Posts Tagged ‘motion tracking’

Fontys Hogeschool Art & Technology Minor: De Abstracte Waarheid

Friday, June 4th, 2010

We are a group of ICT Media Design students at the Fontys Hogeschool HBO-ICT. Here we follow the minor programme called Lifestyle. In this minor, we apply ICT to create new smart and innovative products for wellness, health and home applications. Each semester there is a central task in which we engage. This semester Fontys has a partnership with BALTAN Laboratories. The artists from BALTAN have given us a number of assignments from which we could choose. After brief research we have chosen the assignment by Maurer United Architects in which we have to explore the principles of “De Stijl” (Theo van Doesburg 1917). In this blog we describe the progress of our project and we explain our choices.

The assignment
“De Stijl” was a Dutch art movement which was founded in 1917 in Leiden. The most important members were Theo van Doesburg, Piet Mondrian, Vilmos Huszar, Bart van der Leck, Gerrit Rietveld and JJP Georges Vantongerloo Old. “De Stijl” is characterised by the use of primary colors combined with black, white and gray and straight lines. The members of “De Stijl” were searching for a pure representation of reality in order to create a universal style. The ideas were communicated via the similarly-named magazine “De Stijl”.
“De Stijl” has concentrated mainly on two-dimensional work (paintings and illustrations) and three-dimensional works (furniture and buildings). Nearly 100 years later we are in a different era, which is influenced by all sorts of media technologies. Is it possible to redesign “De Stijl” to fit our modern context?

 The assignment is to create a performance / installation / film with the theme “’De Stijl’ in three to four dimensions”.

Our interpretation of “De Stijl”
After deciding on the assignment we did some research on “De Stijl”. We wanted to create our own vision, and use that vision to form our project. The key elements that we thought formed “De Stijl” are: simplicity, universality, abstraction, reality.
 After many hours of thinking about things that really are universal for all human beings on this earth, we discovered that only the human form itself applies to that. We therefore wanted to use the human form in our project. It is possible to argue that people are very different and certainly not easy. But in a sense we are the same. This we want to emphasise with our concept, and later on the connection with simplicity and abstraction will become clear as well. (more…)

CASE STUDY 8

Friday, January 29th, 2010

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If one projects a MONDRIAAN painting on the wall, and use a computer to generate the depth lines according to the position of the viewer (tracked by a sensor), a virtual depth will be visible.

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BALTAN Session on custom tools

Thursday, October 29th, 2009
December 10, 2009
 
5:00 pmto7:00 pm

On Thursday, December 10th, from 17:00-19:00, BALTAN Laboratories invites you to the last BALTAN Session of the year, which will focus on custom-designed technologies and tools developed as part of artistic research projects. In addition to a festive drink, the evening will feature presentations and demos by artists Gert-Jan Prins and Bas van Koolwijk, who will present their newly released SYNCHRONATOR device; and Erik Overmeire, who has been working with Geert Mul on developing the BALTAN Tracker here at the lab.

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Wendy Ann Mansilla and Jordi Puig in residence at BALTAN

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

As part of BALTAN’s collaboration with Piksel in Norway, we put out an open call in the summer for proposals from artists who were specifically interested in working with the tracking and mapping technology Open Computer Vision. We received a number of high quality proposals through this call and in the end, Piksel and BALTAN selected the project Flick Flock by Wendy Ann Mansilla and Jordi Puig. Wendy Ann and Jordi participated in the OpenCV workshop that was held here in September and arrive next week to start their 4 week residency at BALTAN. The results of their work will be presented at the Piksel Festival in Bergen from November 19-22.

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Flick Flock

Flick Flock defines the meaning of the body and its linkage to the continuous transformation of the urban place and the way it can construct and deconstruct society. It is reflecting the interconnections of bodies and space, reshaping each other to form such an unbound relationship. Using stereoscopic and ambisonic 3D technology, Flick Flock recreates the digital urban space we are living in to allow us to immersively experience the role of the physical body as a vehicle of expression and knowledge. (more…)

New version of OpenCV for PD, codename BALTANIK

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

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Report by Yves Degoyon, workshop leader (along with Lluis Gomez i Bigorda), OpenCV workshop at BALTAN Laboratories, September 21-27, 2009

After 2 years of playing around with computer vision in various contexts and installations, working mainly with performers and choregraphers, we were eager to share these experiments with other people interested in the subject and very interested to test our recently published library: ‘OpenCV for Pure Data’ in a wider context and with people involved in different kinds of applications using
computer vision.

This opportunity was given to us during the workshop organized by BALTAN Laboratories in Eindhoven, from the 21st to the 27th of September 2009. A variety of people showed up with different interests and needs and we tried to provide solutions for their projects using the toolbox we are developing, based on OpenCV.

Niko Knappe and Tara Pattenden (TAIK Media Lab, Helsinki) work in new media installations and were curious to learn new interaction techniques using a simple camera. After inspecting the different algorithms available, they opted for some interaction based on shape recognition and realized a first prototype of a ‘Fruit Detector’, working in the direction of making playful environments. (more…)

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