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Sorry for X pstng. Pls Fwd.<br>
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<b>DRONE-2000 | A DYSTOPIAN PERFORMANCE FOR AMPLIFIED DRONES</b><br>
Press Release. Montréal/Paris. June 24th 2015.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://drone2000.net">http://drone2000.net</a><br>
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<b>Flying systems downgraded into dysfunctional machines</b><br>
With Drone-2000, Nicolas Maigret presents a bestiary of autonomous
flying systems powered by dysfunctional algorithms that coexist with
an audience. This project is symbolically structured around a
succession of three digital or electronic civil attacks on drones,
evolving both in an empirical and dysfunctional manner;
choreographed movements enhanced by the amplified sound of the
rotors. This proposal seeks to produce a situation filled with
deviant, critical, poetic and absurd anticipation.<br>
<br>
Full Press Kit - HD Images <br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://goo.gl/VTJnYO">http://goo.gl/VTJnYO</a><br>
Video documentation <br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://vimeo.com/album/3452842">https://vimeo.com/album/3452842</a> <br>
Interview on We Make Money Not Art<br>
we-make-money-not-art.com/archives/2014/10/drone2000.php<br>
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<b>
Historical context</b><br>
Drone-2000 is a series of critical productions that echo the recent
Western attraction for this seemingly playful technology, birthed
through both military research and scale modeling. For nearly ten
years, the use of drones has spread across the fields of hacking,
cinema, gaming and the art world. They are highly promoted by the
very companies that produce them as well as the military-industrial
complex, and through product placement in the gaming industry and
the science-fiction fantasies inherited from the 20th century.<br>
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<b>Purpose of the project</b><br>
Drone-2000 is a performance where autonomous systems, controlled by
precarious algorithms, coexist with an audience. Their latent and
dysfunctional presence is a tangible threat. Drone-2000 projects us
into a dystopian situation, thus illustrating the military origins
of these entertaining objects as well as their recent use by police
forces. Here, trusting the autonomy of the machine is not only a
discursive concept but a true experience shared with the audience,
triggering visceral and psychological reactions, in the face of
symbolic and real danger.<br>
<br>
<b>Performance structure</b><br>
The concept of the performance is structured around different civil
IT, electronic, and manual attacks. Each attack is initially
conceived to protect oneself against the current intrusion and
likely future invasion of these not-always-well-intentioned engines.
The chosen attacks seek to deviate, block, or blind these cybernetic
machines. All this takes place both in an empirical and
dysfunctional manner, enhanced by the live and amplified sound of
rotors.<br>
For each scene, a drone lifts off before being affected by one of
the possible civil attacks stated here:
<br>
- Attack 01 - Camera interference: A drone is on the ground,
perpetually attempting to lift off without success, its camera
signal is blocked by a digital intrusion.<br>
- Attack 02 - Ultrasound interference: An ultrasound generator is
set to a pulse and a frequency that allows it to crash the drones
present in the room.<br>
- Attack 03 - Virus: The drones are infected by a virus, they move
in all directions, randomly and frenetically.<br>
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<b>Live performance version</b><br>
This project takes on a hybrid form of presentation that voluntarily
provokes a discomfort between the social codes of a concert setting,
a demonstration, a tutorial, and the physical experience of living
with autonomous flying machines. For the performance version, the
drones are equipped with four light spy- microphones. Their erratic
choreography become the score of a live composition, an extreme
sound amplification of the engines’ movements.<br>
<br>
<b>Exhibition version (work in progress)</b><br>
A second series of attacks, in the form of a video piece, is
currently being produced. It seeks to establish a critique through
absurdity, borrowing equally from technophilic ideas as from
technoskeptic ones: <br>
- TARENTULA | A drone begins to turn without stopping, as if caught
up in a ritual or psychedelic dance <br>
- AD INFINITUM | A drone sets off towards the infinite horizon until
it exhausts its resources <br>
- VIRUS | Two drones take off in all directions, randomly and
frenetically <br>
- ULTRASONIC | Three drones stop mid-flight, and fall from the sky <br>
(*excerpt from a collection of imaginary viruses and malfunctions,
being completed and finalized)<br>
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<br>
<b>A project by Nicolas Maigret </b><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://peripheriques.free.fr">http://peripheriques.free.fr</a><br>
Drone modification and development: Arthur Heist, Grégoire Lauvin <br>
(this project is commissioned by Gamerz Festival, France and Eastern
Bloc, Canada)<br>
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