http://lucid.mica.edu

Showcasing some of the best digital artwork around, for your inspiration.




Friday, March 14, 2008

Publicis & Hal Riney Website

Ok, now this is seriously a cool idea for a website.



Publicis & Hal Riney are a design firm in the San Francisco Bay Area that go way back. They recently updated their website to include some pretty cool motion graphics.

But more importantly than that, you can navigate the entire site via webcam. You can swipe your hands that any of the cardinal directions of the screen and the website will move you along.

The work is decent, and the mouse version is severely lacking (mostly because they are obsessed with mouseovers to reveal navigational info... ick) but navigating the webcam version is more fun than I've ever had navigating a website with a mouse. You should check it out if you fancy flailing around your arms for a good 15 minutes:

http://www.hrp.com/

Sight.Sound.Interaction 2.0 Review up on Rhizome

Just a quick update on the previous post about the Interactive Media show at MICA, curated by Jason Sloan, Rhizome has posted a short review of it called Baltimore Rising by Marisa Olson. Go and check it out (your's truely has a sentence or two!)

Monday, March 3, 2008

sight.sound at Maryland Institute College of Art





Sight.Sound exhibit in Rosenberg Gallery (Brown Center, 2nd Floor) features some of the latest interactive works from MICA Students and interactive artists from around the globe (New York, London). From processing to Atari to Yves Klein and Philip Glass inspired work, each piece gets its own space in this well curated show. The show opens March 3rd.

Sunday, March 2, 2008

MoMA - Design and the Elastic Mind






http://www.moma.org/exhibitions/2008/elasticmind/

The new exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art, "Design and the Elastic Mind" is an absolute gold mine of advancements in design, science, art and interactivity in the past decade.

The exhibition website is a great resource and experience. It has a really clever way of using tags - a system that has become common, but this design is far from dull. Who knew that navigating with tags could be so refreshing and exciting? As for the actual featured bits, we get little glimpses and then deeper looks. It's mysterious, yet fluid and intuitive.


On the exhibition:

“Design and the Elastic mind” is the most uplifting show MoMA’s architecture and design department has presented since the museum reopened in 2004. Thanks to its imaginative breadth, Nicolai Ouroussoff concludes, we can begin to dream again.
- New York Times

The exhibition
and the website include objects, projects, and concepts offered by teams of designers, scientists, and engineers from all over the world, ranging from the nanoscale to the cosmological scale.
- Computerlove

The New York Talk Exchange

The New York Talk Exchange, that's right--not Stock, it's Talk--is MIT's latest publicly announced project. Created with the help of AT&T, BT (British Telecom), and Yahoo!, the program monitors the incoming and outgoing calls and internet communications of New Yorkers.


globe encounters


The whole idea of this makes me kind of scared--like, when did MIT tell New Yorkers that the were logging their transmissions?--but when I saw what pretty visuals were created from the data, I relaxed a bit. Makes me think if the PATRIOT Act included spiffy 3D recreations of their wiretaps I would be a little more OK with it... Right.


pulse of the planet


Anyway, Orwellian or not, the fruits of the MIT team's labor is on display in MoMA until May and, once again, available at any time here. You can read the AP article written about the exhibition here.



I'll leave you with what I think is the most interesting fact gleaned from this info: "From Manhattan, the most-called city is London, which represents about 8 percent of all calls overseas. The second most-called city from Manhattan is Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, with more than 5 percent of all calls."

Makes you think...

P.s. In the first image/link, I love the time of night--must be like 4am or something, when the communication dies out altogether for like a split second. Incredible.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

We Feel Fine



We Feel Fine is one awesome-looking website.



It's a website that queries blogs all over the internet for the phrase "I feel _____" and then organizes the results in something that, in my opinion, looks bitchin' sweet. Colors relate to a happy or sad feeling, and depending on where you click, you can have results organized into gender, age or even what the weather was like outside during the time that the poster made the blog post. Combined with particle physics that are just so fun to play with; We Feel Fine is probably one of my favorite sites to check out on a fairly regular basis.



Go check out We Feel Fine today!

Friday, February 8, 2008

Hack 2 School

core77 - hack 2 school

core77 put together a resource website dedicated to design students called hack 2 school. It's got advice on classes, how to promote your work, tips on how to make witty use of the internet - you really should check this out if you are a student or if you've just graduated. This thing is packed, hot!