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Kategorie: Visuelles

Border

An exploration of the absurdity of the lines created by human beings called ‘borders’. Two people meet on such a line. One takes this more seriously than the other but, step-by-step, they find a peaceful solution.

https://vimeo.com/119107623
(Direktlink)

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Music Visualisation Posters

Die Idee, Audiosignale irgendwie zu visualisieren um sie dann als Poster an Wände zu hängen ist nicht ganz neu und meistens dennoch recht schick.

Diese B1 Poster aus dem Hause Braindance gehen da optisch mal einen etwas ungewohnten Weg und sehen dabei hyperschick aus, wie ich finde.

This interesting neuro-art project named Braindance, tries to bridge the gap between art and science. The goal was to visualise the differences in peoples initial responses to music they listened to for the first time. Designer and Visualiser Črtomir Just and colleagues, teamed up with BlackBox and EEG technology to measure the brainwaves of 20 volunteers listening to a musical piece made by music composer, Kleemar.

The measurements took place in a specially constructed black box, where the subjects were deprived from all senses except hearing. The team concentrated on visualising the two most significant and scientifically explainable measures – focus and flow. Focuses told a subjects concentration, while flow showed each subjects relaxation amount. The results were visualised on B1 posters and exhibited.

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Drohnen-Unfälle

Das sind die Drohnen-Aufnahmen, die man sonst nur selten zu sehen bekommt. Die sind ja meistens alles sehr auf schön und glatt gemacht. Aber es geht auch anders – auch Drohnen verunglücken hin und wieder.


(Direktlink, via Martin)

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Ein Porträt aus 20.000 Teebeuteln

Ich mag Teebeutel nicht sonderlich. Ich mag Tee lieber lose. Die in Malaysia lebende Künstlerin Red Hongyi hingegen mag Teebeutel ganz gerne. Ob sie Tee von diesen trinkt, weiß ich nicht genau, aber sie macht Bilder damit. So wie dieses hier, wofür sie 20.000 Teebeutel benutzte.

I used 20,000 teabags to illustrate a man preparing teh tarik in the background, with soft drink cans and an ice-kacang (shaved ice) machine as props in front of him hung in the foreground. The piece was 3.2×2.2meters…and weighed 200kgs! The teabags are stained in 10 different shades of brown. The teabags were stained by steeping the bags in hot water – the lesser and hotter the water, the more they were stained – and the darker tones were stained with brown food dye. All these bags were stapled and attached onto tiles of wiremesh, then hung off a wooden frame. I spent about two months planning, sourcing, creating and filming this piece.


(Direktlink, via Devour)

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