Worship (Dir. Calum MacDiarmid) and Starcrossed (Dir. Tactful-Cactus) which are both worth a look (links to them below).

Here’s the full length film, Sexy Pig:

Sexy Pig from robert ford on Vimeo.

Sexy Pig was written and directed by Robert Ford (MoNoPo Films). To see more of his work, please visit his vimeo profile at: http://vimeo.com/6518306

For more information about the Rushes Soho Shorts Festival, please visit the ICA website here: http://www.ica.org.uk/29443/Seasons/Rushes-Soho-Shorts-Festival-2011.html

To see excerpts from the other films mentioned here, please follow these links:

Worship Dir. Calum MacDiarmid: http://vimeo.com/17436942

Starcrossed Dir. Tactful-Cactus: http://vimeo.com/25718883

Three Theories (2010) – Armitage Gone! Dance

Armitage Gone! Dance

Three Theories is an intense dance piece that is full of energy. It was influenced by physicist, Brian Greene’s book, The Elegant Universe and three theories – General Theory of Relativity, Quantum Mechanics and String Theory – that are discussed in the book. Karen Armitage choreographs rapidly changing movements that are forceful, sensuous and physical to represent the concepts of the theories. Armitage describes the work as, “a balletic work” and goes on to say:

“There are forces that move us which we understand; others which we don’t. My dances are the combination of both. The ultimate purpose in bringing together such forces is to create beautiful and symbolically meaningful movement that quickens our sense of the world.”

Below are three video excerpts from performances of Three Theories:

Armitage Gone! Dance are based in the US, predominantly performing in New York, but have toured across Europe including venues in Germany, Italy, Belgium and the UK.

If you would like to find out more about Armitage Gone! Dance, you can visit their website at: www.armitagegonedance.org

To see more videos of Armitage Gone! Dance in action, visit their YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com/user/ArmitageGoneDance

Sub Terra (2008) – Natasha Barrett

Sub Terra photosNatasha Barrett is a sound designer/artist. She works in various media including installations, electroacoustic composition, multimedia works and composition for acoustic instruments with live electronics. Sub Terra is a concert performance and three sound installations that uses sounds collected from under ground. These sounds are then manipulated and altered to create unusual and exciting sound worlds. The work is described on Natasha’s website as follows:

Each installation zooms in on sounds unique to three locations under Norwegian ground, creating surreal semi-narrative journeys through the development of the sound in itself. The installation sites lead the visitor through underground or enclosed sound-worlds, where atmosphere and acoustics allow the sound to live, gradually closer to the concert space. The concert work crystallises into a musical form that which is most abstract from the installations and involves a dynamic performance through frequency, space and time over 14 loudspeakers.” (see below for more details)

Here is an excerpt from the work:

Find more Natasha Barrett songs at Myspace Music

The installations:

Under the Sea Floor (Coring and Strata) – 10 channel installation.
‘Under the sea floor (Coring and Strata)’ originated in a University of Oslo research project where a 10-meter long core-sample was taken from a ‘pockmark’ in the Oslo Fjord, 32 meters below sea level. For two days I hovered in the background on a research ship and on a drilling vessel, recording sounds from on deck, below water and on the sea-floor. From these recordings came one set of two sound-types used in the work. The second set of sounds originated from a seismic shot created by a large TNT blast in a quarry. This shot was recorded by an array of 2000 geophones spread over tens of kilometers. The sound on each geophone is about 15 seconds long, and records the response from the Earth’s crust and well into the mantle – representing the geological formation through sound and control data.

Sub Terra photos

Kongsberg Silver Mines – 4, 6 or 8 channel installation.
‘Kongsberg Silver Mines’ is a journey on the old miner’s train used to transport silver ore and miners in and out of the Kongsberg Silver Mines to a depth of over two kilometers. The deafening sound and immense vibrations of the old trucks transport us finally into the depths of the mines. Here a miner guide drifts in and out with snippets of description and history. Kongsberg Silver Mines displays a clearer narrative structure than ‘Under the Sea Floor (Coring and Strata)’. Spoken text from tourists and the ‘tunnel acoustic’ are used as landmarks in a Sub Terra surreal journey far removed from a leisure tourist trip.

Sub Terra photos

‘Sand Island’ – headphone listening to a 3-D space using head-related transfer functions (HRTFs).
A holiday sandy shore is transformed. Imagine telescoping down to the size of a sea snail. The lazy Norwegian tide and the soft golden sand take on a whole new perspective. Two hydrophones (underwater microphones) were buried under the sand in the tidal zone of a small bay on Sondre Sandoy in Hvaler, Norway. After some time the tide lifts the hydrophones out of the sand and carries them into a floating bed of seaweed. Be it rain, wind or sun, sit in the Tou garden and explore with your ears the shore-line in a way unimagined.

Sub Terra photos

‘Sub Terra’ was commissioned by NyMusikk Rogaland with support from the Norwegian Cultural Council and the Norwegian composer’s union.

If you would like to hear more of Natasha’s work, please visit her myspace page: www.myspace.com/twinofeyg

To find out more about Natasha and her work, you can visit her website: www.natashabarrett.org

Additionally, there is a Wikipedia entry for her and an article on www.otherminds.org

British Art Show 7 – In the days of the comet

British Art Show 7 logoThe British Art Show is a touring art exhibition that runs for a whole year every five years. BAS describes itself as being, “widely recognized as the most ambitious and influential exhibition of contemporary British art“. The British Art Show 7 – In the days of the comet, is currently in Glasgow where it will stay until 21st August. It will then move to Plymouth, it’s final destination, until 4th December. Previous venues for BAS7 have been Nottingham and London.

NUD (3)2009 by Sarah Lucas

NUD (3)2009 by Sarah Lucas

39 artists have been chosen by curators Lisa Le Feuvre and Tom Morton on the basis of these artists’ contribution to contemporary art over the past five years. The theme of the exhibition is the comet and the ways in which the comet has been interpreted and given meaning by human cultures.

'Our House' (The Object) by Nathaniel Mellors

'Our House' (The Object) by Nathaniel Mellors

Of the exhibition theme, the curators write:

While current scientific theory posits that comets are nothing more than elliptically orbiting clumps of dust, ice and gas, utterly indifferent to our affairs, they remain powerful reminders of the way in which our species has attempted to understand experience through the measuring of time, the writing of history, the belief in cosmological influence, and the notion of a deterministic universe.

Untitled (2005-2010) by Roger Hiorns

Untitled (2005-2010) by Roger Hiorns

Here is a short video from the British Art Show website, presented by the curators, which gives a feel for the exhibition:

If you would like to find out more about the exhibition, please visit: www.britishartshow.co.uk

To see more work by the artists from the exhibition featured here, please visit:

Sarah Lucas:
www.gladstonegallery.com/lucas.asp
Sarah Lucas on www.tate.org.uk
www.sadiecoles.com/sarah_lucas/index.html

Nathaniel Mellors:
Mellors on www.ica.org.uk
www.mattsgallery.org/artists/mellors/exhibition-1.php

Roger Hiorns:
Hiorns on www.tate.org.uk – exhibitions
Hiorns on www.tate.org.uk – artists
Hiorns on www.artangel.org.uk

What’s wrong with Now? (2011) – Gasser-Kochan-Øgrim Trio

Gasser-Kochan-Ogrim TrioWe were recently contacted by Tellef from the Gasser-Kochan-Øgrim Trio about their new album, What’s wrong with Now?. After hearing a couple of tracks from the album it was decided that we should definitely do a feature on it. The Gasser-Kochan-Øgrim Trio is Clementine Gasser (5 string cello), Jacek Kochan (drums/percussion) and Tellef Øgrim (fretless guitar/electronics). Tellef describes the trio as playing, “abstract music on the borders of noisy jazz and contemporary art music, sometimes graphically pre-sketched, otherwise not at all pre-planned”.

On 25th September 2010 Gasser, Kochan and Øgrim met in Amann studios in Vienna for a concert recording that is now in the process of being mastered and released on Nottwo Records this summer under the title, What’s wrong with Now?

Here are a couple of tracks from the forthcoming album:

Gasser-Kochan-Ogrim @ Amannstudios by tellefogrim

If you would like to find out more about the Trio on this website, please visit:
Gasser-Kochan-Øgrim Trio – Info

For further information about the forthcoming album and to see/hear more of the Trio’s work, visit:
Gasser-Kochan-Øgrim Trio on Soundcloud
Gasser-Kochan-Øgrim Trio on YouTube

Insights (2010) – Johanne Timm and Riccardo Attanasio

Insights on flickr

This week we’re featuring an interesting new performance piece that Johanne Timm and Riccardo Attanasio submitted to The Medium of…. Insights is a performance piece that considers, “the relation of two bodies exploring breath as a shared need and connection in a geometrical system of figures. The performers are attached to nylon strings in order to play with the tension and a third body is created in between” (artists’ description).

The piece is quite intricate in structure and pays a great deal of attention to detail, most notably drawing on various aspects of physics and geometry. The full description of the piece (see below) puts it in context and has the capacity to markedly enrich the experience of the work.

Insights has already had performances in several venues across Europe including at the Biennale for Young Art, Moscow.

Here’s a video of the piece in performance (full description is below):

Johanne and Riccardo’s Description of Insights:

Insights is a research [piece] about the relation of two bodies exploring breath as a shared need and connection in a geometrical system of figures. The performers are attached to nylon strings in order to play with the tension and a third body is created in between.

Insights on flickr

The performance starts with the unison of two bodies one behind the other. Slowly they separate and translate their figures beside each other to tune their connection with themselves and the public. An imaginary axis divides the two performers and they rotate on that hinge until they face each other. On the outline of their bodies 16 nylon strings, 3 metres long are attached by a specific transparent glue, suitable for the skin. Both are linked and move reflecting each other forming an equivalent. Stepping backwards the 16 strings will start to straighten until they slowly get into tension:In physics, tension is the magnitude of the pulling force exerted by a string, or similar object on another object. It is the opposite of compression. Tension is measured in relation to the string on which it applies. There are two basic possibilities for objects to be held by strings in a system. Either movement is constant and the system is therefore in equilibrium or there is acceleration and therefore a net force is present.

The two performers and the strings are the system that is in equilibrium when the bodies are diaphanous, communicating. This requires listening and coordinating impulses to operate in unison. The strings of nylon are a visible connection, like cables that transmit information. The glue links the strings to the skin, the surface of the body. The in- and out- breath is communicating vividly between the performers. Slowly a synergy between the performers establishes.

Insights on flickr

When the pulling force increases or one of the performer moves independently without communicating, the nylon strings will cut off. This risk and fragility is subject to the whole performance. Once the nylon connections are detached the visualization of the third body vanishes. You can perceive the third body in between the two figures whose outlines are attached by the strings. By pulling the strings the points of the outline translate in space, like a figure in geometry. The area created in the middle seems like an empty, negative space. The perception might shift and the space is like a solid, positive figure itself.
Insights is looking for the inbetween
.”

To find out more about Johanne and Riccardo on this site, please visit:

Attanasio, Riccardo – Info and
Timm, Johanne – Info

If you would like to see more of Johanne and Riccardo’s work please visit the following sources:

actionentropy’s photostream: www.flickr.com/photos/actionentropy

Another YouTube video including Insights footage: www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhbz0_ctmU0

Horse Glue (2010) – and interview with – Stephen Irwin

small time inc. blog imageBack in December last year we featured a short film by Stephen Irwin called The Black Dog’s Progress. Stephen has recently released his latest film, Horse Glue which we are very pleased to be featuring on our site this week. When Stephen let me know that his new film was finished, I asked him if he would spare us some of his time to do an interview for the site and we are very happy to say that Stephen kindly said yes! So below the
film in this feature you can see the interview
which we hope you’ll find as interesting as we do!

So without further ado, here’s the film:

“When two films, Horse and Glue, unfold together within the same space, their narratives become intertwined” (small time inc.)

The Medium of… interview with Stephen Irwin

The Medium of…: We’re very excited to be featuring your new film, Horse Glue this week on The Medium of… and to be publishing an interview with you, so thanks for taking the time out to do this!

My first question is quite simply, how did you get into animation and film-making?

Stephen Irwin: I began experimenting with short film at university. Some of the work was part of the
course and other pieces I made in my own time. At first I used a mixture of live-action and animation, but at some point the animation took over and I ended up solely working as an animator.

TMO: What is your approach to a project when you start something new? Do you have a process
that you follow?

SI: I’m starting to. It’s only recently I’ve noticed that the last few projects have come together in a similar way, but they happen over long periods of time and are usually in between paid jobs so it’s hard to follow a strict plan. It usually involves playing around with ideas for a while with a basic script and a new sketch book. I’ll do rough storyboards, character designs, sketches etc, until I have enough images to start an animatic, and it grows from there.

TMO: Your most recent film is Horse Glue. Could you tell us a bit about that film?

SI: It was a long process and what I ended up with isn’t exactly what I’d planned! The basic idea was to take two separate films/stories and mix them together somehow, but at some point it just became this one “thing”. One of the stories (Glue) is loosely based on The Babes in the Wood folktale, and the other one (Horse) is a kind of war story.

TMO: We featured The Black Dog’s Progress back in December after I came across it during a screening at the Arnolfini in Bristol. It seems a very intricate film with a lot going on… How is the film put together and how long did all that take?

SI: I spent around 6 months making it plus quite a lot of time in preparation (again, in between other jobs). I was lucky enough to get commissioned by Animate Projects so once I got that I was able to devote all my time to it until it was finished. For a long time it was just a straightforward narrative/animation but when I put the application together for Animate I rethought it and came up with the flipbook element and having the whole narrative on the screen at once. Even if you don’t get the commission these things are worth applying for. I find the process of putting a pitch together a useful way of getting to the bottom of what you want to achieve with the film.

TMO: Staying with The Black Dog’s Progress for a little longer, “black dog” has been used as a metaphor for depression, notably by Winston Churchill. Is depression a motif within this film?

SI: Yes, that was a starting point along with The Rake’s Progress and a news story I read about a woman who set her dog on fire. The way in which the story and visuals start small and grow into something chaotic relates to the black dog/depression motif, but I was also interested in telling this sad tale about cruelty.

TMO: And leading on from that, your films can be seen as quite disturbing and create dark emotions
for the viewer. How do you feel about it being described in that way?

SI: It’s not what I necessarily set out to do. I don’t think it’s a good idea to set out to make something dark or surreal, it should just come out that way. That way it feels natural and unforced.

TMO: Do you ever see yourself creating a joyful/happy/lighter piece, or is the darkness a signature of your work?

SI: I quite often start out with something more light-hearted but as the films develop they often get darker. I’m not sure why that is because I’m interested in all kinds of work, not just the sad stuff, but so far that’s the way the films have gone. Maybe that will change with future projects!

TMO: Both Horse Glue and The Black Dog’s Progress seem to use interwoven elements of narratives, whether it be of the same narrative, as in The Black Dog’s Progress, or different narratives as with Horse Glue. Is that approach central to your work in general, or just something that these two films share in common?

SI: I like having a problem to solve. With Horse Glue it was to find a way of mixing two films together while still telling some sort of story. With The Black Dog it was to contain the whole narrative, including all the scenes, within the frame all at once. I didn’t know exactly how it would work when I started, and having some sort of concept helps keep me interested for the long periods of time it takes to make the films.

TMO: Sorenious Bonk scored the sound and music for both The Black Dog’s Progress and Horse Glue. How do you work together – do you finish the film and then hand it over to Sorenious for scoring, or do you work together in a more organic way?

SI: With The Black Dog’s Progress I had a rough version of the music right from the start so I was working with it from the earliest version of the animatic. With Horse Glue I would send him the current work-in-progress and he’d write some pieces and experiment and send stuff back. We kept passing it back and forth like this until it was finished.

TMO: As I said earlier, I first came across your work during a screening at the Arnolfini in Bristol. Do you find there are many opportunities to get your work “out there” and for non-mainstream film and animation to find an audience currently?

SI: There are some great film festivals that get your work seen and they can have quite big audiences. I’m lucky to have had my work screened at festivals all over the world, so other than the internet there is an audience out there for this kind of work. I’m always impressed at how enthusiastic the audiences are at film festivals. For me the main place I watch shorts is online but it’s always good when I get to see work on the big screen.

TMO: Finally, what are you working on at the moment – what’s next?

SI: A new short about a pyromaniac bear who misses his mother.

TMO: Wow! Can’t wait to see that! So that’s it. Thanks again Stephen for taking the time out to answer some of our questions and we look forward to seeing much more of your work in the future!

To find out more about Stephen Irwin on this site, visit: Irwin, Stephen – Info

To see more of Stephen’s work and to find out about his news and latest projects, visit: www.smalltimeinc.com

Ether Festival – Rebonds B (1988) – Iannis Xenakis, Fitkin Band Live (2010)

Ether festivalThis Thursday the Ether Festival opens at the Southbank Centre. Ether is an annual music festival, “of innovation, art, technology and cross-arts experimentation” (Southbank Centre website).

Iannis Xenakis
This year there is a strong focus on the work of the French composer, Iannis Xenakis. This includes an International conference comprising several talks, workshops and performances of the composer’s work. Xenakis is known for his use of processes and the application of mathematical theories as compositional tools. As well as writing instrumental and vocal music, Xenakis also wrote electronic music and devised a computerised musical composition tool called UPIC which he used for the composition of some of his electronic work. The festival is running a series of workshops on the use of UPIC.

One of Xenakis’ pieces that is to be performed is Rebonds which is for solo percussionist. Here is a taste of what could be expected at the festival concert on 3rd April:

The Fitkin Band
On the opening day of the festival (24th March) there is a performance by the Fitkin Band. This is the British composer Graham Fitkin’s nine-piece band, formed in 2009. They are joined by musicians and dancers from Trinity Laban Conservatoire in creating a site-specific event. Below is an extract from a live performance by the Fitkin Band:

Fitkin Band live in Nottingham from Fitkin Band on Vimeo.

Another event worthy of note is the world premiere of Will Gregory’s (of Goldfrapp fame) opera, Piccard in Space. For more details on this and plenty of other events, visit the Ether programme which is linked below.

Ether runs from 24th March to 28th April at the Southbank Centre. For full details about the festival, visit the Southbank Centre website: www.southbankcentre.co.uk/find/festivals-series/ether

For more information about Iannis Xenakis on this website, visit: Xenakis, Iannis – Info
To see and hear more of Xenakis’ work, visit YouTube and type his name – you’ll get plenty of hits.

For more information about the Fitkin Band on this website, visit: Fitkin Band – Info
To see and hear more of the Fitkin Band, visit: www.vimeo.com/fitkin