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Posts Tagged ‘Nicolas Sassoon’

Notes on a New Nature at 319 Scholes, Brooklyn, Nov 10–Nov 20, 2011

10 November, 2011 by
“Window Series” by Sara Ludy

“Window Series” by Sara Ludy

Notes on a New Nature
Curated by Nicholas O’Brien.
Opening: November 10, 7:00pm – 10:00pm
November 10 – November 20, 2011

@ 319 Scholes
319 Scholes St.
Brooklyn, NY 11206 (map)
Gallery hours: Friday and Saturday, 2:00pm – 6:00pm and by appointment

If you’re in or around Brooklyn tonight, this is an event not to be missed.

For me the Internet has always been a physical space. Working as a sculptor, the first moment I started experimenting with HTML code and viewed the results in the browser, I witnessed a physical installation.
Jan Robert Leegte talking to cont3xt.net

“Notes on a New Nature is a physical manifestation of an ongoing research project conducted by artist, writer, and curator Nicholas O’Brien. The research critically examines and compares the relationships that contemporary artists working with digital media have to practices started in Modernist Painting – specifically the pursuit of capturing the virtual qualities of what constitutes a landscape. How does an artist depict a space faithfully enough to show its affect on a subject? Can art capture the space between the viewer and the horizon, and where does that horizon reside now that we can digitally circumnavigate the globe? Can the digital reconcile the physical?

One way that we know how to understand the natural is through the domestic spaces of our daily lives. The interior shelter allows for reflection on what is “outside,” and as a result positions civilization away from the natural. However, as various digital and virtual landscape permeate the domestic space, our notion of what constitutes the natural has become more complicated than a simple inside/outside dichotomy. We use all forms of digital and analog technologies to simulate the natural world daily, and artists in this show point to how these tools affect the ways in which the “realness” of the natural is no longer as simple as locating it outside your window.

This newfound complication highlights the central argument of Notes on a New Nature: our varied notion of what constitutes the natural is shaped by technology, which is a narrative that can be traced all the way back to the advent of agriculture and the dawn of civilization. Through employment of various digital approaches, artists in this exhibition reference this long-standing problem we face when attempting to represent landscape and acknowledge the ways in which digital technology has forever changed our understanding of nature.”

Participating artists include:

Duncan Alexander
Mark Beasley
Chris Collins
Petra Cortright
Theo Darst
Marjolijn Dijkman
Paul Flannery
Joe Hamilton (aka Hypergeography)
Jan Robert Leegte
Sara Ludy
Garrett Lynch
Michael Ray-Von
Sherwin Rivera Tibayan
Nicolas Sassoon
Rick Silva
Pascual Sisto
Kate Steciw
Wes W Wilson
Krist Wood

RSVP on Facebook.

–> Live-streaming Notes on a New Nature Gallery Tour
Friday, November 11, 2011, 3:00pm EST

Mark your calendar for a live-streaming gallery tour of the Notes on a New Nature exhibition. This tour with curator Nicholas O’Brien offers visitors the opportunity to view and ask questions about the exhibition. Just tweet your questions with the hashtag #NoANN or email your questions in advance to info@319scholes.org.

Notes on a New Nature, an Introduction for 319 Scholes from Nicholas O’Brien on Vimeo.

A video introduction for “Notes on a New Nature” exhibition at 319 Scholes in Brooklyn, NY

November 10-20, 2011

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Plant Classification by Sara Ludy

26 August, 2011 by

"Plant Classification" by Sara Ludy

“Plant Classification,” a digital image chart by Sara Ludy.

via Computer’s Club.

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Magmatic (2011) by Tremblexy & Nicolas Sassoon

18 April, 2011 by

by Sara Ludy, Austin Meredith, Nicolas Sassoon, 2011, 3 min, video, sound

An aqueous voyage through the cavernous depths leads to a vacant, oneiric chamber. A lo-fidelity music video for “Magmatic,” by Tremblexy (Sara Ludy & Austin Meredith), with visuals by Nicolas Sassoon.

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GEM by Nicolas Sassoon

13 April, 2011 by

“GEM” by Nicolas Sassoon from Jeronimo Jimenez.

Here is a video capture of GEM, an animation by Nicolas Sassoon, projected in SOMA in Mexico City, Mexico, April 1, 2011.

If you like secrets, secret treasures, jewels and gems, then this GEM projection video is for you.

GEM is akin to Sassoon’s DEBUTANTE; two of my personal favorites; both are lurid devices that will toast you.

More:
youmakemesohappy.blogspot.com
Click here to see the original GEM animation.

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Computer Visions: Headquarters by Nicolas Sassoon & Sara Ludy

6 April, 2011 by

Computers Club Headquarters by soundsfc

On the computer, a dream and a screen, the syzygy. Chimerical, real, and otherworldly.

Headquarters, by Nicolas Sassoon and Sara Ludy, is an architectural proposal for the online art collective, Computers Club.

The animation displays a 3D aerial view and walk-through of a building rendered at a low resolution, using a simple color palette. The building displayed in the video is meant to act as a physical meeting point and a center of operations for the members of the collective. Nicolas Sassoon, a member of the Computers Club, created the design of the building and the animated rendering. Sara Ludy, another member of the collective, created the soundtrack for the animation.

A more conceptual note from N. Sassoon:

“The ‘making’ of the building is completely improbable, which is what really interested me when I started working on it.

I wanted to work on a project that seemed highly unrealistic, and at the same time, I wanted to work on a project that would address the process of how architecture is promoted and conceptualized today. I also wanted it to be very romantic; an ideal space for artists, where every one could meet, have its own studio, etc.

Throughout my recent research, I have been interested in how architectural projects are shaped within computer technology. This phenomenon interests me especially when it comes to an amateur practice, where a lot of anonymous users use 3D programs today and create their own projects.

Generally, it’s about dream homes, ideal locations, projects that will most likely never be made in real life, but will only exist as a virtual object — a fantasy on a screen.

That aspect of 3D modeling really interests me; it’s something that I find extremely beautiful and relevant about our relationship to technology. I am curious about the vocation of these objects, and about the conditions of their display, and also about what could be their ultimate aspect, function, and effect. Headquarters is a step in that research, it is a virtual building that I made for Computers Club, in collaboration with Sara who created a soundtrack to complete the experience of that building.”

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7 Question (Oulipo) Interview with Nicolas Sassoon, Vancouver-based Computer Artist

31 January, 2011 by

Home/Land Studies #15 by Nicolas Sassoon

Nicolas Sassoon is a Canada-and-France-based computer artist whose work dissects landscape, architecture, and wordplay by digital dint of the raffish animated .gif. His work benefits from stylized pseudo-retro aesthetics, characterized by lurid colors, moving patterns, and bitmap. His work is quite delicious when it wanders through notional objects, sanctities, and sanguine wordplay.

The following interview is seven questions and answers translated using Oulipo constraints (learn more here). Technique: Oulipo S+7, AKA N+7: Each noun in question and answer is replaced with noun that is seven entries after it in a dictionary. These constraints yield amusing results and sometimes strange things occur. The original untranslated questions and answers are located page bottom.

Nicolas made these animated .gifs especially for this little interview.

(more…)

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Nicolas Sassoon: Hot Springs: 11 Dec – 18 December, 2010, 304 Days, Vancouver

15 December, 2010 by

Hot Springs
Nicolas Sassoon

December 11th to December 18th, 2010

Nicolas Sassoon is an exciting artist to follow, whose work translates the ineffable by means of the animated .gif, the computer drawing, and animation. Hot Springs, Sassoon’s exhibit at 304 Days, Vancouver, Canada, “exhibits an installation of sculpture, print and animation. His practice examines the relations between architecture, landscape, and the origins of computer technology.

Nicolas Sassoon received his MFA from EESI. Nicolas lives and works in Vancouver and Biarritz, France.”

304 Days
436 Columbia Street
Vancouver

304days.com

Gallery Hours: Friday & Saturday // 12pm to 5pm // and by appointment

Sassoon takes the animated .gif to a new level, usually working with the XL-sized canvas. The Hot Springs .gif below is embedded at its original size, therefore it overlaps this blog’s main column. Well worth the overlap. Please take the time to visit Sassoon’s website — click hier — and enjoy the complexity of the Sassoon animated .gif.

Hot Springs by Nicolas Sassoon

Always a treat.

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a beach in Boston, July 23rd – August 28th: Axiom Center for New and Experimental Media

22 July, 2010 by

a beach (2010) | click to enlarge

My two-part film, a beach (2010), will be wavin’ simultaneously on two monitors at the Axiom Center for New and Experimental Media, as part of Refresh, “an exhibition of video and animation work that explores an alternative aesthetic in digital media artwork.” … “Refresh features a group of artists that all ask the viewer to reevaluate our collective definition of digital beauty and the value we place on visual quality in contemporary culture.”

The opening reception is tomorrow, 23 July, 2010, and the exhibit will sit pretty 23 July – August 28th, 2010. Artists in the show include: Nick Briz (Chicago), Michelle Ceja (NY), Clint Ennis (Canada), Elna Frederick (the internet), Doug Goodwin and Rebecca Baron (Los Angeles), Duncan Malashock (NY), Rosa Menkman (a Dutch-visualist DINCA recently interviewed, the Netherlands), Andrew Rosinski (Chicago), and Nicolas Sassoon (Canada).

This exhibition is curated by Yuri Stone.

REFRESH

23 July – 28 August, 2010
Opening Reception: Friday, July 23, 6-9pm

Axiom Center for New and Experimental Media is pleased to present Refresh, an exhibition of video and animation work that explores an alternative aesthetic in digital media artwork. Refresh features a group of artists that all ask the viewer to reevaluate our collective definition of digital beauty and the value we place on visual quality in contemporary culture.

Spanning from 8bit and ascii animations to manipulated digital video, this exhibition creates an aesthetic and conceptual dialogue that allows us to question conventions of digital media in our society as well as our relationship to new and past technology.  The artists included in this exhibition evoke notions of nostalgia, document unintended artifacts, and push the boundaries of the ↓field by experimenting with new technologies.  In doing so, these artists create a refreshingly alternative digital practice that functions outside of the mainstream aesthetic.

More:

Axiom Center for New and Experimental Media
Refresh Exhibit Page
Nick Briz
Michelle Ceja
Elna Frederick
Doug Goodwin and Rebecca Baron
Duncan Malashock
Rosa Menkman
Andrew Rosinski
Nicolas Sassoon

Please spread the word of this exhibit by clicking the “Share/Save” button below. Great thanks, and remember: this summer, take a break and beat the heat by visiting a beach.
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