1. links for 2008-06-25



  2. links for 2008-05-24



  3. Sometimes, I would like to speak japanese…

    Makin Jan Ma has been kind enough to cite me as one of his friend for an article in the japanese fashion magazine Soen. The magazine’s article is covering his amazing work, and that’s how i ended up part of the creator’s circle in London and depicted à la Tetsuwan Atomu (in english: Astro Boy, in French: Astro le petit robot); I quite like the funny picture.

    soen-magazine.jpg

    If anyone reading Assembling and speaking japanese could put a translation in the comment, it would be lovely :) Thanks! I would love to know what’s written as I felt like a bit on the un-prepared side during the interview…

    The work featured in the magazine is a serie of books: Sun Tzu - KD01k, the Art of War from which we are planning to edit and publish a (very big) research book - more details soon.

    Astro Boy
    Via Wikipedia

    * Electronest is taking care of the interest of Makin Jan Ma online

    ** update: the issue cover is by Eley Kishimoto



  4. links for 2008-02-12



  5. links for 2008-02-08

    links_2008_0208-picture1.png

    From LSO’s Chronicle

    Russian 20th-century music is inseparable from history. As film composers, Shostakovich and Prokofiev both got used to the idea of providing accompaniments to images of great moments from their country’s past. But few have chronicled their own times as relentlessly as Shostakovich.

    Variously fêted and reviled by the Soviet authorities, and constantly treading a fine line between triumph and disaster – sometimes even between life and death – his desire to compose never wavered, and thus it is that the late symphonies featured in this series offer an image of the postwar decades in music of unfailingly intense expression, from the ‘optimistic tragedy’ of the Tenth to the descriptive power of the Eleventh, and the dark contemplations of the Fourteenth to the quirky irony of the Fifteenth. Yet out of necessity Shostakovich’s is also an art rich in ambiguity, its surface messages often seemingly undermined by steely irony and double meaning.

    Three decades after his death these great works still have the power both to fascinate and to reach deep into our hearts and minds.

    From Wikipedia: Shostakovich’s page:

    After a period influenced by Prokofiev and Stravinsky (Symphony No. 1), Shostakovich switched to modernism (Symphony No. 2 and The Nose) before developing a hybrid of styles with Lady Macbeth and the state-suppressed Fourth Symphony. This hybrid style ranged from the neo-classical (with Stravinskian influences) to the post-romantic music (with Mahlerian influences). His tonality involved much use of modality and some astringent neo-classical harmonies à la Hindemith and Prokofiev. His music frequently includes sharp contrasts and elements of the grotesque.



  6. Fashion Design, Rock the Casbah and Ecosonic Ensemble.

    The picture of Barbara’s trousers has been taken on the way back from the concert ‘Ecosonic ensemble with Ouija Board’ where she invited us on Saturday - it was a the Union Chapel, in Islington, an amazing place:

    UNIONCHAPEL-stage-tryptch.jpg
    We were at the Union Chapel, a beautiful and old church - http://www.unionchapel.org.uk/ they are using the rent of concert space to refurbish the architecture.

    Ecosonic Ensemble with Ouija Board
    Baroque Flutes: Stephen Preston, Eva Caballero
    Ouija Board: Peter Coyte, Matt Cargill
    Cellos: Thomas Gardner, Laura Reid

    After the concert, walking to a pub to get some food for our thoughts, Amandine was saying to Barbara she really liked her trousers: short legs but huge top part which reminded us of some trousers one can see in Egypt - since it was a Tartan we spoke about the Clash’s cover of ‘Rock the Casba’ by the algerian rocker Rachid Taha:

    [youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DbFYsi9iSg 350 300]

    I like also form him the ‘Voilà voilà que ça recommence’As a strange reminiscence, Barbara’s trousers made me think about what I felt during the concert, however neither the Tartan pattern or Rachid Taha has anything to do with the concert we just saw (at least not that I know) - it’s nice to have different kind of music suddenly related trough a bit of fashion design:

    It’s a kind of trousers one could define as being a closed long skirt. With a minimum use of means, the Tartan fabric is enclosing the leg just above the ankle. The fabric then moves in a somehow nice transfixing movement: and you suddenly find yourself thinking what is this that she wears: a skirt? a trousers?

    reduced-15122007(006).jpg
    The ‘Rock The Casba’ trousers has been bought at Comme des Garçons, and it has been designed by Rei Kawakubo.

    In a way, like for the trousers, the stage design used a minimum of means (if not, none at all) - something a bit like a DorkBot in a disaffected London east end warehouse.
    On stage there was 4 chairs and an orange structure with 4 vertical legs partially covered with a white piece of fabric, with 3 metal boxes on the side, one with a computer on top of it; there was also the microphone of the performers, and a few instruments: 2 violoncellos and 2 flutes, a bright light was on top of the stage, a couple of cables were lying on the floor, 6 performers catched our attention and hears for the next hours or so.
    So far, it looks quite familliar to me: ‘you plug, you hack, it works’ is my moto since a few years now.

    There was 4 improvised acts; the first one saw all the 4 instruments playing together and 2 guys in the back moving their hands over the white piece of fabrics, triggering noisy loops from the computer. the remaining acts were based on couple of instruments. Those couple were articulating in the manner of a discussion like in a lot of improvisation performance. Those instrumental discussions allowed the public to be maybe a bit more aware of how the classical instruments were interacting with the ‘table’ and the mesmerising flow of hands on top of it: the instruments were recorded live on the stage and the records were then used as sample or loops, played by the hands like on an invisible keyboard. The performance was all made of recorded loops, a re-temporisation of the music just performed on stage.

    On the stage design side: instrumentalists are facing the audience, they play in front of. In the background, the table with one or two performers focusing on the table top. When an instrumentalists finished to play its bit she or he looked at the table - in a manner of saying: ‘it’s your turn now’ - and maybe this was a bit too demonstrative of the process: to show how the ‘things’ were actually working was clearly didactic.

    hand-shadow-C010-5.jpg
    image via: Project Gutenberg’s Hand Shadows To Be Thrown Upon The Wall, by Henry Bursill

    The electro acoustique performance was relying heavily on the Reacting Table Top - the ‘Ouija Board’. The light on top of the stage was projecting shadow of the hands on the top of the table: a piece of white fabric hang by a structure of 4 feet. Underneath: a camera, filming the shadows. The shadows are then transcripted into music trough the use of the computer which is recording the music. The computer use MaxMSP to translate the hand position into a ‘push a button action’

    enfants-du-paradis.jpg

    The movement of the hands over the table top reminded me of this film I recently watched Les Enfants du Paradis written by Jacques Prévert and filmed by Marcel Carmé - which narrates the love affairs of Baptiste a pantomime (a theater mime) in Paris back in the 1820s or 1830s.
    Those handled performance were implicating both performative and demonstrative aspects. Performative in its relationship with the dancer, Demonstrative in its relationship with actor (transmitting a meaning like a pantomime)

    This ‘Ouija Board’ made me think of an instrument made of a hollowed instrument - here but not here, made of its own absence.
    My e65 camera phone is really bad at taking any kind fo picture; nonetheless the over exposed zone (the aura on the picture) is actually the place where the hollowed and somehow magical instrument was situated

    electroconcert_15122007(004).jpg

    After discussing with the composer at the end of the performance i had the confirmation that nothing on stage was in anyway designed - which it happens I quite like - much more than if it would have been.

    I like this design principle: designing something without designing it actually, letting things happen and reacting upon discussions and new discoveries - it is a little bit the same process Åbäke and us used to work on the Kitsuné website or on the Digitalism’s ‘Idealistic’ cover - but I keep the Dome story for a bit later…



  7. Hollybush Gardens Website

    Åbäke and I designed a simple and effective website for the east london gallery Hollybush Gardens based on the printed identity Åbäke designed for them. The idea was to make the geo location of the gallery as obviously as possible; they also can access the archives and the presentation of artists, current exhibition and what’s planned for the forthcoming exhibitions.
    hollybushgardenscouk1.png

    hollybushgardenscouk2.png



  8. Macondo - conceptual web design

    The conceptual electronic presence of the Macondo café on Hoxton Square (London), this was the first website design of the Macondo which lasted for quite some time from August 2005 to November 2007.
    The evolving color of the background was setting the stage along with a post mixed record of the ambient sound - giving a sort of strange pre-impression of being at the café. The website was purely informative: it had only text and no seductive pictures, since the idea was for people to be there and not in front of a computer screen.

    They since moved off of this identity track Daniel Mair and I designed.
    macondo-gif-anim-bkg.gif
    the background color used a 10×10 gif animation

    macondocouk3.png