Sunday, June 30, 2013

surveillance back stage

Sam Altieri preparing the time-lapse

Surveillance installation

Surveilling Photodotes III

Industry Lab surveillance corner
Zenovia Toloudi & Sam Altieri surveilling the upcoming Agora studio

Surveillance warning
Photodotes III time-lapse was created by Sam Altieri. To watch it, visit Zitofos link.
To see more of Sam's time-lapses visit this website. Other work from Sam can be found in her website.

Monday, June 10, 2013

Photodotes III through analogue photogaphy

On May 2013, Photodotes III: Plug-n-Plant was presented at the Industry Lab Gallery. The work celebrates the inauguration of Zitofos research on spatial light that started 2 years ago on May 2011, right after obtaining my doctoral degree from Harvard GSD: A symbolic beginning! This ongoing research is being documented in its different stages since August 2011. It has been presented and published in various venues, like the MIT Museum, MIT Energy Night, The Garden Lab exhibition at MassArtEcology & Design 5th Atmos(phere) Symposium in Canada, and in the recent ACSA 101: New constellations/ New Ecologies conference in San Francisco in March 2013. For this celebratory post Zitofos selected a series of rare, analogue photos that were taken during the opening. 

Photodotes III: Plug-n-Plant. Photo credits: Samantha Altieri

Photodotes III: Plug-n-Plant. Photo credits: Samantha Altieri

Photodotes III: Plug-n-Plant. Photo credits: Samantha Altieri


Photodotes III: Plug-n-Plant. Photo credits: Samantha Altieri

In case you are interested to have Samantha Altieri's analogue photographs, please contact: saltieri913 [at] gmail [dot] com. For more info on Photodotes/ Zitofos, contact: zenovia [at] gmail [dot] com. 


Friday, June 7, 2013

planting & plugging

Planting Arabidopsis/ Kristophe Diaz by Zenovia Toloudi
Plugging the block into Photodotes transparent wall/  Zenovia Toloudi by Kristophe Diaz

Monday, June 3, 2013

photodotes music

Reuben Son's performance during Photodotes III opening event, Photo credits: Steven Hien
Reuben Son's performance during Photodotes III opening event, Photo credits: Steven Hien

Reuben Son is known as a multi-instrumentalist whose live performances and studio work often include utilization of guitars, tape machines, and modular synthesizer. His 'breaking guitar' pieces have focused on the fragmentation of linearity in performance-time with exploration of  opportunities for manual intervention within the context of electroacoustic music. His new in-progress work moves away from the very hands-on guitar pieces, and focuses on a relatively hands-off system, involving generative digital structures articulated by traditional analogue synthesis methods. Inspired by Photodotes III interplay with organic materials, plants, light, and space, Reuben Son, created and experimental soundtrack that was premiered during the opening reception of the exhibition at Industry Lab (Cambridge, MA) on May 31, 2013:
 



https://soundcloud.com/reubenson/music-for-photodotes-iii
According to Reuben Son: 

"...a pair of algorithmic patches written for and executed on an Arduino microcontroller interfaced with a mostly analogue modular synthesizer...All sounds were synthesized processed in real-time using traditional analogue synthesis methods, with the notable exception of the use of a brief sample from David Behrman's "Leapday Night - Scene 2", which kicks off and anchors the second half of this recording..."
The algorithmic generation of musical parameters and control structures (articulated by a compact analogue synthesis system allow for a minimum or with some gradient of human interaction. The piece's life-cycle is inter-determinate and gives the opportunity to Reuben Son to make "relatively infrequent and subtle changes to the music's progression in an improvised fashion." 

Reuben Son's performance was his first Boston set in exactly nine months. It was instigated by Yurij Roman Lojko, Senior UI Developer at Genuine Interactive,  Webmaster at Green City Growers, and also Radio Host & Sub Director at WMBR, Cambridge.

Saturday, June 1, 2013