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Michelle Hastings

The Metropolitan Museum of Art - First Major Exhibition Devoted to History of Manipulat... - 0 views

  • Faking It: Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop at The Metropolitan Museum of Art is the first major exhibition devoted to the history of manipulated photography before the digital age.
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    There is much discussion about the manipulation of photographs using computers.  But as this exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art demonstrates, photo manipulation dates back to the 1800's.  So, is the method of manipulation actually relevant, or are computers just another step in a long history of the technological evolution of the medium?
anonymous

This is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession - 1 views

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    Daniel Levitin is the Author of "This is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession". He is a musician and neuroscientist and this post is him giving a talk about his research and book at Microsoft Research. One of his main premises from his research is that music may be more fundamental to humans than language.
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    This is a very riveting talk. I didn't come away with the idea that music might be more fundamental to humans than language, but that music is fundamental, as is language, and that each of us is a musical expert, if not expert performers!
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    I have continued thinking about this topic...Levitin also intimated that musical capacity is similar to language acquisition in that there is a window of time in which that capacity needs to be triggered in order for fluency in music to be attained. The window for language acquisition is birth to puberty. If your language capacity is not triggered within this time frame, you can't learn to speak as we understand speech. I wonder if this is really true of musical capacity...perhaps, but perhaps not in the way that it is of language. Of course they massive amounts of research have been applied to the question of language.
mcruise37

Science peers into Van Gogh's Bedroom to shine light on colors of artist's mind | Art a... - 3 views

  • Newly uncovered colors of two van Gogh paintings show how the artist’s darkening life cast a shadow over his work and change the way art experts see the late period of his life. Both paintings portray Vincent van Gogh’s bedroom in Arles, southern France, in the late 1880s, and are part of a new exhibition opening in Chicago. On Sunday conservators revealed the original colors, at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), thanks to technology called X-ray fluorescence spectrometry.
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    Van Gogh painted two version of this infamous "Bedroom in Arles". Thanks for a recent technology called "X-ray fluorescence", the original colors of the paintings can be seen for the first time.
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    This is amazing! "He described it in a letter to his brother Theo: "I have painted the walls pale violet. The ground with checked material. The wooden bed and the chairs, yellow like fresh butter; the sheet and the pillows, lemon light green. The bedspread, scarlet coloured. The window, green. The washbasin, orangey; the tank, blue. The doors, lilac. And, that is all." "Casadio said Van Gogh had a room ready for Gauguin and he had worked for weeks to decorate the walls with art. "In the myriad letters he wrote to his brother Theo and friends, he said the color has to do the job here," she said. "When he was finished he slept for two days." And now there is an Air BnB where you can stay in his room! ( I'll post about it!) I'm in, he's a favorite of mine! Great post, thanks!
Alison Basford

At Cleveland Museum of Art, the iPad Enhances - 0 views

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    This NYTimes article discusses the influence of technology on an art museum, and the potential effect it could have on the art world. The Cleveland Museum of Art has created an iPad app for its entire permanent collection, something that is almost unheard of as of yet. The app can revolutionize the way people see the exhibits and view art museums. The app seems like a fantastic way for people to be more interactive with a piece of artwork on a wall in a museum. This seems to be an example of technology boosting and enhancing the art experience.
mcruise37

Robotic Third Arm Turns Drummers Into Beat Machines | Popular Science - 2 views

  • This robot drum arm comes from Georgia Tech, and was originally designed as a way to help a drummer who had lost an arm.
  • Here, the drum arm augments an existing drummer. While the user in question is wearing a headband with sensors, that part of the project isn’t ready yet. Instead, the robot arm is drumming of its own accord, with some awareness of what the human is doing. It listens, and it plays along.
  • The robotic arm is smart for a few reasons. First, it knows what to play by listening to the music in the room. It improvises based on the beat and rhythm. For instance, if the musician plays slowly, the arm slows the tempo. If the drummer speeds up, it plays faster. Another aspect of its intelligence is knowing where it’s located at all times, where the drums are, and the direction and proximity of the human arms. When the robot approaches an instrument, it uses built-in accelerometers to sense the distance and proximity. On-board motors make sure the stick is always parallel to the playing surface, allowing it to rise, lower or twist to ensure solid contact with the drum or cymbal. The arm moves naturally with intuitive gestures because it was programmed using human motion capture technology.
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    Mechanic arm allows drummers to augment their playing. The arm's technology allows the arm to tune into what the human drummer is doing and follow along. Interesting technology that perhaps could find its way into other areas of music (the three handed piano player, or allowing people with one arm/hand to play instruments formerly difficult to play).
mcruise37

With Video Cage, U2 Continues To Evolve Concert Staging And Experience - Forbes - 1 views

  • Between the two stages is a walkway that is surrounded by two 96’ by 22.5’ LED screens on each side. While the screens do play video, they are also see-through and allow the band to stand and play in the walkway between the video boards. Bono and Co. are still playing their exhaustive list of hits dating back to 1980′s “I Will Follow”, but they are also innovating the in-arena experience to suit an audience that is growing increasingly used to living on and through screens.
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    On U2's 2015 tour, the jem of their stage was the "video cage"; two massive video boards spanning the length of their two stages (linked by a walkway). Whether you are a U2 fan or not, the stage is pretty remarkable. A clip of the screen in action can be found here (start at the 3:30 minute point): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YylDq4BlkRI
brady294

The Future of Music: The Rise of Technology and Global Music - - 0 views

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    Modern music is in the midst of a revolution. Less than a generation ago, music was confined to well-defined genres aimed at pleasing radio stations, record companies, and those all-important key demographics. The music industry of yesterday was built in such a way that keeping these genres separate made it easier and more efficient to sell a product.
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    This is a cool article about the future of DJ's and how anyone can make a mix these days. Is it a good thing or bad thing?
mcruise37

America's Space Age Has Never Looked More Eerie and Otherworldly - 7 views

  • In the 20th Century, humanity finally built and strutted up its mechanical ladder to the heavens to discover the space above our skies; the first step of a grand and beautiful journey that will become the thread of history books to come, widening its place in the narrative as we ourselves evolve in knowledge and know-how.
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    Visual News is a wonderful website collecting unique and interesting collections of art. This particular piece features photographs of abandoned NASA stations and offices, offering a unique glimpse into America's space age.
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    "So you can thank photographer Roland Miller, who, for 25 years, has traveled to more than 15 NASA launch and research sites across the country to document their current state." Wow, so beautiful and sad... and i think we will only see more of this. Thanks for posting.
mcruise37

How The LEGO Movie Was Built - 1 views

  • The truly surprising part about the LEGO Movie, which is far more entertaining than it has any right to be, is how it looks
  • the whole movie looks like it's actually made of stop-motion LEGO bricks.
  • The whole movie really is stop motion. Sort of. Okay, Internet, slow down. Technically speaking, a huge majority of the film was made on a computer by the animation team at Animal Logic. But. But. That CG animation was created according to the rules of classic stop motion. McKay explains that in order to achieve motion blur or certain effects, they would crib cheats and camera tricks from the stop-motion playbook. "We set ourselves up with a bunch of rules and limitations with how we animated the thing, because in CG you could do anything. You have 15,000 explosions and their arms can bend and stretch but we said, 'No, we're only going to move these figures in the seven points of articulation that a minifig can move in.'"
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    Lego created their film using CG animation based on stop-motion. Technology meeting childhood toys meeting film.
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    This was really interesting to me not only because Lego has suddenly taken over my son, body and soul, but also because I am fascinated with the practice of using new, cutting edge technology to make new stuff look old. Amazing! Thanks for posting, really fun to know how it's done!
Alison Basford

A Case Study In The Value Of Responsive Design - 0 views

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    "In advance of the responsive orchestra website review later this week, it makes sense to provide a working example of not only what responsive design is, but why it is a necessary component for contemporary performing arts org web design." Drew McManus provides a compelling example of how easy it is, and how crucial it is for arts organizations, to create better websites. He shows how one was designed in 13 days for only $500.
Michelle Hastings

Mesmerizing GIFs of Living Movie Stills - My Modern Metropolis - 2 views

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    This is a series of stills from movies, with motion created in gif format.  Definitely not a form of photography that would be possible without computers.
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    Have you seen my stapler....
brady294

Technology and Music - 0 views

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    Innovative music has always been inextricably linked to technology. The Pythagoreans set scales in accordance with their mathematical concepts of harmony in nature, Mozart wrote groundbreaking concertos centered around the newly invented piano, and The Beatles completely changed the face of popular music by pioneering almost every modern recording technique.
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    This is an awesome piece about the democratization of music and the advent of producing from a laptop and how that is changing the world of music.
hdale1983

Section 6: Overall Impact of Technology on the Arts - 1 views

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    The arts organizations represented in the survey tend to agree with the notions that the internet and social media have "increased engagement" and made art a more participatory experience, and that they have helped make "arts audiences more diverse." They also tend to agree that the internet has "played a major role in broadening the boundaries of what is considered art."
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    100 Louvre masterpieces in your pocket. The selection of museum must-sees now features Greek sculptures, paintings by Bosch, Titian, Raphael, Holbein, and Cranach, and a drawing by Leonardo da Vinci..." One of the cool finds from this list! Thanks!
mcruise37

This new electronic instrument can make every sound ever | Consequence of Sound - 3 views

  • Nashville-based Artiphon has created an electronic instrument that beats them all for one reason: It can become them all.
  • the Instrument 1’s endless compatibility and customization means it can reproduce the sounds of a bongo, an oboe, a hurdy gurdy, a lur, even a nyckelharpa. Even crazier, it can create all those sounds at the same time by assigning each of its digital strings to a different instrument.
  • The incredible device can be plugged into almost any computer or Ap
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • The musician can perform hammer-ons and pull-offs, turn on fret-less play, slide, create vibrato, and even use an iPhone like a bow(!).
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    Amazing new instrument that can be strummed, bowed, plucked and that can mimic the sounds of many instruments, even at once.
bethhardie

How is technology affecting interior design? - RMJM - 0 views

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    In the last decade, technological breakthroughs have had a significant impact on the world of interior design, but how will the next generation of innovations change the relationship between consumers, brands, and designers? The new frontier of design at home One of the biggest advances in the past twenty years has been the introduction of BIM Technology and virtual reality.
stewartgirl1

Art Institute re-creates Van Gogh's bedroom to rent on Airbnb - 0 views

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    Now you can sleep in Vincent Van Gogh's bedroom. Well, sort of. As part of the Art Institute of Chicago's new exhibit, "Van Gogh's Bedrooms," a replica has been created of the famous artist's bedroom featured in his paintings. For $10, members of the public can reserve a night's stay on the popular home-sharing website Airbnb.
Ryan Brumit

The History Of Modular Synthesizers (MIT Course) » Synthtopia - 2 views

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    An MIT course on the History Of Modular Synthesizers. Very fascinating if you are into electronic music.
Ryan Brumit

Björk Biophilia instruments - YouTube - 0 views

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    This blew me away completely. Bjork has always been on the cutting edge of tech with her instruments. This shows off a few of them. After you watch, check out some more videos on the reactable (the blue table with the shapes on it).... it's pretty nuts.
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    This triggered various images: instrument statues that are also kinetic...sound made visible...most intriguing!
Beau Bisson

San Francisco Bay Bridge - 2 views

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    This has been big in the new recently, but what better marriage of art, design and technology is there!? Very cool and very accessible to all.
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    Quite lovely...magical. It brings to mind the interplay of atoms, or even particles...the unceasing movement of the universe. And, yes, accessible to all!!
Alison Basford

Technology in the Arts | Blog, podcast, and workshops exploring arts management and tec... - 0 views

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    This discussion-based blog explores the intersection of arts management and online technology. Technology in the Arts is a service of Carnegie Mellon's Center for Arts Management and Technology.
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