Category Archives: Art

Introduction to Computational Media: Reactive Planar Dimension using Processing and a MacBook Pro

In the 1990s I created a series of grid structures using acid-etched industrial steel parts.  A sensor was located at each intersection.

l’Autre, Terezakis, Here Gallery and performance space, 1996

They were all connected with a combination of RJ11 and RJ45 connectors and appropriate cable. For ease of touring and installations, I designed six grids to be 48″ x 96″.  Plywood, sheetrock, and other building materials in the United States typically max out at those two dimensions.   Correctly fabricated the modules would have easily fit in cargo vans, elevators, and trucks.   Much to my chagrin, I did not factor in the additoinal length caused by the couplings and the additional offset of the pipe.  This caused some extra challenges. But that’s for a different text.

The grid structures were created for people to be able to play music and/or poetry either in a random manner or by controlling where their shadows fell on the grid. In this manner they could then control the placement and pattern of sounds or words if they chose.

I always liked the idea of creating participatory volumes and felt that their must be a better way to get control signals to the computer.

Processing and the availability of low cost web cameras would seem to be one way to update the mechanics of the artwork.

Serial port communication is a lot like it was in the 1990s.  Except that it is more robust, runs over a USB (then non-existent!) cable, has relaible physical connectors,  and Apple computers which can do things undreamt of back then.   The Arduino was essential in making this project work.  (This seemed like a heavy-handed solution for the task at hand. I can’t help but thing that a simple 16C58B could have given me the hardware interface I needed for this project.) I used the Arduino because I wanted the experience with the platform as well as the fact that its language is nearly identical to that of Processing.

A screen grab of the Arduino code appears below. In its uncommented out incarnation, the code allows me to see which outputs are firing and when. For the demonstration and testing I am using incandescent bulbs. Due to the heat they radiate, I prefer to have the lights “off” while waiting to trigger them using camera input.

LED test code for Arduino and AC power moduletest-test

Clicking on this link will open a new window with a screen cap showing the code testing with the laptop webcam. A white rectangle will appear with contiguous moving black segments, showing where my arm passes in front of the camera. (QT controller is at the bottom of the file.)

The above example is the code portion working. The file at this link shows the lights changing in response to the detected movement.

Peter Terezakis
ITP, Tisch School of the Arts
New York City

Sacred Sky Sacred Earth: Coronado (Sunday March 20, 2011)

Art, dance, and music on Coronado's North Beach as the sun sets and the moon rises.
This Vernal Equinox you are invited to bring family and friends to SACRED SKY SACRED EARTH: CORONADO

This Vernal Equinox you are invited to bring family and friends to
SACRED SKY SACRED EARTH: CORONADO

Dress warmly, wear comfortable shoes, and join us on the sand to enjoy the creativity of
Coronado School of the Arts (CoSA) Actors, Dancers, Musicians, Technicians, Visual and Media Artists
Directed by Betzi Roe.

The evening will feature contemplative art, dance, and music on Coronado’s North Beach
as the sun sets and the moon rises.

Sunday, March 20   North Beach Coronado (Map)
Event opens at 6:00 p.m.   Admission is free thanks to a grant from the NEA
Programme from 6:30 to 7:30   SacredSkySacredEarth.com

John Flood

While ramping up the next Sacred Sky Sacred Earth: Coronado (Sunday March 20, 2011) event I had a wonderful meeting with John Flood. John is an incredible percussionist and also has deep-rooted concerns regarding environmental issues. During our meeting he brought the following video up as an illustration of an educational objective with students. If you haven’t seen it, it is worth viewing. John’s website is here.

TRUE WEST

Lotus Theatre, Sophia A. Ziebell Director
Lotus Theatre, Sophia A. Ziebell Director

True West written by Sam Shepard   directed by Sophia A. Ziebell
True West written by Sam Shepard directed by Sophia A. Ziebell


There are only two more performances of this production at Hillcrest’s Urban Grind Cafe located at 797 Park Boulevard, San Diego, CA 92103.

I was invited to do the lighting and to mount some photographs.
Last two nights of the show are this Friday and Saturday, (the 19 and 20th, 2010) at 9pm. My exhibition will come down just after Thanksgiving.

Help support the arts by experiencing theater in this unexpected place!

OnSite @ UCSD

>More Theater, Dance, and Art at UCSD's Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration
More Theater, Dance, and Art at UCSD's Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration

Free events at the University of California, San Diego November 18 – 20, 2010. Within the events of OnSITE, there will be video, an installation of Heart Beats Light, and the playing of some musical instruments I have built. Click on the image above for detailed information.

ReAnimated Artifacts –

For the past two months a number of found objects (boxes, springs, a can, fruit cake tin, pitchfork, saw, bicycle wheel, and other items) made their way into my studio. Some have been recombined, others look almost the same. All now possess a kind of second-life and have been re-animated as electro-acoustic constructions. They will be seen and heard Sunday, July 11 in two performances of Letters/Words Lost/Found, choreographed by Betzi Roe.

This series of four site-specific dances at different locations will be held on the grounds of Rancho Bernardo’s historic (operating continuously since 1889!) Bernardo Winery and includes twelve dancers, five musicians, and three musician-dancers! Performances will begin at 2 pm and 6 pm.

Four site-specific dances with amplified objects
Sunday July 11th at 2 pm and 6 pm only. Click for directions.