Oct 20 2008

Re-inventing Radio

Category: Projectsagarton @ 2:58 am

Tuesday 21 Oct 2008 will see the official launch of the book, Re-inventing Radio. I was one of several contributors to this important collection of essays, considerations, reflections and questions.

The book will have been launched at The MAK where I will have appeared on a small panel with the editors and performing GRIT #02. The performance will feature the found film experimental video piece, Rot Emulsion, by Andrew Thomas and myself.

I am, of course, terribly proud to be involved with yet another fine publication with the likes of Heidi Grundmann and her fellow travellers, and of course, another KunstRadio production.

Re-Inventing Radio
Aspects of Radio as Art
Frankfurt/Main 2008, Revolver, 544 pages, 200 images, English
ISBN 978-3-86588-453-4
25,- EUR

Edited by: Heidi Grundmann, Elisabeth Zimmermann, Reinhard Braun, Dieter Daniels, Andreas Hirsch, Anne Thurmann-Jaje.

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Oct 06 2008

NOTHINGKNOWN

Category: Projects, journalagarton @ 6:43 am

The NOTHINGKNOWN prototype was launched as part of the CPU series at ESC, Graz, on Saturday, 4 October. The opening was part of an organised day trip of various galleries coinciding with the start of the city wide festival, Steirischer Herbst.

The soundscape was generatively created from a piece that ran for 9 days. It consists of field recordings made from Iban longhouse communities in 1999.

For more information, exhibition details and aknowledgements:
http://agarton.org/wiki/index.php?title=Nothing_Known

Note: this piece is frequently updated as changes are made in response to feedback and discussion with other participating artists and visitors to the gallery.

The ESC tech support person, Peter, helped to ensure my pieces were complete in the hour before people arrived by sharing the rendering and compressing load… we also managed to get a Toy Satellite showreel completed for another space at ESC. It become a popular spot for visitors to the gallery who found the soundscapes comforting, as someone described…

The NOTHINGKNOWN prototype turned out just as I had intended… I was moved by how it well it was received and that people have taken an interest in the Sarawak land rights issues the piece is largely drawn from.

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Sep 01 2008

GRIT #02 concept notes

Category: Projectsagarton @ 2:58 pm

Proposed for book launch presentation at The MAK (Museum fuer Angewandte Kunst / Museum for Applied Arts), Vienna, 21 October 2008. Commissioned by KunstRadio.

GRIT #02 - Illusions of Homogeneity / Illusionen von Homogenität

Performance for solo voice, oral microphone, hard curve saturation and open licensed visuals.

Homogeneity means “being similar throughout”. What homogeneity brings to societies is an illusion. Sameness is celebrated. Difference is discarded. It is a monoculture, a folly. Sameness will be our undoing.

  • Reference: wikipedia.org (Homogeneity)
  • GRIT #01 - open licensed photo, video and sound collage by Andrew Garton

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Jul 16 2008

Licht Drift Online

Category: terminal quartetagarton @ 9:58 am

The last performance of the Terminal Quartet took place in Brisbane, at the State Library of Queensland, 24 June. A recording of that performance, featuring Lawrence English, Andrew Kettle, Julian Knowles and myself, is now available online:

Licht Drift MP3 Download

Licht Drift Podcast

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Jul 05 2008

Notes Towards a Live Machinima

Category: Projects, gallery, son of scienceagarton @ 9:04 am
Steve Law with Border Song installation

Steve Law with Border Song

Notes towards the Border Song exhibition held at RMIT University, June 2008, by John Power and Andrew Garton.

Andrew and I have worked together - and with others - in a range of collaborations since 1998. The first collaboration was called Auslander (Foreigner), an online opera written by Andrew. It is worth mentioning here because the theme of statelessness is one that has stayed with us and which informs the work you hear and see in this exhibition.

Most of these collaborations have been towards live audio visual performance, where Andrew makes sound and I make video; the results of this making often sparks other ideas and so it has proceeded. There was an improvisational element from the beginning and this continues. We were curious, excited and sceptical in equal parts at whether or not the sounds and images formed a meaningful relation in live AV performance. The more we improvise together, the more confident we feel that we can leave any conclusions up to you.

This work here is not improvised, but the sound and image are on asynchronous loops, so you may invent Audio Visual events as you look and listen, as they will not repeat.

Andrew got to work with Steve Law in 2004 on some songs; John created video elements to each of these songs. We read Olaf Stapleton’s Star Maker. We performed the images and sounds live around Melbourne and Andrew called it Son of Science. Others joined us. The sound and images have kept evolving and this exhibition takes you through the current state of the collaborative space. What you see and hear in this exhibition are audio visual notes toward a future linear Machinima and live Son of Science performance that will echo inside each other. As happens in much collaboration, conversations and responses are more around themes than plots; more around sound and image than platforms (although we do find our computers very handy).

Stapleton’s 1937 Star Maker was a protest against the rise of Fascism, albeit wrapped inside an epic science fiction where the futuristic characters become preoccupied with building artificial worlds.

This work is a response to the theme of Statelessness.

John Power
May 2008

The real-time space was authored, and is running in, Epic Games’ Unreal Tournament 2004 Engine.

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