http://www.fklab.net/
http://www.keio-up.co.jp/kup/camp/index.html
加藤文俊研究室の作品は、人びとのコミュニケーション過程を理解するとともに、関係性を可視化する方法を検討します。|慶應SFC XD展 2011
http://sakainaoki.blogspot.com/2011/04/sfc-xd-2011.html
http://www.fklab.net/
http://www.keio-up.co.jp/kup/camp/index.html
http://sakainaoki.blogspot.com/2011/04/sfc-xd-2011.html
http://designthinking.dangkang.com/
Article:近代住宅の終焉とコミュニティデザイン
http://www.asahi.com/housing/column/TKY201108040199.html
近代住宅という近代的な暮らしの「器=モノ」の出現が、近代国家を成立させる最小単位としての近代家族を誕生させたのである。近代国家を維持、成長させていくには、健全な労働力となる近代家族が必要不可欠だったからだ。近代住宅は、近代家族を再生産する建築装置としてデザインされたといっていい。日本の場合、20世紀後半のおよそ半世紀間、近代住宅は夢のマイホームへと変身し、投資の対象にもなり、それはみごとに有効に機能してきた。それが、いま終焉をむかえようとしている。

From: nori_fujimura@me.com [mailto:nori_fujimura@me.com]
Sent: Thursday, September 15, 2011 12:02 PM
To: imgl-phd@ml.keio.jp
Cc: imgl-phd@ml.keio.jp; Jess Mantell; Masa Inakage
Subject: [imgl-PhD 00088] Precedents for color shadowing technique
Dear all,
I’d share information of precedent for my research as Tokuhisa-sensei briefly mentioned at my presentation.
This one is particularly about a technique of creating colored shadow from white light.
Nori
*
徳久先生が既存の例として挙げていた青森での光の混色を使ったワークショップの記事をみつけました。
Following can be the thing Tokuhisa-sensei mentioned at my presentation.
http://www.aomori-museum.jp/ja/blog/1175.html
サンフランシスコにある科学と芸術の博物館でも、この原理を楽しむ記事が紹介されています。
Exploratorium of San Fransisco also has an article.
http://www.exploratorium.edu/snacks/colored_shadows/
*
発表の際に少し紹介したように、舞台照明ではよく使われるテクニックですが、
現代美術の方面でも、同じ原理を利用した作品がありましたので、紹介します。
As I mentioned, color shadow technique has been common in theater lighting. Here is another example of utilizing it for contemporary art.
Slow-motion shadow in colour, Olafur Eliasson, 2009
http://wwwolafureliasson.net/exhibitions/your_chance_encounter_24.html
以下のカタログに収録。 Included in this catalog.
Olafur Eliasson: Your Chance Encounter. Exhibition catalogue. Baden: Lars Müller Publishers; Kanazawa: 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, 2010.
*
舞台照明のテクニックとしてのColored shadowは、以下の本で紹介されています
Colored shadow technique in stage lighting context is introduced in following book.
Designing with Light, J.Michael Gilette, 1978
Pulse Room in Aarhus, Denmark,2009
About 100 (analog/classic) light bulbs are hung from ceiling of the installation site.
The bulbs plays a sequence of blinking. Every singe bulb represents and actually repeats heartbeat of past participants as 1 by 1 correspondence.
Sequence of how new participant joins is as following.
One of audience grabs a handle which heartbeat sensor is embedded.
It takes a short while until the sensor stabilize its readout. When it is done, whole order of pulses of bulbs shifts 1 (the oldest is now gone). And the new beat joins.
(Aug 2011)
http://framemag.com/video/2265
April 19, 2011|By Molly Samuel, Special to CNN
A new exhibit at the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco doesn’t just challenge visitors. It questions them.
“Are We There Yet?” is made up of hundreds of questions, and anyone entering the near-empty gallery hears a different combination from everyone else. The exhibit is actually responding to how fast each visitor moves around the room, how long he or she stays and where each person goes.
French sculptor, photographer, painter and film maker. Self-taught, he began painting in 1958 but first came to public attention in the late 1960s with short avant-garde films and with the publication of notebooks in which he came to terms with his childhood. The combination in these works of real and fictional evidence of his and other people’s existence remained central to his later art. As well as presenting assemblages of documentary photographs wrenched from their original context, in the 1970s he also experimented inventively with the production of objects made of clay and from unusual materials such as sugar and gauze dressings. These works, some of them entitled Attempt at Reconstitution of Objects that Belonged to Christian Boltanski between 1948 and 1954 (1970–71; see 1990 exh. cat., p. 11), again included flashbacks to segments of time and life that blurred memory with invention.
In the 1970s photography became Boltanski’s favoured medium for exploring forms of remembering and consciousness, reconstructed in pictorial terms. After 1976 he handled the medium as if it were painting, photographing slices of nature and carefully arranged still-lifes of banal everyday objects in order to convert them into grid compositions that reflected the collective aesthetic condition of contemporary civilization in a stereotyped way. In the early 1980s Boltanski ceased using objets trouvés as a point of departure. Instead he produced ‘theatrical compositions’ by fashioning small marionette-like figures from cardboard, scraps of materials, thread and cork, painted in colour and transposed photographically into large picture formats. These led to kinetic installations in which a strong light focused on figurative shapes helped create a mysterious environment of silhouettes in movement (e.g. The Shadows, 1984; see 1990 exh. cat., p. 20).
In 1986 Boltanski began making installations from a variety of materials and media, with light effects as integral components. Some of these consisted of tin boxes stacked in an altar-like construction with a framed portrait photograph on top, for example the Chases School (1986–7; Ghent, Mus. Hedendaag. Kst). Such assemblages of objects again relate to the principle of reconstruction of the past. Such works, for which he used portrait photographs of Jewish schoolchildren taken in Vienna in 1931, serve as a forceful reminder of the mass murder of Jews by the Nazis. In the works that followed, such as Reserve (exh. Basle, Mus. Gegenwartskst, 1989), Boltanski filled whole rooms and corridors with items of worn clothing as a way of prompting an involuntary association with the clothing depots at concentration camps. As in his previous work, objects thus serve as mute testimony to human experience and suffering.
Andreas Franzke
From Grove Art Online
© 2009 Oxford University Press
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer (born in 1967 in Mexico City) is a Mexican-Canadian electronic artist who works with ideas from architecture, technological theater and performance. He holds a Bachelors of Science in Physical Chemistry from Concordia University in Montreal. Currently, Lozano-Hemmer lives and works in Montréal and Madrid.
Christen Boltanski at Naoshima/Teshima
Rafael … Pulse lights
Miyajima at Naoshima
Find the root of this way of participation.
Remember salt lake project seen at Tate modern
http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%AE%B6%E3%83%97%E3%83%AD%E3%82%B8%E3%82%A7%E3%82%AF%E3%83%88
http://www.benesse-artsite.jp/arthouse/kadoya.html
「Sea of Time ’98」 1998年
「Naoshima’s Counter Window」 1998年
「Changing Landscape」 1999年
家プロジェクトの第1弾。200年ほど経過した家屋を、焼板、漆喰、本瓦を使用し復元。山本忠司が建築を担当。屋内には宮島達男の3つの作品が置かれる。暗い内部に張られた浅い池の底からカウンターで発行するLEDのさまざまな色の朧な光が浮かび上がる作品、「シー・オブ・タイム」(「Sea of Time ’98」)- この作品の制作には町の人々も参加している。土間の壁には液晶ガラスに透明な数字がランダムに変化していく「ナオシマ・カウンター・ウィンドウ」(「Naoshima’s Counter Window」1998年)が、さらに蔵の奥には山水画の上に彩色を施した作品「チェンジ・ランドスケープ」(「Changing Landscape」1999年)がある。[1]
http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E7%9B%B4%E5%B3%B6%E7%94%BA
アーティストの宮島達男は家プロジェクト第 1弾の「角屋(かどや)」を創るに当たって町民125人を公募し、作品を構成する125個のディジタル・カウンターの明滅速度を一人一人にセッティングし てもらい、地域住民参加という手法を取ることで、現代アートという異質なものが保守的な土地に入って来ることに対する町民の反感、抵抗を払拭した。