Waves
Eleonore: a really existing non-utopian social sculpture
Posted August 10th, 2010 by Armin Medosch(notes, Artist in Residency, Day 2) Yesterday I arrived at the Eleonore in Linz. Already before leaving I had the first insight. I was packing and couldn't find any suitable string to tie together my Yoga map. So I took a Cat 5 ethernet cable because I thought I might need that as well. And then I thought what connects Linux with Yoga? That both can show up, sometimes painfully, the limitations of the human being, especially in my case.
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Water and Areals
Posted August 10th, 2010 by Armin MedoschMartin Howse at Work
Posted March 10th, 2010 by adminMartin Howse conducting artistic measurement in Gijon, Octobre 2008. Background, Erich Berger. Martin uses a self-built wide-band antenna to use existing radiation and measure its reflections on different locations. Under the pavement of this square is an ancient salt mine and fish factory. Electromagnetic archeology is supposed to be able to identify the location of the underground structure.
Floating Structure: A Platform for Artistic Measurements and Research
Posted March 10th, 2010 by Armin MedoschThis text is the preliminary outcome of a research project going back to 2003/2004 and developed jointly by Franz Xaver and Armin Medosch. It has a theoretical and artistic dimension as well as an activist one. At the point of its inception stood questions relating to the crisis of art in informational capitalism. The project sets out to bring some clarifications by word and deed about the relationships between art and technology, art and science and the role of the artist at the beginning of the 21st Century.
Artistic Research
Posted April 28th, 2009 by LindsayThe immersiveness of art processes. The methodology of the artist. The varying frameworks for research. The alternative forms of thesis writing. Throwing in rather than out...
Spectropia: Acoustic Space No. 7
Posted April 24th, 2009 by admin| Publication Type | Book | |
| Citation Key | 990 | |
| Year of Publication | 2008 | |
| Authors | Šmite, R.; Medosch, A. | |
| Series Editor | Rasa Šmite | |
| Series Title | Acoustic Space | |
| City | Riga | |
| Publisher | RIXC | |
| Volume | 7 |
Aeriology
Posted April 22nd, 2009 by adminPier Tide
Posted January 13th, 2009 by LindsayThis is a recording of the last tide of the day, coming in under Achiltibuie Pier on a summer evening in North West Scotland on 6th August 2008. The recording is very quiet as the weather conditions were sunny and calm; however there is a slight electrical noise that I was not aware of at the time of the recording, which is common-made electro-magnetic interference for which the hydrophone needs to be balanced.
3:35 minutes (4.1 MB)
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Quarry Dive
Posted January 10th, 2009 by LindsayThis is a clip of an audio recording of a quarry dive. The hydrophone is sitting approximately 5 metres under the water against the side of the rocks. I could not get the microphone any further under as I was seven metres or so above on a mini-cliff which meant throwing the microphone in from height. Boddam Quarry is a fresh-water training site for dive clubs, so at this point there was six divers in total in the water.
3:36 minutes (4.14 MB)
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Firth of Forth
Posted January 10th, 2009 by LindsayIn October last year I made my first audio recording of the Firth of Forth from a diving rib that was around 500-600 metres away from the main deep shipping channel. My hydrophone was at approximately 20 metres in depth and highlights that the attenuation of sound through water is extremely efficient. As I was making the recording, a large tanker appeared further up the estuary a couple of miles away, the noise of its engines slowly increasing until it was quite overpoweringly noisy.
1:04 minutes (1.23 MB)
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