Tag Archives: Interactive

Body Form Test: An Interactive Installation Through Social Practice

Body Form Test from Stephen Surlin on Vimeo.

Body Form Test by Stephen Surlin & Michael Ngo

Stephen placing the body form.

The project was an attempt to engage with the often apathetic Windsor community. Especially their aversion to the “homeless” and the ability to ignore a problem that is often so obvious, while remaining hidden, elusive or difficult to engage with. We received several mixed and intense responses to the work.

We were heavily influenced by the interventionist street artist, Mark Jenkins, and his public sculpture work. The subjects/characters represented in his works often possess a grotesque and ambiguous quality, often dealing with distinct social tensions or taboos.

It was our intention to interact with the public and receive an illicit response, possibly triggered by strong emotion. We received threats of violence and words of encouragement.

Filmed in Windsor, Ontario, Canada.

Creation: Stephen Surlin & Michael Ngo, Film: Stephen Surlin, Photography: Michael Ngo, Music: Aphex Twin – Father

The variety of reactions were part of the goal. Michael and I had the opportunity to talk to several people about their uniqie connection to people in need. From a person who works in health care to a miner form Alberta and their awareness of people with addiction, including himself.
Photo by Michael Ngo 2011

Photo by Michael Ngo 2011

Photo by Michael Ngo 2011

Photo by Michael Ngo 2011

Photo by Michael Ngo 2011

“Hell Is Other People’s Money” Group Exhibit @ Common Ground Gallery

During May of 2011 I was given the opportunity to curate a gallery exhibit at the Common Ground Gallery, located in MacKenzie  Hall in the Old Sandwich Town region of Windsor, Ontario. With my involvement in the MayWorks Festival planning committee, I was assigned to curate a labour/economics themed exhibition. The space was paid for  by Artcite Inc. for the exhibit.

“Sergio Forest, one of the volunteers for the non-profit gallery, explains the gallery started as a kind of grass roots movement twenty-six years ago, supported by the Art Gallery of Windsor and Artcite. The intention was to support local talent by offering affordable, high quality studio space to burgeoning artists. While it is still mainly local multi-media artwork that is to be found on Common Ground’s walls.” - Windsorite.ca

Artcite Inc.’s MayWorks 2011 is based in the May Day labour celebration. The events are in solidarity with workers and labour rights as Artcite’s website describes:

“Artists, workers, and students have met over many months to organize a collection of exhibitions, projects, events, a rally and a parade, to celebrate our creativity as a community, our dedication to the values of workers’ solidarity, social justice and human rights.

The various activities will highlight our support for our city and our history of solidarity, concern for social justice and our tradition of labour arts.” – Artcite Inc. (artcite.ca)

Sartre - No Exit by A.R.T.

The theme for the show was inspired by my interest in existential theatre and literature and it’s examination of the individual and their connection to society. This is exemplified in Jean-Paul Sartre’s “No Exit” from 1944. The play revolves around three main characters who discover their situation is the result of “sinful” lives and that they are in “hell” which is simply living with “other people” for eternity. This is where the play’s most famous line comes from, “hell is other people“. I used this as the conceptual context for the exhibit, calling it “Hell Is Other People’s Money”.

The title is referring to the complexities of human interaction, especially within the context of contemporary economics. The tensions, fear and struggles found in a seemingly perpetual era of economic crisis.

After developing the theme I made a priority of including one of my colleagues, Teresa Carlesimo, who had recently created a work called “The Room” or “Waiting Room”. This work, which acts as a contemporary view of the  type of “non-spaces” that we inhabit, also emphasizes the connection to Sartre’s theatre production.

Teresa Carlesimo's "Waiting Room"

Later I found several more artists for the exhibit that could work within the theme. The participating artists were: Marcy Boles, Mike Ngo, Rachel Chausse, Teresa Carlesimo and Stephen Surlin.

Marcy Boles’ installation is a pseudo-historical devotional collection of materials of traditionally female labour that often involves a type of pain that Boles herself feels in her repetitive auto-motive factory job. The anti-arthrital braces are Boles’, which are beside the etching tools she used to create the printing plate in the installation.

Marcy Boles' installation.

Marcy Boles' installation detail.

Mike Ngo’s installation is a colaborative piece between him and the Campus Community Garden at the University of Windsor. Ngo collected buckets of compost from the gardens pile, which is for sale, and used one of their organic tomato plants for the installation. The tomato plant is a very charged icon for the recent economic histories of Windsor/Leamington region of Southern Ontario, along with it’s tumultuous colonial history with Spain and other countries.

Mike Ngo's installation.

Mike Ngo's installation detail.

Ngo also had a shelf installed with information and a donation jar for the CCGP in the space.

Rachel Chausse’s work featured a colour photo of a miniature model that she made which was then printed large. The photo engages with the complex and painful histories of Leamington’s tomato industry which often advantages from the exploitation of migrant Mexican workers who are caught in racial tension and resentment form local population who greatly advantage from the industry.

Rachel Chausse's large scale photograph.

Stephen Surlin had a varying collection of works including paintings, text based/interactive and new media works. All of Surlin’s work deals with the intricacies of contemporary consumer culture/identity, the spectacle of politics and the “battle” with depression and suicide that many people face.

Paintings by Stephen Surlin

A reflexive moment with Surlin's internet based paintings.

A look at the didactic work by Surlin which encouraged participation from the patrons.

The beginning of the artist talks (from left to right): Mike Ngo, Rachel Chausse, Stephen Surlin, Marcy Boles

After a moment to allow the attendees to view the exhibit, Susan Gold-Smith, one of the Artcite Inc. planning committee members, introduced the artists and gave a brief word on the history of the MayWorks Festival.

Surlin beginning the interactive question of "what scares you about the economy?"

After the talks, I began the discussion of “What scares you about the economy?” to bring to the fore some of the anxieties that cause tensions between individuals and groups. The black board I created includes text and diagrams that compare the salary of artists and government spending on the arts and etc. The audience began shouting out ideas and I wrote them down and tried to keep the discussion going.

The black board after the discussion. Filled with the anxieties and fears of the individual in response to the economy.

The discussion was intense and varied, and sometimes comical. Though this was a kind of therapeutic purging of collective dis-ease that was focused on in the exhibit in varying ways.

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War, Depression, Suicide: A collection of new studio works

War, Depression, Suicide: A Collection Of Studio Works from Stephen Surlin on Vimeo.

“War, Depression, Suicide” is a collection of recent studio works I did for my independant studio course at the University of Windsor in mid 2011.

The works deal with an exploration of the themes of violence, especially as it is seen in war and internal violence, that for many, turns into a kind of self inflicted violence, the most extreme being suicide (particularly in the way it is so connected with the arts and artists).

A large portion of the works are inspired by my research into depression and suicide. I was very shocked by the amount of artists throughout history that committed suicide after various bouts of depression. This brought the subject closer to me as well because I have been in a depression before. When viewing lists of artists and performers with depression, I found that Conan O’Brian and Sarah Silverman, two of America’s most popular performers/comedians, suffered form depression at some point, inspiring me to make a PSA style poster.

The “Not Angry Enough” self portrait was inspired by my studies of African American civil rights leaders, their struggles, passions, and eventually their assassinations. The succession of violence in the years ’67, ’68 and ’69 give a chilling perspective on the prevalence of violence in the American ethos for most cultures, especially African American. My embodying of Malcolm X in the reproduction of Barbara Kruger’s “Not Angry Enough” is an attempt to create a layered and complex view of my identity.

The paintings suggests the subtle violence that is often masked in popular media, like the slaughter behind a “simple” hamburger or the environmental damage that comes with aluminum cans.

Another theme is the gender and sexuality that creates complex systems of meaning. The “girls” and gun phenomenon has greatly increased through video games with sexualized female characters like “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider” and viral media like YouTube, where one can find thousands of videos of women shooting guns for primarily male consumption.

Though, one of the most violent aspects of this online presence is the highly aggressive and objectifying language that can be found in the comments section beneath the videos. This is what inspired the title’s of the paintings.

The painting “Governer of Alaska” which features the clothing and gun of Sarah Palin adds a layer of meaning by making the methods of consumption appear more complex, rather than suggesting only the pornographic can deal with the complex gender histories with firearms.

The cropping out of the women in these paintings is to bring the focus onto the consumer rather than giving the ability to “scape-goat” the women involved; to think of the abstract systems involved in the consumption of this media.

The interactive installation “War Games” is meant to bring the viewer into the often passive viewing experience of war media. The theme of the apache helicopter is strong throughout because of two main connections. The recent popularity of WikiLeaks and the leaked helicopter footage mirrors the kinds of language and attitudes found in playing video games, especially ones that feature “Middle Eastern” conflicts like “Desert Strike: Return To The Gulf” for the Sega Genesis.

The Sega controller is attached to an Arduino that controls a Max/MSP/Jitter patch on a laptop. The arrow keys act as fast forward and reverse and the “A, B, C” buttons change to a random clip from a collection of reapropriated and manipulated material from the internet.

 

Death of a Salesman & ”This is the one he started before he shot himself”, Oil Stick on paper, 24″ x 36″

Depression: Conan O’Brian & Sarah Silverman, C-Prints on paper, 8.5″ x 11″

Serotonin, Norepinephrin, Dopamine (Mark Rothko, No. 8), C-Print on paper, 11″ x 17″

The 12 Signs of Depression (With the ones I am most afraid of erased), Graphite on stonehenge, 48″ x 60″

Self Portrait (Not Angry Enough, After Kruger), C-Print on paper, 36″ x 36″

Self Portrait (Not Angry Enough, After Kruger) Detail

Hamburger, Oil stick on raw canvas, 36″ x 48″

Crushed Can, Oil stick on raw canvas, 36″ x 48″

 

Hamburger & Crushed Can Detail

Governer of Alaska, Acrylic on canvas, 48″ x 60″

Those Girls Can Shoot My Gun, What Good Is That In The Kitchen, That’s A Weird Looking Kitchen, Acrylic on canvas, 48″ x 60″

Installation view of “War Games“, an interactive installation.

The Arduino based interface from “War Games” used to control a video playing patch in Max/MSP/Jitter with a Sega Genesis Controller.

The “PSA” Shelf at Artseen 13: Shelf Life

From March 19 to April 23, 2011, Artcite Inc. (One of Windsor, ON’s finest Artist Run Centres) held an event called Artseen 13: Shelf Life. Artice Inc. Describes the event as follows:

“The shelves flew off the shelves here at Artcite, as artists from the Windsor and Detroit areas picked up 23″ x 9″ pine shelves to turn into original works for ARTSEEN 13 – SHELF LIFE.

60 artists have hung their shelf-creations on Artcite’s walls, working the idea and the materiality of “the shelf” in a show that pushes the boundaries of the creative process:

Objets d’art, objets d’artiste, Duchampian “ready-mades” (that make ‘dada’ proud), SHELVED ideas! Think OUTSIDE the shelf! Think ON the shelf! Think ABOUT the shelf!”

-Artcite Inc.

I entered the show under the alias, PSA (Pertinent Social Action). A fictional activist group that works within communities to do actions and spread the often urgent and politically charged ideologies of feminist artists, including: Jenny Holzer, Adrian Piper, Barbara Kruger and The Gorilla Girls. I anonymously reproduced the works of these artists in a uniform format, similar to that of a public service organization.

The work included a poster with that text from a Barbara Kruger piece, two documents from The Gorilla Girls, a “Calling Card” from Adrian Piper and buttons with Jenny Holzer “truisms” on them. All of the  material was free to take. Though many of the audience members needed to be encouraged to take part of the piece with them.

PSA (Pertinent Social Action) from Stephen Surlin on Vimeo.

Performance: Paramecium In Three Parts

Paramecium In Three Parts from Stephen Surlin on Vimeo.

This was a work I did in my BioArt class at the University of Windsor (http://www.incubatorartlab.com) that involved interactivity and performance. The basis for my interaction with the biological (living or at one time was living) element is through the program Max/MSP/Jitter, especially the OpenCV.jit computer vision libraries, in order to track movement and other data through a camera. During the performance I am changing play speed, creating loops that play forward and reverse and adjusting thresholds that determine what aspects are being detected.

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Histographic Self Portrait

Histographic Self Portrait from Stephen Surlin on Vimeo.

This was a project in development for my senior level drawing course with Iain Baxter& at the University Of Windsor. The project was to create a self portrait.

I have had a recent interest in Max/MSP/Jitter and thought to use the histograph abilities, taken from a live camera. I used ‘face detect’ from Open.CV to detect a person, which starts the rapid flow of colours as the screen projects the histograph one colour band at a time. The face detects also allows only one person to start the projection, if two or more faces are detected the projection will stop.

Music:
Boards Of Canada – 747

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Windsor Labyrinth Project

This project came from being made to look at my community and engage with it in a different and unique way in my Drawing class with Iain Baxter& at the University of Windsor. I was already familiar with the idea of the Labyrinth, especially the type you may find in places of solitude, contemplation and spirituality.

Many Labyrinth‘s can be found in cathedrals around Europe, though many more can be found outdoors, in parks and gardens.

“ Labyrinths are used by modern mystics to help achieve a contemplative state. Walking among the turnings, one loses track of direction and of the outside world, and thus quiets the mind. “

A picture of someone walking a labyrinth in the American Midwest.

This inquiry into the Labyrinth brought me to focus on three sites that might be advantageous to contemplate on and within.

Windsor, Ontario’s downtown core, a site where many dissonances and fear exist from segregation of groups and the emptying of many buildings/businesses.

Windsor’s West End, Sandwich Towne, a place I previously lived and borders on the University I currently attend. The boarding up of several streets has caused an already ignored area become greatly more destitute. This is because of a second bridge to America that might be built but is not underway; in the meantime exacerbating the desolation of one of Windsor’s heritage communities, which I am from.

Orchard Park, Tecumseh, Ontario, the neighbourhood I currently reside in. I have been living in several homes in the “suburbs” for over a decade now. These communities are very symptomatic of the cultural and economic apartheid based in urban sprawl.

I created a system of maps in order to create a route that traverses these three regions.

Windsor, Ontario’s downtown core

Windsor’s West End, Sandwich Towne

Orchard Park, Tecumseh, Ontario Read More »

THE NOISEBORDER ENSEMBLE: Master Control

Master Control

Thursday, March 4, 2010 at 7:30 pm

Lambton Tower, Studio A, University of Windsor

featuring works by  Trevor Pittman, Chris McNamara, John Cage, blackhole-factory (Martin Slawig, Elke Utermöhlen) and The Noiseborder Ensemble (Brent Lee, Chris McNamara, Patrick Nickleson, Nick Papador, Trevor Pittman, Sigi Torinus) with guests Stephen Surlin and Justin Langlois.

- The Noiseborderensemble.blogspot.com

This was a great performance experience. Everyone involved was so inspiring and creative, making it a fun and instructive few days.
I was especially happy to have worked with Martin Slawig, Elke Utermöhlen of the blackhole-factory. The pair came to Sigi Torinus’ Digital Media class to give some lectures/demos on Max/MSP/Jitter and documentation of some of their performances. Especially fitting because I was intending to use Max/MSP/Jitter in the performance Master Control with the NBE in Lambton Tower, Studio A at the University of Windsor, where I am completing my Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Arts.
You can see me seated at the far left. I’m using a patch I made in Max/MSP/Jitter to draw on projections on the screen across to me. This image comes from a live video feed attached to the DV camera that is next to me. I pointed the camera at the musicians, the instruments, etc.
In the picture above, you can see Elke Utermöhlen recording vocals into a Max/MSP/Jitter patch on her laptop. Performing in the background, Patrick Nickleson and Brent Lee.

In the picture above, you can see the small DV camera to the right of Martin Slawig, it’s pointing at the bongos to the right of it; this is being projected onto the walls and I am drawing over it with the mouse on my laptop via Max5 patch.

Photos are from The Noiseborderensemble.blogspot.com posted by Sigi Torinus.

Window Microphone

Window Microphone

Window Microphone

Piezo disc, breadboard, wire and recording equipment

Stephen Surlin 2010

This project was part of Broken City Lab‘s “Storefront Residencies for Social Innovation” which took place between June 11 and July 11, 2010. I entered the project with an impromptu idea to use some of the minimalist audio recording technology I had been working with, especially the piezoelectric disc.

“For 30 days, this project will call on over 25 different artists, writers, designers, restauranteurs, musicians, architects, archivists, and other interested parties to occupy a space in downtown Windsor for up to one month in June and July 2010 to attempt to intervene with the everyday realities of skyrocketing vacancy rates, failing economic strategies, and a place in need of new imagination.”

-Broken City Lab

My process called upon the ethos of the Broken City Lab by literally and metaphorically “listening” to the city through a piezoelectric disc attached to the window, which turns the entire window into a large microphone. The vibrations that the large diaphragmatic window catches is turned into an electrical frequency that can be amplified and heard/recorded.

The amplified sound could be listened to by any of the visitors of the storefront during open hours. This invites the audience to engage with the city in a different way. The audio characteristics of this microphone mainly picks up the low rumbly frequencies of distant busses and the piercing tone of birds and footsteps, sometimes the faint murmur of talking could be heard when small groups would collect outside of the storefront windows.

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