2007-04-06

detourist

[be]
by Yaz

A way to recycle, the temporary art interventions of Leo Fitzmaurice, via PingMag:

From 2005 to 2006, artist Leo Fitzmaurice became a Detourist: while traveling to Berlin, London, Shanghai, Stavanger, Zurich and back to his own city Liverpool, he made around half-a-dozen temporary artworks by rearranging found materials such as catalogues, flyers, or cardboards in their own environment creating some unexpected new meanings. By placing those rearranged objects in public spaces, and sidewalks he made art in the form of small, temporary interventions. PingMag wanted to find out more about Leo’s theory behind his objets trouvés and met him at Berlin’s General Public gallery…

detourist

Leo Fitzmaurice’s “Craterform” made out of the well-known UK shopping catalogue of Argos, which sells just about everything [PingMag]

Making art out of an everyday object… something that you don’t mind renouncing when you leave. So art is not about the object, but about its making, the intriguing creation that a found object inspires. More about the readymades of Duchamp

2007-04-05

blog press

by Yaz

…on neo-nomads’ whereabouts:

Rhizome

Turbulence

The Pondering Primate 

2007-04-04

interactive television system

by Yaz

St Louis. I find a copy of my bill on the hotel’s interactive television system…

2007-04-03

Freedom Trail Reloaded

by Yaz

Amir Rozenberg, from Connexto has been a key actor in the process of the project DiMo. Thank you Amir for your work-boosting post!

Amir is the Director of Product Management at Nextcode Corporation. Nextcode is providing ConnexTo, the mobile code scanning solution.

2007-04-02

New Bar Codes Can Talk With Your Cellphone

by Yaz

Remember project DiMo? Yesterday evening I was reading this article of the NYTimes: New Bar Codes Can Talk With Your Cellphone… by Louise Story | April 1, 2007. Here are some excerpts:

[…] American universities and technology companies have been experimenting with the codes in their labs for several years. Now, as more cellphones come equipped with cameras and the ability to run small computer programs, the codes are beginning to appear on some state drivers’ licenses and on some mailing labels, mostly for commercial use.

[…] In the United States last fall, the Canadian alternative rock band Barenaked Ladies placed the codes on concert posters.

[…] Executives at Verizon, AT&T and Sprint declined to say whether they were in discussions with the companies that make the code reading technology. Bar code companies said the carriers stood to benefit from the codes because they might encourage consumers to add Internet service plans to their accounts and spend more time on their phones.”

[…] The consumer needs a reason to do it,” said Jim Levinger, chief executive of Nextcode, a bar code company. “They don’t just wake up and say, ‘Hey, let’s go scan some bar codes.’”

If you are wondering which are these universities… well yes, there is us! Find more on the class project: DiMo blog.

2007-04-02

InsideOutside

by Yaz

I do like the idea of a piece of clothing that ‘links’ you to places, augments the feeling you have of spaces, reacts to it. InsideOutside is a project that is participative as everyone can enter the coordinate of places that make him/her feel uncomfortable. The designer is Annina Rüst (Check by the same occasion her eRiceCooker project!). I find it rather amusing that the wearer poses in front of an MIT modernist building… that I do happen to feel comfortable with… maybe because of my design background. Would be cool if we could sense/locate the public places where people feel particularly comfortable with/in… just out of curiosity…

InsideOutside is a piece of (under-)clothing that heats up or cools down uncomfortably when the wearer gets near spaces where others feel discomfort. These areas can include but are not limited to video-surveilled areas, shopping malls, riot-proof architecture, uncomfortable street furniture etc…