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La résidence:

Le nom COMMON PULSE a émergé de la croyance que, malgré nos différences, il existe un esprit commun et un synchronisme social que nous partageons tous.

 

Voilà le défi que nous avons proposé aux cinq artistes en résidence. Bien qu'ils soient tous spécialistes en arts médiatiques dans un domaine précis, il a été demandé à chacun d'incorporer dans une nouvelle oeuvre le signal d'une pulsation synchronisée. Ce common pulse sera distribué à chaque oeuvre, soit sous forme de signal de contrôle numérique, de tension fluctuante, ou de battement rythmé – selon les besoins formels des oeuvres finales.

Les cinq artistes vivront et travailleront à Durham pendant les trois semaines précédant le festival. Le Durham Art Gallery sera transformé en studio-atelier partagé, où les artistes auront la chance de se serrer les coudes tout en travaillant à la production de nouvelles créations. De plus, ils auront l'opportunité d'interagir avec la population locale et les visiteurs au moyen de présentations d'artistes, de cafés informels et d'ateliers de production d'art médiatique, lesquels seront offerts pendant leur résidence. La période de résidence se terminera par une exposition à la galerie de Durham, où seront présentées les œuvres complétées dans le cadre du festival.

 

Laura Kikauka

Meaford, Canada / Berlin, Germany
www.laurakikauka.com

Laura Kikauka

Laura Kikauka's body of work over the past twenty-five years encompasses various media including site specific installation, mixed media, electronic sculpture, drawing, photography, video, performance, music, text and costume creations. Her installations establish a highly specific visual (and often audio) language that blends the increasingly overlapping worlds of high and low art forms. In general Kikauka's excessive aesthetic is comparable to urban archeology and addresses issues of consumer culture, and the question of good and bad taste.

Kikauka's work is inspired and derived from decades of on-going collecting of found objects. Employing the formal strategy of meticulously sorting and organizing these objects, as well as modifying or transforming them, she then creates specifically themed and coded installations that transform gallery and exhibition spaces into densely packed, highly detailed installations.

Laura's categorization speaks of similarities and differences. The Funny Farm studios in rural Meaford and in Berlin are living and working spaces treated as on-going installations that exemplify, through a density of detail, her interest in low class consumer culture. It is with a sense of sarcasm and empathy that she explores this recurring theme.

Laura is represented by DNA Gallery, Berlin and MKG127 Gallery, Toronto.

 

Jessica Field

Oshawa, Canada
www.jessicafield.ca

Jessica Field

Jessica Field has an artistic practice that explores the possibilities for shared behaviour between organic and inorganic objects. For the past eleven years she has worked with robotics and artificial intelligence. “I create immersive environments that address the social issues concerning the creation of artificial intelligence and its connection to human behaviours, expectations and desires. I am interested in how technology, particularly artificial life research, influences and defines how people see themselves and the things they create.” Her recent robots have the potential to stage their own theatrical presentations thus creating a new level of dramatic performance which she calls Automata Theatre. Recent exhibitions include Field Studies at Interaccess (Toronto) and Oboro (Montreal); Maladjusted Ecosystem, Optica (Montreal) and participation in the group exhibition Robot Dreams at Kunsthaus Graz (Austria) and Museum Tinguely (Switzerland). Field currently teaches in the New Media Department at Ryerson University.

 

Ken Gregory

Winnipeg, Canada
www.cheapmeat.net

Ken Gregory

Ken Gregory works with DIY interface design hardware hacking, audio, video, and computer programming to create installations, video, multi-media, interactive works, and audio collage. Primarily self taught, his work is an improvisational process with an intuitive application of tools and ideas. Raw materials such as found objects, discarded technology and electronics are manipulated through various processes and reconstituted in a manner which plays upon new meanings and interpretations. Gregory's 12 Motor Bells has been on display at the Dalhousie Art Gallery and was purchased by the National Gallery of Canada. Recent exhibitions include Wind Coil Sound Flow, a sound installation at San Jose City Hall as part of the ZERO1 2010 Biennial; The Road to Eldorado, a sound work at The 8 Fest Toronto; Cheap Meat Dreams and Acorns, a solo survey exhibition at the Art Gallery of Hamilton.

 

Karo Szmit

Vienna, Austria
www.karoszmit.blogspot.com

Karo Szmit

Karo Szmit is an emerging artist from Austria, born in Warsaw, Poland. Her current art practice involves, video, Vjing, film animation, as well as site-specific text and drawing installations that use diagrams to examine global networking. Intersections and diagrams also play a role in her video Le Grand Content which examines the omnipresent Powerpoint-culture in a search for its philosophical potential. Her performance projects deal with online communication platforms as well as the analogies between internet processes and the physical world. Szmit’s films and videos have been shown internationally at Ars Electronica in Linz, Austria; the Némo Film Festival in Paris; International Kurzfilmfestival Hamburg (audience award); Edinburgh International Film Festival (UK), Tampere Film Festival (Finland), Biennial of Moving Images (Switzerland), Barcelona Independent Film Festival (Spain). In 2009 she was invited to a five-month artist residency by MediaLab: Estonian Media Artists' Union in Tallinn, Estonia.

 

Andrew McPherson

Guelph, Canada
www.andrewmcpherson.ca

Andrew McPherson

Canadian musical chameleon Andrew McPherson is an artist moving seamlessly from the producer’s chair to that of the songwriter, project leader, multi-instrumentalist, remixer and DJ. In all of Andrew’s musical incarnations can be heard a consistent through line of meticulous craftsmanship, fearless experimentalism, inventive ideas and a soulful statement of purpose. Whether in his copious production work, three solo albums Mixing up the Medicine, Phoenix at the Wheel and Lefty Singer, Juno-nominated, Canadian Music Award winning, global fusion project Eccodek or in the plethora of remixes and side projects, the ‘master soundscaper’ is at the centre of a provocative and diverse body of work.

Never brimming too far from the surface has been Andrew’s interest in longform instrumental work, particularly music for film. Having often joked about film making as a second career if music soured, it’s safe to say that Andrew has always seen and heard music. A recent recording with fellow producer, multi-instrumentalist and Eccodek electronics whiz Deliveryboy produced a provocative new score to accompany Fritz Lang’s 1927 dystopian classic Metropolis as a live performance. New York’s Huffington Post wrote, “It is so far left of field you'd just have to--and should--experience Metropolis Re:Scored for yourself.” Not content to stay idle, Eccodek is set to release a remix compilation titled Remixtasy, touching on their first three releases, featuring new versions of Eccodek’s catalogue by some of the world’s most progressive fusionists working today. Also in the wings for 2011 is a stunning new collaborative project with Toronto/L.A. drummer Morgan Doctor, that features new compositions developed from improvised recording sessions over the last year. The walls are listening....

 

Blog:

Jessica Field at Work

 

Alexis O'Hara: Subject to Change

Alexis O'Hara delivered an electrically intense performance... in more ways than one. Utilizing conductive copper wire sewn into her dress, wearable electronics and Max/MSP software, Alexis triggered recordings of questions telephoned in by public participants. She then proceeded to answer these questions in the form of song or spoken word, layering and manipulating her voice with musical sequencers, prerecorded beats and effects pedals. The performance was delivered off the cuff and saturated with O'Hara's brilliantly dry and witty humor. She is an absolutely captivating performer whose art lives on the cutting edge of technology and musical performance.  

 

The Best of Parsons and Morel

Comedy duo Parsons and Morel entertained the crowds with their quirky humor last night at the Durham Town hall. Infusing song and satire their lyrics poke fun at technology, new media and Canadian pop culture. Their routine is seamlessly performed, and along with melodic skills, they are also talented actors.  

 

Opening Night: CrissCross & InterPlay

Artists in residence Laura Kikauka, Jessica Field, Ken Gregory, Andrew McPherson and Karo Szmit saw nearly a months work come to fruition last night at the Durham Art Gallery's CrissCross exhibition opening. InterPlay included Steve Daniels and Isabella Stefanescu artwork which was also displayed in the gallery, and the night was well attended and well received. Steve Daniels' creatures were busy with movement as viewers waved their arms and interacted with them. Isabella had viewers absorbed by moving stones on a large scale which controlled audio along with projected images of her personal notebooks. CrissCross flashed with colored lights, bright candy, and the pulsating sounds of Andrew's audio installation and Jessica's mechanical black box.      

 

Symposium Day 1: Afternoon

Marcel O'Gorman, David Jhave Johnston, Martha Ladly shared their extensive knowledge and body of work at Friday afternoon's symposium. Marcel O'Gorman, Director of the Critical Media Lab at the University of Waterloo discussed Necromedia: Death, Self and Technology. He shared works such as Dreadmill, in which he lectures about the impact of technology on the body while running on an interactive treadmill interface. David Jhave Johnston delivered a poetic lecture that illuminated his deeply personal web based works of art. Raw and captivating, he addressed prevailing themes in his art work: vulnerability, knowledge, innocence, loneliness and epiphanies. Martha Ladly's topic was Mobile Art and Design: Responsive Environments and Social Practices. She showed mobile art and design that uses methods of urban intervention as a form of art, social change, critique, and community building. She is an Associate Professor at OCAD University with expertise in the areas of Research, Interdisciplinary Studies, and Interaction Design.

 

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