SARC Events:
“SATS”
A Sciences/Arts Conversation about Satellites
Live: Monday November 25, 18:00 UTS
Produced by Cabine Voltaire & 1st-Mile Institute/SARC
Hosted by Daniela De Paulis (Rotterdam) & Richard Lowenberg (Santa Fe)
Small Satellites, from CubeSats to ChipSats, are revolutionizing all aspects of international space programs, presenting new opportunities for technology innovation, education, economics and culture. Our guests will discuss all of this and more. Tune in.
Participating Guests:
Zac Manchester,
Zac Manchester is an Aerospace Engineering PhD candidate at Cornell and founder of the KickSat project, a highly successful Kickstarter campaign, raising nearly $75,000 to build tiny, free-flying Sprite KickSats for low Earth orbit testing. The Cornell team has been selected for a free launch into orbit through NASA’s Educational Launch of Nano-satellites, which supports university science and technology missions. Hundreds of Sprites, satellites built on microchips that weigh only 5 grams, are planned to be packed inside a triple CubeSat, for launch aboard SpaceX CRS-3, in early 2014. Zac’s is interested in very small spacecraft, satellite dynamics and control, and is passionate about the democratization and expansion of access to space.
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/zacinaction/kicksat-your-personal-spacecraft-in-space
Julian Priest,
Julian Priest is an artist living and working in New Zealand. Utilizing participatory and technological forms, recent work explores our relationships with different infrastructures, including time, energy, security, and communications. Julian was co-founder of the early wireless freenetwork community, Consume.net, and became an advocate for the freenetworking movement and for open spectrum in the public interest. He has lectured most recently at Auckland University of Technology in NZ, and is a board member of the Aoteoaroa Digital Arts Trust. He is now developing a series of artworks exploring gravitation and information, and will launch an orbital artwork in 2014, as part of the KickSat program.
http://julianpriest.org
Google+ Hangout: https://plus.google.com/+CabineVoltaire/
Facebook: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwbetCH69CSYJveB9LNEHsQ
A Sciences/Arts Conversation about Satellites
Live: Monday November 25, 18:00 UTS
Produced by Cabine Voltaire & 1st-Mile Institute/SARC
Hosted by Daniela De Paulis (Rotterdam) & Richard Lowenberg (Santa Fe)
Small Satellites, from CubeSats to ChipSats, are revolutionizing all aspects of international space programs, presenting new opportunities for technology innovation, education, economics and culture. Our guests will discuss all of this and more. Tune in.
Participating Guests:
Zac Manchester,
Zac Manchester is an Aerospace Engineering PhD candidate at Cornell and founder of the KickSat project, a highly successful Kickstarter campaign, raising nearly $75,000 to build tiny, free-flying Sprite KickSats for low Earth orbit testing. The Cornell team has been selected for a free launch into orbit through NASA’s Educational Launch of Nano-satellites, which supports university science and technology missions. Hundreds of Sprites, satellites built on microchips that weigh only 5 grams, are planned to be packed inside a triple CubeSat, for launch aboard SpaceX CRS-3, in early 2014. Zac’s is interested in very small spacecraft, satellite dynamics and control, and is passionate about the democratization and expansion of access to space.
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/zacinaction/kicksat-your-personal-spacecraft-in-space
Julian Priest,
Julian Priest is an artist living and working in New Zealand. Utilizing participatory and technological forms, recent work explores our relationships with different infrastructures, including time, energy, security, and communications. Julian was co-founder of the early wireless freenetwork community, Consume.net, and became an advocate for the freenetworking movement and for open spectrum in the public interest. He has lectured most recently at Auckland University of Technology in NZ, and is a board member of the Aoteoaroa Digital Arts Trust. He is now developing a series of artworks exploring gravitation and information, and will launch an orbital artwork in 2014, as part of the KickSat program.
http://julianpriest.org
Google+ Hangout: https://plus.google.com/+CabineVoltaire/
Facebook: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwbetCH69CSYJveB9LNEHsQ
"The Surface of Mars"
On Friday October 25, 9:00 am. PDT / 16:00 GMT
Cabine Voltaire and 1st-Mile Institute present:
A Google+ Hangout exchange with:
· Michael McNabb, composer for the NASA 'Mars in 3D' film
· Hans Van't Woud, founder and director of Cerberus Game
· Jean Constant, visual artist, director at Hermay CSV
The discussion is moderated by Daniela de Paulis (Cabine Voltaire, NL)
and Richard Lowenberg (1st Mile Institute, US)
To follow the live Hangout: https://plus.google.com/events/c8k4009eg4h4qmtg9sm4901fgvs?authkey=CPaMu4my1PPtIw
We will post “The Surface of Mars” Hangout on YouTube soon after the live exchange. Stay tuned.
Participant Bios:
Michael McNabb www.mcnabb.com
Michael McNabb is a world renowned composer, performer, installation artist and computer musician, in the San Francisco Bay Area. Michael holds a doctorate in Music Composition from Stanford University, where he studied at the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics with John Chowning and Leland Smith. He is also senior Silicon Valley technology consultant, V.P. of Technology at AquaMinds Software and former manager of Sound and Music Software at NeXT Computer. His works have been recorded and presented internationally, he often collaborates with dancers, visual artists, photographers, and technology innovators, and his writings have been widely published.
Michael composed the computer music soundtrack of "Mars in 3D", a 1979 NASA documentary on the Viking Mars project, and was responsible for its recent restoration and release as a 3D Blu-ray disk (AIX Records) .
Hans van't Woud www.blackshore.eu/
Hans van't Woud is a multimedia designer, interactive learning and games developer based in the Netherlands. He is currently the Director and Product Manager of his company, BlackShore, which is successfully collaborating with the ESA business incubation centre in the Netherlands.
Blackshore’s Cerberus game platform, an automated processing engine to translate photographic satellite data into usable GIS data by harnessing the power of the crowd, is the GMES master 2012 overall winner and winner of the European Space Imaging High-Res challenge.
Hans was awarded his MSc degree from the University of Amsterdam, for his research now known as "The Mars Crowdsourcing Experiment".
Jean Constant http://hermay.org
Jean Contant is a French mathematician, computer image composer, fine artist, author and educator based in Montreux, Switzerland and Santa Fe, New Mexico, co-directing Hermay, a nonprofit organization for the development of contemporary arts. He is past professor of Visual Communication and Media Technology who now dedicates his time to research on art and science collaborative projects, and actively participates in the MFO’s Imaginary Project , Bridges Math & Art and Symmetrion.
His interest in space and in particular Mars exploration is guided by a deep curiosity for all the technical skills that are pooled to undertake such project: multiple disciplines collaborating in an endeavor that compounds our most salient achievements with focus on a common goal that enriches the dialog between all involved.
On Friday October 25, 9:00 am. PDT / 16:00 GMT
Cabine Voltaire and 1st-Mile Institute present:
A Google+ Hangout exchange with:
· Michael McNabb, composer for the NASA 'Mars in 3D' film
· Hans Van't Woud, founder and director of Cerberus Game
· Jean Constant, visual artist, director at Hermay CSV
The discussion is moderated by Daniela de Paulis (Cabine Voltaire, NL)
and Richard Lowenberg (1st Mile Institute, US)
To follow the live Hangout: https://plus.google.com/events/c8k4009eg4h4qmtg9sm4901fgvs?authkey=CPaMu4my1PPtIw
We will post “The Surface of Mars” Hangout on YouTube soon after the live exchange. Stay tuned.
Participant Bios:
Michael McNabb www.mcnabb.com
Michael McNabb is a world renowned composer, performer, installation artist and computer musician, in the San Francisco Bay Area. Michael holds a doctorate in Music Composition from Stanford University, where he studied at the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics with John Chowning and Leland Smith. He is also senior Silicon Valley technology consultant, V.P. of Technology at AquaMinds Software and former manager of Sound and Music Software at NeXT Computer. His works have been recorded and presented internationally, he often collaborates with dancers, visual artists, photographers, and technology innovators, and his writings have been widely published.
Michael composed the computer music soundtrack of "Mars in 3D", a 1979 NASA documentary on the Viking Mars project, and was responsible for its recent restoration and release as a 3D Blu-ray disk (AIX Records) .
Hans van't Woud www.blackshore.eu/
Hans van't Woud is a multimedia designer, interactive learning and games developer based in the Netherlands. He is currently the Director and Product Manager of his company, BlackShore, which is successfully collaborating with the ESA business incubation centre in the Netherlands.
Blackshore’s Cerberus game platform, an automated processing engine to translate photographic satellite data into usable GIS data by harnessing the power of the crowd, is the GMES master 2012 overall winner and winner of the European Space Imaging High-Res challenge.
Hans was awarded his MSc degree from the University of Amsterdam, for his research now known as "The Mars Crowdsourcing Experiment".
Jean Constant http://hermay.org
Jean Contant is a French mathematician, computer image composer, fine artist, author and educator based in Montreux, Switzerland and Santa Fe, New Mexico, co-directing Hermay, a nonprofit organization for the development of contemporary arts. He is past professor of Visual Communication and Media Technology who now dedicates his time to research on art and science collaborative projects, and actively participates in the MFO’s Imaginary Project , Bridges Math & Art and Symmetrion.
His interest in space and in particular Mars exploration is guided by a deep curiosity for all the technical skills that are pooled to undertake such project: multiple disciplines collaborating in an endeavor that compounds our most salient achievements with focus on a common goal that enriches the dialog between all involved.
SARC@Currents2013: “New Media: Arts & Sciences”
1st-Mile Institute presents:
SARC@Currents2013: “New Media: Arts & Sciences” A Look at Today’s Leading Edge and the Future of New Media 1st-Mile Institute’s SARC (Scientists/Artists Research Collaborations) program presents an afternoon program of screenings, panels, presentations, and group discussions, with arts and sciences practitioners, working at the convergent forefront of new media technologies, applications, challenging ideas and creatively inspired eco-social responsibility. Sunday June 23, 2:00 – 6:00, Santa Fe CCA – Cinemateque Studio |
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Program 1: From Nanos to Cosmos
(micro to macro worlds, visions and views) Media Screenings: • Jason Silva: To Understand is to Perceive Patterns • Magnifying the Universe • CERN: 19 Ways That Art and the LHC Open a Portal to Physics • Drew Berry, Biologist/Animator, Melbourne: Bjork's "Biophelia" Presentations and Discussions: * Thomas Ashcraft, "Capturing Transient Luminous Events", Heliotown, Santa Fe * Charles Veasey, IDEUM, designer, programmer, sound engineer, Santa Fe/Corrales Program 2: Geo-Info-Eco (global to local imaging, simulation and modeling) Media Screenings: • NASA Scientific Visualization Studio: Ocean Currents • NASA: US Groundwater Map 2002-2012 • Martin Wattenberg & Fernanda Viégas, Google "Big Picture" data visualization group, Wind Map • Julian Priest: May 20 ISAW4 Hangout, on Sprite KickSats • Felix Pharand-Deschenes: Welcome to the Anthropocene Presentations and Discussions: * Philip Jones, PhD, Co-Project Leader, Climate, Ocean and Sea Ice Modeling (COSIM), Los Alamos National Laboratories * Jed Frechette, LIDAR Guys, geologist, LiDAR & 3D data capture specialist, Albuquerque + Lexi Pickel & Jeff Carrit, UNM, Albuquerque Program 3: Photonic Interference & Coherence (The future of light-based media) Media Screenings: • Holographic/3D works • JPL – Mars 3D Imagery • MIT Senseable Lab: FlyFire Presentations and Discussions: * August Muth, holographic artist, The Light Foundry, Santa Fe + Sally Weber & Craig Newswanger, Resonance Studio & Zebra Imaging, Austin, TX (via Skype) * Gary Oppedahl, CEO/President, TriLumina Corp., semiconductor “Light Engine” laser technologies, Albuquerque |
ISAW4 * Hangouts - Monday May 20 & Tuesday May 21ISAW4 is sponsored by Taksha University (TU) and Taksha Institute for Space Arts (TISA) with (TBA) Corporations/Foundations, in collaboration with Carnegie Mellon University, NASA Research Park, SETI Institute, Singularity University, Zero1 and Zero Gravity Arts Consortium.
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ISAW4 is pleased to announce that there will be two special online Hangouts as a featured part of the 4th International Space Arts Workshop being held at NASA Research Park in Mountain View, CA, May 20-22, 2013. http://www.taksha.org/course/TFA721
Daniela de Paulis, Director of AstroArts, and Richard Lowenberg, Director of 1st-Mile Institute will facilitate two Google+ Hangouts with on-site and remote international participants, on the mornings (PST) of Monday May 20 and Tuesday May 21. The Hangouts will be available online live and on YouTube thereafter. Stay tuned for updated information, detailed schedule and a list of the Hangout tele-participants. Astro Arts AstroArts is a program of Astronomers Without Borders, presenting monthly "AstroArtist of the Month" online Hangouts with artists, scientists, and others setting creative examples at the intersection of the arts, astronomy and space exploration. http://www.astronomerswithoutborders.org/projects/astroart.html 1st-Mile Institute, based in Santa Fe, NM, is the nonprofit home to SARC (Scientists/Artists Research Collaborations) and the New Mexico ‘Broadband for All’ Initiative. www.1st-mile.org |
The Art of Systems Biology and Nanoscience
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The Art of Systems Biology and Nanoscience
Location: 333 Montezuma Arts, 333 Montezuma, Santa Fe, NM Register here: http://stmc.health.unm.edu/art/agenda.html Friday, March 29, 2013 4:30 pm Private reception for registered guests 6 pm Talk by Dr. Mark Ellisman "Imaging the Dark Matter of the Brain" 7 pm - 9 pm Gallery viewing Saturday, March 30, 2013 Art exhibits on display from 10:00 AM to 8:00 PM 10:00 am - 2:30 pm: Kid-friendly nanotechnology exhibit – a national NanoDays event - Interactive experiments for kids of all ages presented by the UNM graduate students in Nanoscience and Microsystems Engineering View Experiencia Nano! poster 2:30-3:00: Short presentation by Stephen Todd, PhD student at the University of Wales, UK, on the transformation of scientific images into the art space - Title: "Photography and Scientific Evidence: Beauty of the Every Day" 3:00 - 4:30 pm: Gallery walks with artists in residence, Drew Berry and Thomas Deerinck (small groups) 4:30 - 5:30 pm: Private reception for registered participants 5:30 - 7:00 pm: Public Lecture 2: Dr. Angela Wandinger-Ness (Intro Dr. Elaine Bearer) Title: "Envisioning therapies by picturing disease" 7:00 - 8:00 pm: Continued viewing of the art exhibits and interaction with the artists Displays of photo micrographs, scientific illustrations and animations by world renowned artist-scientists Drew Berry and Thomas Deerinck frame talks given by researchers Dr. Mark Ellisman (UC San Diego) and Dr. Angela Wandinger-Ness (UNM). For additional information and detailed schedules, please visit the sponsor website: http://stmc.health.unm.edu/art/agenda.html More information can be found in these locations: |
3rd LHI Art-Sci Symposium
Richard Lowenberg and a number of SARC Artists and Advisors are among the presenters at the 3rd LHI Art-Sci Symposium: Why Art-Sci? Analyzing a Paradigm, March 23 in San Antonio.
http://www.penelopeboyer.com/LHI_website_revised/2013_LHI_Art-Sci_Symposium.html
http://www.penelopeboyer.com/LHI_website_revised/2013_LHI_Art-Sci_Symposium.html