Design, Environment & Culture - Theory, Art and Design proposals toward a resilient future.
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Shifting the timeframe as a creative practise to tell a different story

Whenever we talk about climate change or planetary boundaries being overshot, discussions are held on a very abstract and hypothetical level based mostly on the predictions by scientists and researchers. It involves an immense amount of cognitive effort of any regular person to imagine these processes stretching out over time and into our future. These are not events which can be perceived with our human eyes and experienced directly with our bodies. 

The emerging field of high quality but low-budget time lapse photography has a lot of potential to be our technological prosthesis, our third eye which enables us to look into the past and observe slow occurring events more easily. By changing the timeframe, any video editor with decent skills can tell a different story, a story of our existence on this planet. Through time-lapse videos we can observe the actual rotation of our planet, gaze at the rise of Milky Way, see how the weather evolves and perceive the complexity and rhythms of our modern civilisations. Even the most convinced advocates of reason must have to admit that these images have something mythical and are extremely strong. 

In their movies (Qatsi Trilogy, Baraka) time-lapse pioneers Godfrey Reggio and Ron Fricke first performed the task of taking the viewer on a journey through time (and not only that!). Meanwhile, 2 decades later every hobby photographer with decent equipment can do the same and present a mythical and sublime experience of mother earth in universe on a computer screen. Whereas in most of the footages of the time-lapse communities on Vimeo or Youtube you can gaze for hours at the beauty of earth, the full communicative potential of this creative method hasn’t been harnessed so far. Good examples, which set the direction we should be heading with the time-lapse fun is Greenpeace’s short clip “breath in, breath out” or James Balog's "extreme ice survey".

Filed under  //   art   movies   practise   time  

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Ross Ching: Running On Empty

In addition to Matt Logue's Empty L.A. Ross Ching has taken the idea one step further, combining retouching with time lapse photography. 

Ross describes his work as follows:

I live in Los Angeles. I drive in Los Angeles. I think about traffic a lot in Los Angeles. A few months ago, I discovered Matt Logue’s Empty LA photographs. I didn’t think much about it at the time, but every time I was stuck in rush hour all-hour traffic, I found myself thinking, “What if tomorrow everyone’s car disappeared.”

What would that scene look like? How would people react? How quickly would the atmosphere rebound from centuries of fossil fuel emissions?

So I took Matt Logue’s still photography concept and applied it to something that I do best — time lapse. I built a story around the idea of us being shackled to this ball and chain; this love-hate relationship with whom we spend so much time with here in LA.

PS. Driver who goes 60 mph in the fast lane — I still hate you.

More info about the video editing: rossching.com

Filed under  //   art   digital   fiction  

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Afterlife by Auger-Loizeau

Auger-Loizeau's brilliant project Afterlife: There's life after death, in a battery. Speculative design at its best!

13.7 billion years before the Earth existed, the blue print and elemental makeup for this planet and all its contents were formed. The big bang is widely accepted as the event responsible for the creation of everything - The universe, its stars, it’s planets; it’s trees, animals, silicon, I-pods and humanity. Nothing, including the human body, exists that cannot be created from these basic building blocks. Under normal circumstances after death, the human body would be assimilated back into this natural system.

The Afterlife device intervenes during this process to harness the chemical potential and convert it into usable electrical energy via a microbial fuel cell - a device that uses an electrochemical reaction to generate electricity from organic matter. This electricity is contained within a familiar dry cell battery.
(Source: Auger-Loizeau)

Project website: auger-loizeau.com

Filed under  //   art   concept   science   technology  

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Flooded McDonald's by Superflex

Seems like I have missed that wonderful artpiece by the superflex collective which had been screened during January and February 2009 at South London Gallery. More Info on the project website.

"Flooded McDonald's is a film work in which a convincing life-size replica of the interior of a McDonald's burger bar, without any customers or staff present, gradually floods with water. Furniture is lifted up by the water, trays of food and drinks start to float around, electrics short circuit and eventually the space becomes completely submerged." Superflex

 

Filed under  //   art   desaster   movies  

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The Earth Sound: Alunda Church Choir plays the soil of northern Uppland

“The vinyl is dead. Good. Now listen to the beautiful noise of the earth. In this performance Alunda Church Choir, conducted by Cantor Jan Hällgren, plays the soil of northern Uppland (in Sweden)."

Introducing: the terrafon, a large version of the horn gramophone, amplifying the sounds in the track it ploughs. What I like in particular about Olle Cornéer und Martin Lübcke's work with the title "Harvest" is the participation of local ensembles "playing" their soils, the analogue approach and the use of soil as a media: putting the soil on the level with vinyl discs to which one can listen to. These performances offer a complete new experience of soils. I have never had the chance to listen to soil before! Check also Diego Stocco's similar but more digitised work on music from Sand or from a Tree.

 

Filed under  //   art   music   performance   soil  

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Wash your clothes by pedaling your bike

US based Dave Askins has created a pedal-powered laundry-system. He's hooked a bike to a washer built from old parts. He spins on his bike and thereby dries his clothes. He says the whole task takes about 15 minutes. This is a triple-win: Being clean, getting clean and getting exercise. It is funny to stumble upon this as I've put a similar concept (only) to paper a year ago. 

On his website, Dave has tracked every bike-powered load of laundry since July 2007. He's nearing 200 loads.

Update: here's another protoype

Filed under  //   art   concept   diy   energy   performance  

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