Monday, June 8, 2009

Ryoji Ikeda’s ‘+/- [the infinite between 0 and 1]’: An Interpretation

Ryoji Ikeda: +/- [the infinite between 0 and 1] is the first major retrospective of Ikeda’s work, presented by the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo (MOT) and runs until June 21st 2009. The exhibition includes new commissions, large-scale audiovisual projections, sound, and Ikeda’s abstract celluloid landscapes.

Click here for a nicely formatted version of this article as a PDF file.

Ikeda has quickly earned himself an international reputation as a leading electronic composer and sound artist. His work is hailed by critics as the most radical and innovative examples of contemporary electronic music, earning him a Golden Nica prize in the Digital Music category at Prix Ars Electronica in 2001—one of the most important yearly prizes in the field of electronic and interactive art, computer animation, digital culture and music.

Although best known for his sound installations, Ikeda has extended his activities and compositions into the visual arts, and these activities have caught the attention of MOT’s chief curator Yuko Hasegawa. “Previously, we have held exhibitions of veteran and midcareer artists as solo shows,” says Hasegawa, “but we really want to focus on the younger generation and represent them in solo shows.”

Ikeda has been intensely active in sound art through concerts, installations and recordings since 1995. Described as an ‘ultra-minimalist’, Ikeda employs cutting-edge computer technology to develop a unique set of methods for sound engineering and composition. His works feature computed, mathematically pure ‘microsonic’ tones, frequencies and noise that sometimes exists at the edge of perception.

These intense, exhilarating sounds are integrated in audiovisual installations, projected at cinematic scale in his concerts, in which each pixel is precisely calculated by mathematical principle. The vast scale of the projection heightens and intensifies the viewer’s perception and immersion in a world of pure objectivity. Acoustics and sublime imagery—derived from pure mathematics and from astronomy, genetics and other real-world data—are employed to create an experience of time that and be sped up, slowed down and frozen for analysis. Space too is like a field that can be traversed at high-speed, or sliced up for scrutiny.

Time and space, the vast universe of precision numeric data representation, and the limits of human perception are explored with precisely correlated and synchronized audio and video rhythms that sound and image fuse and become indistinguishable—resulting in a synaestheia-like experience.

Although usually described as an electronic composer, this retrospective demonstrates Ikeda’s talent as a visual artist too with large-scale photographic work and a 35mm x 10m abstract celluloid landscape known as data.film [nº1-a].

“My intention is always polarized by concepts of the ‘beautiful and the sublime’”, writes Ikeda, “To me, beauty is crystal, rationality, precision, simplicity, elegance, delicacy. The sublime is infinity, infinitesimal, immensity, indescribable, ineffable. The purest beauty is the world of mathematics.”

Consider how these sentiments are expressed in a pair of Ikeda’s artworks shown in his ‘V≠L’ exhibition. The work was inspired by his dialogue with Harvard mathematician Benedict Gross and explores the idea that perhaps nothing in the universe is random. Consisting of two horizontal panels, one is etched with a prime number consisting of over 7.23 million digits; in counterpoint, the second panel presents a random number generated by computer algorithms, also consisting of over 7 million digits. From more than a few inches away, the panels appear as a random, concrete-like grey texture. But close-up they reveal a mind-boggling array of 0.8mm-high digits, daunting in their vastness and precision. For comparison, consider that the estimated number of atoms in the observable universe is a number only 80-digits long. Unlike the random sequence, this prime number is like a jewel, a mathematical diamond that can be contracted into the sum of two squares and expanded. Its endowed with special properties which make it vital to data security. But change a single digit and this whole, delicate, seven-million-two-hundred-thirty-five-thousand-seven-hundred-and-thirty-three unit long system of perfection becomes unstable and collapses.

Such expressions of point and counterpoint abound in +/- [the infinite between 0 and 1]. Other examples include the white-light of SXGA projectors within the perfect black room. The 10 screens itself a play on the nature of the number 10 as representing the both the on-and-off of binary logic. The notion of [+/–] polar-opposites are found in the contrast of signal vs. noise as individual instances of discrete data and moments in time are plucked from the vast oceans of endless random data. Light and sound is used to freeze certain moments in time like unique snowflakes, only to dissolve back into a sea of data on the next beat.

Review and description of Ikeda’s work tends to stop short of interpretation. Indeed, with regard to the meaning of Ikeda’s work, curator Hasegawa’s says that Ikeda’s art, “doesn’t have any particular symbolic meaning; it is nonsignifying. He just wants to create a kind of matrix, or give the idea of the universe and infinity, for the visitor to simply enjoy. You can read whatever you like into the work.”

But while Hasegawa seems to believe the exhibition amounts to little more than audiovisual eye-candy, this writer found many clear, masterfully crafted messages, and believes that taken collectively, Ikeda’s work has the same power and potential as any work of great art to be a catalyst for profound personal transformation.

Spoiler alert: if you’re planning to visit the exhibition, I suggest you experience it for yourself before reading further.

The flash of revelation happens once you make your way down to the basement where a second level of the exhibition has been constructed. Here a through-the-looking-glass counterpoint to the entire exhibition upstairs has been ingeniously constructed. This alternate exhibition is identical in size and layout, but whereas the former space was set in pitch black darkness, we now face a negative-image in the form of a pure white room, Great care is taken to make it work. The expansive floor is covered in delicate white felt, and visitors don fabric slippers so as to not scuff the floor with their shoes. The felt doubles as an acoustic absorption material, helping to create an anechoic-chamber-like silence in the room. The entire room is lit from above by a grid of large panels which produce a soft, uniform and continuous light source.

Instead of 10 video projections, we find ‘the irreducible [n_1-10]’: 10 static, black panels composed of a large—but finite—set of numbers. These numbers of so tiny, they are barely visible to the naked eye. Whereas before we explored the unbound vastness of space, the limitless expanse of discrete moments of time, and the infinite range and precision of data representation with god-like objectivity, now we arrive at the polar opposite: the single, here-and-now subjective experience of the only one true universe. Here all the hypothetical possibilities collapse into a single instance of the world having a specific form and state. Our subjective perception of this particular place, the one-and-only world in which we inhabit, is enriched and is much more reified by its contrast with the inverse, counterfactual world of pure objectivity[1].

The experience is supplemented by ‘matrix [5ch version]’, a 5-channel audio installation composed of five Meyer Sound Laboratories SB-1 parabolic long-throw sound beams. Exploiting the directional behavior of a parabolic reflecting surface, the SB-1 provides the ability to propagate precisely focused sound waves while maintaining a narrow beamwidth.

Listeners who traverse, and disrupt, the soundscape created by these 5 speakers, encounter a highly-subjective hearing of the work. There is no objective position, only one vastly entangled system as the act of observation itself disrupts the sound waves and the acoustics are highly dependant on the position and direction of the listener’s body, head and ears within the field. This further solidifies our conception of space as a uniquely subjective experience.

Venue details:
http://www.ryojiikeda.mot-art-museum.jp/

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[1] The ‘White Room’ mise-en-scene in the movie “The Matrix” plays an analogous role. The stark white, horizonless background, and anachronistic setting reinforce the emptiness and artificiality of the Matrix. By contrast, the subsequent transition, made without physically leaving the ‘white room’, to a scene on the outskirts of New York City, reinstates the theme of simulation versus reality in the film.

One is also reminded of the “white room” scene in “2001: A Space Odyssey”, in which Dave Bowman ages rapidly. Devoid of doors and windows, this room too plays counterpoint to the ordinary perception of space and time.

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Monday, October 27, 2008

cevin key X dj oto



Web gallery of shots I took at a skinny puppy dj set at Shinjuku Kabukicho's MARZ on Oct 25th '08

all shots created in-camera (no photoshop)

You can hear some of Elliot's (DJ OTO) tracks here:
http://djoto.com/

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Monday, September 15, 2008

The Monkees - Porpoise Song (Theme From HEAD)

Monday, July 28, 2008

America: “A Horse with No Name”

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Monday, July 14, 2008

Apple and the future of the computer

I just bought my first Apple product--a 32GB iTouch. Well, it's true that I already owned an iPod Nano, but I didn't buy it because it was given to me.

I bought an iTouch for two primary reasons: White Rabbit Press is planning to develop a Japanese language app for it, and I also thought it would be a nice way to tote around my photography so I can show it to others (several photographer friends of mine are already using their iTouch as a mini-portfolio).

I really wanted to like the iTouch, but--while the fanboys seem to have lost their ability to think critically about all things Apple-branded--I find the device to be very disappointing.

First and foremost: you can't save any files on it. Well, of course you can save stuff you buy from the iTunes store...but this state-of-the art touch-screen digital audio player with built-in wi-fi and Safari browser cannot save an mp3 file, a picture or any other file from anywhere else on the web. I'm flabbergasted. I have 30 GB of space, I have an audio player, a video player and a photo album app, and I can browse the web, but I can't save anything? You've gotta be kidding! I was able to navigate to my flickr account and thought I'd download some of my photos into my album, but I couldn't figure out how to download the images. I thought I just needed to learn the right multi-touch technique, but nope, it can't be done.

This is CompuServ all over again: corporate controlled network access which diverts you toward proprietary fee-based services.

Of course I could download the images on my PC, then import them into the iTunes App and then sync my iTouch, but why do I have to go through all that hoopla when I have all the necessary and required elements: free memory, a web broswer, an image viewer app, and wi-fi access?!

You can't save email attachments either. What if I'm on the road and I want to email a PDF document to someone? Guess you also need to carry a real touch-screen handheld computer for that.

OK, so moving on...

* No copy-and-paste: got a mail from my friend Kenn and wanted to add this info into my Contacts. His address and phone number is in his signature, but you need to have pen and paper handy because there is no way to copy-and-paste this information into the contact form

* limited web-based user experience: two words: no flash. Also, there is a YouTube app which allows you to search and view YouTube videos over the wireless network, but you can't login to your account in order to access your favorites. You can bookmark YouTube videos that you find, but those bookmarks can only be access from your Apple iPod...

* doesn't support many popular video formats: Only quicktime, MPEG4 and h.264 videos. No "live" video or audio streams (it can play "streamed" archival media as it is downloaded).

* can't upload: guess this goes without saying, but mp3 files, images or any other files cannot be uploaded (to flickr or basecamp for example) or attached to an email.

* predictive text seems to have a learning disability: I'm getting tired of typing things like "whiterabbitpress.com" over and over...my mobile phone does much better plus it allows you to keep a list of phrases which can be pasted into an email message or memo.

* Browser doesn't seem to be extensible: no way to access my Google Toolbar bookmarks?

* Apple Tax: Hadn't had it for 24 hours before I get hit with my first Apple Tax. An iTouch 2.0 firmware update was released today. I called Apple to explain that I just purchased my iTouch the day before. So new customers are effectively getting a $10 discount. I asked if I could get a $9.95 gift certificate so I could download the update for free. Sorry Charlie, no money no honey. Yeah, I know, it's only $10, but isn't the $500 I paid for this thing already enough? I've never had to paid for a firmware update for any audio interface, computer, camera or mp3 player I've owned. Besides, it's a penalty for buying these devices ahead of others, because future customers get it for free.

* doesn't come with any kind of case: my nano did, why doesn't the iTouch? Had to spend another $15 so that the metal doesn't get scratched to shit in my bag or pocket.

* if Apple is the first company to "get the interface right" then why can't you use the keyboard in landscape mode? That would make it much easier. Bigger keys = less mistakes. Guess no one at the Genius Bar thought of that one...

* wish the designers also thought of drilling a strap hole in the frame. There's nothing to attach a strap to, and this thing is pretty slick on a hot and sweaty crowded Tokyo train...

* the headphones could have benefited from a little plastic nub on one side, so that you can distinguish the left and right by touch alone because it's faster than looking and also possible to do in low-light. My Sennheiser cans have this feature.

* no voice-over-ip: for obvious reasons

* Devices like Microsoft's XBox, Apple iPhone and Amazon's Kindle are designed to lock you in to business model which funnels more-and-more money back to the gadget provider. I worry that if everyone has a gadgets like Amazon's Kindle and Apple's iPhone then they start to become a barrier to alternative ways of communicating and distributing digital goods. For example, if the PC were as locked-down as the iPhone, then you might not be able to install Skype and you’d have to use some Microsoft fee-based voice-over-IP service.

Imagine if Microsoft said that for every application that runs on Windows, we get a copy of the source code? Or if Microsoft took 30% of the revenue for each and every Windows application sold? You'd think they were greedy monopolistic sons of bitches, and you'd be right.

Furthermore, would-be iPhone application developers — at least those who aren’t well connected — can be waiting up to six months to be accepted into the Apple iPhone developers’ program. Only those in the program can submit apps to be distributed through the iPhone Apps Store, and with several minor exceptions the Apps Store is the only way to get an iPhone app distributed to the public. And once an apps is submitted, there’s still a review by Apple — which can reject it for any reason or no reason at all. No there's no guarantee that the $30,000 you just spend to develop an app will even be able to see the light of day.

If these devices are 'the future of the computer' as some people suppose then I really worry because they completely lack the sort of hands-on openness and limitless possibility which inspired young people (like myself) to think and learn and create.

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Purple Haze by Jimi Hendrix played on medieval instruments

http://www.record-producer.com/learn.cfm?a=4493

Purple Haze by Jimi Hendrix - played on various medieval instruments. Tam Nightingale, musical co-ordinator on the project, said he chose Purple Haze as he thought it to be "the quintessential psychedelic track."

Instruments featured on the trail
Rackett - The cool bass synth sounding instrument
Tef - Medieval tambourine
Shawm - A double reed, which makes a very distinctive medieval sound
Rebec - Precursor of the violin
Viol - A type of early cello
Recorder - A type of flute

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Friday, April 11, 2008

CPR and John Travolta

Need to administer CPR but can't remember the number of chest compressions per minute? Just match the beat of the disco track "Staying Alive"

Administering CPR to the beat of "Staying Alive" and maintaining 100 beats per minute for three or four minutes until help arrives gives this person has a triple chance of surviving.

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Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Devendra Banhart - Sight To Behold



It's a sight to behold
When you got small words to mold
And you can make 'em your own

Still love it would be much better
Love it would be much better
I'm told

It's like golden corn
And i love its golden glow
It's the little head inside your little hole
And out spring some sparkling thoughts

Still love it would be much better
Love it would be much better
Love it would be much better
Love it would be much better

It's like finding home
In an old folk song
That you've never ever heard
Still you know every word
And for sure you can sing along

But love it would be much better
Love it would be much better
Love it would be much better
Love it would be much better
I know, i know

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Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Your earphones suck!

Bought a pair of Audio-Technica ATH-CKM50 Inner Ear Earphones this week and they were sooooo worth it!

Definitely the best pair of earphones I've owned. Cost is 4,000 yen on Amazon.co.jp (I got mine at Bic Camera). Very reasonable price for a big improvement in sound.

They sound very clear and bright especially in the mids and highs. These earphones are MUCH more revealing than those crappy Apple headphone that came with my iPod Nano. Get rid of those things! Life is too short for crappy earphones!

Available only in Japan with 3 different colors.

Specifications
Type: Dynamic type
Driver: 12.5mm
Output overpressure value: 104dB/mW
Playback frequency zone: 5 - 24,000Hz
Largest input: 200mW
Impedance: 16 ohm
Mass: 7g
Plug: 3.5 gold plated stereo mini-plug
Cord/code length: 0.6m (Y type)

Included accessories:
1.0m extension cord, pouch, ear pieces (S, M and L)

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