[spectre] Hidden Worlds: screening & lecture
Redazione Digicult
redazione at digicult.it
Mon Dec 6 09:16:29 CET 2010
Sorry for any crosspostings
HIDDEN WORLDS
screening & lecture
by Digicult / Marco Mancuso
16th International Conference of Film Studies
"Cinema & Energy"
Rome, Teatro Palladium, "Roma Tre" University
8-11 December 2010
Link to video collection and description:
http://www.digicult.it/public/screening_eng.doc
>From the mid-Nineties, "Roma Tre" University's Department of Communication
and Spectacle (Di.Co.Spe.) reflects on changes in cinema and other arts,
analysing new tendencies and perspectives linked to the evolution of
languages, modes of production and making of films. The Conference for 2010
will be on the relationship between "Cinema and Energy", being energy a
concept that invest social life all over the world (besides of human science
and scientific research).
Cinema histories often write about relationship between cinema and
technology, underlining that cinema is the technological art par excellence,
because it was born during industrial revolution and because its
optical-chemical-mechanical device derives from scientific experiments on
stroboscopic effect and movement's deconstruction. Cinema histories also
specify all technological conquers that have brought forward cinema
expression, such as synchronization of sound, colour, lightening, film
emulsions and so forth. Besides, contemporary reflections about
"remediation" between cinema, television and new media highlight the
redefinition of filmic language, because of the mingling between analogical
and digital technologies.
Nevertheless, energy, in which all these process are rooted and that gives
form and meaning to cinema, is often neglected in contemporary studies. But
energy is considered in other science - from biology to chemic to
astrophysics - as the most important and engaging field for research,
present and future. Just think about that 80% of cosmic energy called "dark
energy" (in relation with the "dark matter"), that is defined "dark" because
is still unknown; in this sense, really interesting are recent observations
about neutrinos made by CERN and Gran Sasso laboratories.
The conference will map the relationship between cinema and energy, showing
an articulated picture of various ways to understand this relationship in
filmic and audiovisual language and forms through history.
------------
A MYRIAD OF VIBRANT PHENOMENA
THE HIDDEN WORLDS OF AUDIOVISUAL ART-SCIENCE
Lecture by Marco Mancuso / Digicult
Between 1899 and 1904 the german philosopher and biologist Ernst Haeckel
published Kunstformen der Natur (Art Forms of Nature), one of his best known
works and a symbol of his zoological research and philosophy, centered on
the observation of marine micro-organisms as well of various natural species
and animals. The complete volume, consisting of over 100 lithographs, each
accompanied by a short descriptive text, obtained a great success even among
the non-specialist public and among some Art Nouveau artists, committed to
find new models to be used in the nascent industrial design and in
architecture. In this regard, the volume lends itself to multiple
assessments: as a zoological work depicting the evolution of organisms, as a
work of art and as a work of aesthetics that focuses on seeing and
perception as a way of knowing. Aesthetics, as the science of beauty, intent
on understanding the nature in relation to art.
The tables of the book, according to a geometric arrangement of the
drawings, are based upon the microscopic siliceous skeletons of radiolarians
and diatoms, the umbrellas of the jellyfishes, the tentacles of sea anemones
and spirals shells of molluscs. These illustrations depict therefore the law
that regulates natural energy phenomena: the evolution, the fact that
organisms are formed and transformed over time, according to genetic
relationships of descent, from a common original type. In other words, by
analyzing the tables of his rich classification, it is wonderful to see how
nature is not only capable of spontaneously creating veritable art forms,
but also of establishing a direct connection between a certain algebraic and
geometric aesthetics, starting from a fundamental unit/core and reaching a
more complex entity, a consequent evolutionary practice of adaptation.
Moreover, one of the most currently fascinating mathematical theories is no
doubt the theory of fractals: according to the definition of its recently
passed away discoverer, the polish mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot (1975),
who started his researched form the fractal structure found out by french
mathematicia Gaston Julia in 1920, fractals are geometrical figures
characterized by a repetition to infinity of a same pattern on a more and
more reduced scale. Nature is in fact filled with forms very similar to
fractals, which don't follow in any way any of the rules of Euclidean
geometry. A coastline, the branches or the roots of a tree, a cloud, the
snowflakes, the zigzag lightning bolts and the leaf venation patterns: these
are only a few examples of fractal forms spontaneously creating in nature.
Among these ones there is the spiral, the fractal form par excellence. The
procedural, generative, hieratic and evolutionary element can therefore be
considered the key of this thought, turned to a modern "computational
ecology": almost 40 years of study, analysis and research have passed
between Alan Turing's revolutionary theories about morphogenesis (the
capability of every living being to develop complex bodies starting from
very simple elements, using self-assembling processes without an external
guide), which followed those by bio-mathematician Thompson D'Arcy in his
work On the growth and form (1917), and more recent studies (1980-1985) on
genetic algorithms (a particular kind of evolutionary algorithms utilizing
mutation, selection and other recombination techniques in order to guarantee
a certain number of abstract representations of possible solution for
optimization to become better solutions). Those researches were meant to
point out the almost computational characteristics of Mother Nature on one
hand, while on the other they confirmed the analog/digital machines'
capability of simulating and replicating complex natural phenomena.
These examples show clearly how nature is characterized at the root by a
matrix of numbers and mathematical expressions involving a series of
physical, optical, chemical-physical, electromagnetic and nanometric
phenomena influencing its forms, species, colours, sounds and structures. If
science is considered an organic complex of knowledge obtained through a
methodical procedure, capable of providing a precise description of the real
aspect of things and the laws by which the phenomena happen, and if the
rules governing such process are generally called "scientific method", then
the experimental observation of a natural event, the formulation of a
general hypothesis about such event and the possibility of checking the
hypothesis through subsequent observations become fundamental elements in
modern scientific research.
All of this is really evident in some video works that have been collected
within the screening Hidden Worlds, a critical reflection upon the existing
connection between audiovisual art, energy and science on the borders of
cinema, video and digital. A project that was born from a lecture held at
Science Museum in Naples in 2008 followed by the curatorship at Sincronie:
music and astronomy festival in 2009. Hidden Worlds doesn't some pioneering
works which were not possible to include in the screening, like the studies
on Cymatics carried out by naturalist Hans Jenny that explain how every
existing sound can be reproduced starting from a waveform visualizable
through precise geometrical forms, depending on the medium used. Moreover,
some Mary Ellen Bute's works like Abstronic, that examine the expressive
potentialities of the electrons flow within a cathode ray tube, shooting the
film with a number of abstract animations to the rhythm of music. And Johny
Whitney finally, who with Permutations, applied his "Computational
Periodics" theories to the field of computer graphic, obtaining a "series of
harmonic events in the audiovisual introduction", where a specific
simulation of a musical progression can be achieved through the multiple
superimposition of graphic objects.
What it is today recognized as "immersive art-science" is a form of creative
expression meant to rise above the notion of art as abstract representation,
in behalf of a multi-sensorial experience. The purpose here is to create
aesthetical fascinating objects and also to invite the public to go beyond
ordinary perception's border. Immersivity awakens a synesthetic awareness
both in the mental and in the physic space. A myriad of vibrant phenomena,
usually beyond the observer's reach, are instead made reachable through an
accurate psychophysical conditioning.
------------
HIDDEN WORLDS
Videoscreening curated by Marco Mancuso / Digicult
The Hidden Worlds exhibition celebrates one of the most fascinating yet
obscure territories of artistic audiovisual contemporary research: the
relation between art and science. The video screening produces works that
induce into a critical reflection on the existing relation between
audiovisual contemporary artistic research (as regards to cinema, video and
digital experiences) and applied sciences.
This project, dealing with different artistic examples which investigate new
expressive forms for the representation of the sound-image relation,
deliberately avoids focusing on the existing common aesthetics among them,
as well as on a possible expressive language. It rather suggests an overview
on specific systems for sensorial perception, and emotional mechanisms of
"saturation", achieved through the use of hybrid techniques, that today like
never before expand the tradition of analog experimental cinema and digital
audiovisuals.
This video screening takes the spectators to wonderful "hidden worlds",
illustrated by artists and scientists who more and more often collaborate
and share experiences with one another on the research of new expressive
potentialities within specific mathematical processes and physical, optical,
chemical and electro-magnetic phenomena.
By watching the audiovisual representation of the existing energetic and
electromagnetic phenomena on the Sun's surface and of current interferences
generated from interaction of electromagnetic fields between the Sun and
Earth, as possible instrument of aestheticization of the space phenomena by
the Semiconductor duo (in works such as Black Rain and Brilliant Noise), the
passage to the audiovisual representation of chemical-physical-optical
reactions of the Portable Palace duo (Evelina Domnitch & Dmitri Gelfand) is
extraordinary short indeed. In their first work present in this exhibition,
(Camera Lucida) they study the chemical-physical phenomena of
"sonoluminescence", while in their second one (10000 Peackcock Feathers in
Foaming Acid) they analyze the potentialities of optical phenomena generated
by investigating the laser light within the nanometric structures of foams.
Moreover, if the work on "chemical grams" by the video maker Jurgen Reble
(Materia Obscura) underlines the structures born out of a film's chemical
corrosion, in the same way the first work by Thorsten Fliesch present in the
exhibition (Energie!) shows the scorches on photographic paper produced by
an high potential energy flow of an electron beam contained in a cathode ray
tube.
The number is an ever present concept, being the fundamental element of
every mathematical and algebraic formula which involves not only a single
energy phenomenon present in nature, but also a series of
disturbing/superimposition phenomena, such as interferences, beats,
accumulations, harmonies and other optical event, like Moirè's (optical
illusion created by geometrical sequences of interference phenomena), as
shown by the purely glitch and software works by Carsten Nicolai (Spray) and
Karl Kliem (Vienna Concert !! Excerpts).
The number, in its highest abstraction of key element for a fourth dimension
representation , is still an important part of Thorsten Fleisch's video
(Gestalt), a sort of recognition of the quaternion worlds (four-dimensional
fractals) visualized in a three dimensional space through appropriate
software. Yet maybe John Campbell's masterpiece (LI: The Patterns of Nature)
is the work that mostly evidences the geometric structures spontaneously
present in Nature, through a kind of magical and hypnotic audiovisual
document, perfect sample of a deep critical conviction: contemporary
audiovisual art, today more than in the past, has the technological
instruments and the ethical duty to confront itself with the empirical world
and the "natural" technologies within it. Technologies that should be
collected, observed and manipulated by man, who has already given proof of
his skill with light, sound, image and space.
More information about the SPECTRE
mailing list