Posts Tagged ‘Animation’

Subway Art in New York

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

If you are around NY sometime, do visit the Bryant Park Station to see work by a great Artition participant, Joshua Spodek.

Read what Josh says about his piece:

My first big public art piece went up in the Bryant Park subway stop at
42nd and 6th Avenue last week through MTA Arts for Transit! You can see
it at the bottom of the stairs at the northwest corner of Bryant Park
(the videos below show you where it is).

Four students at NYU Tisch School of Arts Interactive Telecommunications
Project (ITP) co-created it — Brett Murphy, Igal Nassima, Eyal Ohana,
and Molly Schwartz — with Submedia providing equipment and support
(using no MTA funds).

If you’ve seen my work, you know the medium: still images that appear
animated when you move past. This display is digital, which is new, so
the images cycle between our 1.5 second animations, each inspired by
Bryant Park — images of nature, ice skating, fashion week, the
carousel, abstractions, etc.

The display took almost two years of development. As usual, most of the
work was in the last two weeks — late nights, moving stuff in
blizzards, approvals, etc. If anyone wants stories, just ask, there are
plenty. I also make smaller pieces for individuals and am working on a
large series for a gallery show. In the meantime, check out these videos
and links of the display (keeping in mind videos don’t compare with
seeing it in person):

* Video, including a family of five peering at the display:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wIfi71_ffG0
* Arts for Transit page:
http://www.mta.info/mta/aft/lightbox/lightbox.html?station=5&img=5
* A guard and subway rider looking at it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z0aTJH0jL5o
* Just the kids and family from the first link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anwg1BhkAFU
* My blog: http://www.spodek.net

How you make pixel to artworks

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Whether they be called Yves Netzhammer, Martin Dörbaum or Eric Weets, all of them are producing artworks of the future, that is on the computer. Netzhammers recent auction prices for his prints and objects are dealt with between 8000 and 15000 Euros and according to expert opinions good investments.

With computer animations you create a room that is hard to create anywhere else. Things are possible that you cannot photograph or create with classical mediums. And using the latest 3d printers, objects can be produced such as anything else can be printed.

Eric Weet’s ‘GOOD DAYS ARE HERE TO COME’ on Artition

Martin Dörbaum’s ‘A SMALL MAP OF HEAVEN’

Yves Netzhammer’s ‘DIE UNGENAUEN KÖRPER’