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archive: BRODY CONDON: 3 MODIFICATIONS
Art Mods

Virgil de Voldère is proud to present its second solo exhibition with Brody Condon. In the three works on view, the artist digitally reconstructs a trio of well-known late-medieval paintings from northern Europe by Hans Memling, Dieric Bouts, and Gerard David. By re-imagining the religious content of the original works, the artist presents calm scenes of transcendence that slowly give way to anxiety and spiritual trauma.

For 3 Modifications, Condon modifies current computer games with strategies and tools taken directly from online participatory subcultures to create slowly animated, transfigured works that function as moving paintings. The subversive tactics of hacking and the intervention into commercial computer games that characterize the artist's previous work, however, have given way to a critical examination of the politics of representation.

Read more here

Posted by rebecca on Thursday, October 25 @ 03:24:43 CEST ( )
permalink... read more | archive

hello: SP wins Open Source award for Creativity..
Art Games

I'm posting this super news a few days late as I've been on the road..

SP is very honoured to win the Open Source award for Creativity at the New Zealand Open Source Awards.

This is an extra special award for us, for reasons I'm sure you can guess.
Thankyou very much to all that chose us from the finalists!

Also a big thanks to my sis Hannah for picking it up and reading my rambling speech to the hundreds present ;)

Posted by julian on Monday, October 22 @ 12:59:10 CEST ( )
permalink... hello

theory: Games Episode of Marcus Westbury's 'Not Quite Art' doco
Notes

Not Quite Art is a short Australian documentary series currently screening Tuesday evenings on the ABC channel. The second episode features an interview with the mastermind behind Escape From Woomera. It will be available for a limited time on the ABC website as well. http://www.abc.net.au/tv/notquiteart/

The Not Quite Art facebook group can be found at http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=17133164480 and Selectparks has a group at http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=4084839274



Posted by rebecca on Monday, October 22 @ 09:38:42 CEST ( )
permalink... theory

Biomodd
Art Games


We Make Money Not Art has a great write up about Angelo Vermeulen's Biomodd game, which can be viewed from October 20 - December 1 2007 at the exhibition Multispeak in de Witte Zaal in Ghent (Belgium).

"Inspired by the case modding scene, a custom computer is built as a form of expanded sculpture. Inside the case, excess heat of over-clocked processors is recycled by an elaborate living ecosystem. The computer hardware is used as server for a new computer game. The objective of this game is to bring some of the main themes of Biomodd into an imaginative multiplayer game experience.

Both the computer structure and the game are developed with a group of biology, game and art enthusiasts. Exhibition visitors can also modify the piece: through playing they generate heat and hence influence the interior ecosystem."

More at http://www.we-make-money-not-art.com/archives/009779.php

Posted by rebecca on Monday, October 22 @ 09:06:58 CEST ( )
permalink...

theory: Wolves Evolve Blog
Blogs
wolves evolve logo

I just wanted to point everyone in the direction of  Christian McCrea's Wolves Evolve blog. Here he shares academic insights into technology, aesthetics and games. Christian is currently teaching games and cultural studies at Swinburne University in Melbourne, Australia, and is rather a fun guy to sleuth the real identity of in anonymous internet chat rooms. xxx

http://www.wolvesevolve.com

Posted by rebecca on Tuesday, October 16 @ 06:55:04 CEST ( )
permalink... theory

archive: levelHead, a Spatial Memory Game
Art Games



I've just finished the first beta (really an alpha) of my little AR/tangible-interface game levelHead. Admittedly there's not much up on the project page yet, but here's a YouTube video that conveys the general idea pretty well.

Here's a better quality video in the OGG/Theora format (plays in VLC). Enjoy.



Posted by julian on Sunday, October 14 @ 01:46:58 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

archive: Blender: Mesh-Modeling to Rendering (Introduction)
Tutorials

Here's a manual I wrote introducing the basics of modeling, texturing and rendering using the excellent open-source software Blender for the FLOSSManuals project.

Blender isn't the sort of software you can just dive in and teach yourself so easily. It has an unusual interface but one that pays off greatly once learned. For instance, in my experience, Blender is much faster to work with - and more performant - for rapid mesh modeling than 3DSMax or Maya.

Following this manual and doing the tutorials should get you well up to speed with Blender.
Later on I'll post a section on the Realtime Game Engine part of Blender toward the ends of rapidly prototyping your game/3D interface ideas.

About FLOSSManuals: FM, initiated by Adam Hyde, seeks to provide high-quality user-contributed and maintained technical manuals for open-source software, some of which will be published as paper books on-demand.


Posted by julian on Saturday, October 13 @ 20:08:42 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

hello: CineKid Game Develoment Workshops at Mediamatic, Amsterdam.
Opportunities
I'll be giving a 5 day game development intensive at the excellent Mediamatic, Amsterdam, alongside Friedrich Kirschner, Daniël van Gils and Klaas Kuitenbrouwer.

Here's a bit from the workshop page:

During the workshop, participants will build a prototype of their crossmedia project and develop and visualize its user-scenarios. Participants will learn the basic principles of creating machinima, designing 3D game spaces and developing game play and game rules.

Participants will also learn about trends in game culture such as massive multi-player games and new kinds of game interfaces like the Nintendo Wii. Besides this, participants will be updated on the new web culture of creating, matching and sharing user-generated content, which is very influential in game culture.

Registrations are still open, See you there!

Posted by julian on Wednesday, October 03 @ 15:42:39 CEST ( )
permalink... hello

archive: PlayWare at Laboral, Spain.
Exhibitions


Playware
is the second installment in the GameWorld exhibition series at Laboral in Asturias, Spain and is up and running until March 21, 2008.

Contrary to the first GameWorld exhibition - which focussed on strictly artistic explorations of computer games and gaming culture - this "expansion pack" is focussed on games that challenge traditional computer-aided play logics and interfaces

Says the site:

Playware presents the work of artists, designers, and engineers who are probing the limits and expanding the possibilities of digitally-mediated play. The exhibition establishes a continuum between two types of works:

1) ‘multiplayer’ interactive art installations that explore, often in the form of a game, new methods of playful interaction with digital information

2) ‘art game’ software made for everyday computers and gaming systems that differ from their more commercial siblings in their use of abstract, whimsical, or surreal animated environments.

Works at Playware include PingPongPlus (above image), Perfect Time, Bump, Linerider, Armadillo Run, flOw and Toribash.

See the project page here.


Posted by julian on Friday, September 28 @ 12:27:13 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

archive: Escape From Woomera archived..
Art Games


Escape From Woomera is now archived here at Select Parks, it's final resting place on the internet after being shuffled around by ISPs and falling victim to some pretty sneaky domain hijacking.

This of course means that the .com and .org links for EFW kindly placed in books and essays around the globe will no longer work. From here on, use:

http://selectparks.net/archive/escapefromwoomera

Big thanks to Kipper for grabbing the site tree and passing it on to us here at SP for archiving.

Posted by julian on Friday, September 28 @ 10:55:22 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

archive: Play! A Live Video Games Symphony
Art Games


Sydney Symphony Orchestra paid tribute earlier this year to the creative force behind early video game soundtracks.

Play! was a video game symphony that brought to life the award-winning music of 20 of the biggest and best computer games around. Music from the games was performed by the Sydney Symphony Orchestra (conducted by Arnie Roth and backed by choral sensation Cantillation) while massive screens, suspended over the orchestra, captured stunning game play sequences. Play! ran  from 19-23 June and was exclusive to the Sydney Opera House. Music was performed from games including:

  • Final Fantasy VI &VII
  • Metal Gear Solid
  • Halo
  • Castlevania
  • World of Warcraft
  • Kingdom Hearts
  • The Legend of Zelda
  • Super Mario Bros
  • Sonic The Hedgehog

Thanks to Marcus' Not Quite Art Show for the info and the pic.

http://www.sydneyoperahouse.com/sections/whats_on/features/play/index.asp


Posted by rebecca on Wednesday, September 19 @ 14:33:24 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

archive: Eddo Stern Solo Show at Postmasters, New York.
Exhibitions



Those of you in New York should check out Eddo's new show at Postmasters Gallery, running until October 13.

Postmaster's writes:

His new works - kinetic shadow sculptures and 3D computer animation videos - use a mash-up of documentary material from online forums, clip art, YouTube videos, midi music, electronics, and hand made puppets. They mine the online gaming world at its paradoxical extremes: on one hand, an untenable perversity of life spent slaying an endless stream of virtual monsters, on the other, an ultimate mirroring of the most familiar social dynamics. The struggles with masculinity, honor, aggression, faith, love and self worth are embroiled with the gameworld's vernacular aesthetics.


Argh, summer-stoned. I was a bit late on the money with this one. Thnx Eddo for sending it through (and see you soon)!


Posted by julian on Saturday, September 15 @ 11:49:10 CEST ( )
permalink... read more | archive

theory: Evaluating User Experiences in Games
Art Games
Regina Bernhaupt writes:

Call for Position Papers

The workshop "Evaluating User Experiences in Games" invites position papers on evaluation methods for user experience in games. Submissions are invited addressing one or more of the following questions:

What kind of evaluation concepts and methods are used in the industry, and what are their limitations? Do today's game evaluation concepts and methods address industry needs? What factors of game experience are measured and have to be measured? How can we evaluate new forms and developments of interaction techniques in gaming, for example emotion or eye-movement as input for games, ambient displays or virtual environments as output? Is there a common framework of methods that are appropriate to evaluate the user experience in games?

Deadline for submission: Oct 19th 2007

More information about the workshop here.


Posted by julian on Saturday, September 15 @ 11:31:58 CEST ( )
permalink... read more | theory

hello: OzCo Second Life Artists Residency Announced
Exhibitions


Still pinching myself over this piece of news (hence the time to post). Adam Nash, Justin Clemens and yours truly (Christopher Dodds) just won the inaugural Australia Council Second Life Artists Residency Grant. It's a AUD$20k recognition of virtual worlds as legitimate creative spaces, and I get to buy a new suit (kidding OzCo... kind of). We'll be posting progress reports on the BabelSwarm blog.


Posted by christo on Tuesday, September 11 @ 08:38:14 CEST ( )
permalink... hello

archive: Not Possible IRL
Performance Instruments


Not Possible IRL is "Dedicated to identifying and sharing well conceived and realized visual arts n' things in second life which would not be possible in real life: architecture, landscaping, art, animations, fashion, particle effects, building tools and scripts."

Two featured works you have to check out are Senuka Harbinger's SENASY (studies of fractals and formulaic art) and Keystone Bouchard's Gallery of Reflexive Architecture.


Posted by christo on Friday, August 31 @ 05:53:46 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

archive: Bio-predictive game engine.
Notes



A pair of sadistic researchers have devised a new application for bio-feedback in gameplay. By analysing pizeo-electic currents on the skin surface of the player they are able to best-guess the next move the player will make.

Coining the games that result from this interface "Frustration Games" they found that a player' intention to jump can be accurately predicted up to 2 seconds prior to the actual move.

Oh, the evil.

Via /. Related: Mindball and The Predictor.

Posted by julian on Friday, August 31 @ 00:32:22 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

archive: Tekken Torture Tournament
Art Mods

For some retarded reason Tekken Torture Tournament, C-Level's completely rad performance-game-mod never made it into this version of the archive.

c-level 2001

Tekken Torture Tournament was a performance event combining the latest video game technology, untapped public aggression and painful electric shock. Willing participants were wired into a custom fighting system - a modified Playstation (running Tekken 3) which converts virtual on screen damage into bracing, non-lethal, electric shocks.

C-Level appear to have disbanded now, but the physically brutal memories live on at their website:

http://www.c-level.cc/tekken1.html

Posted by rebecca on Wednesday, August 22 @ 14:04:30 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

Level Design As Play
Notes
Chris O' Shea
sent us through an article by Wired's Clive Thompson collecting his experiences making levels in Dungeon Maker for himself to play in.

In the wake of transformative titles like Little Big Planet this conversation of level design as an active function of play is timely.

Says Clive:

By the time I'd crafted my fourth level, I had the surreal experience of revisiting my first level and literally being unable to remember why the hell I made the creative decisions I'd made. Stupid, stupid: Putting the staircase in the far northeast passage? What was I thinking? "Man," I thought as I lumbered down yet another passageway, "this dungeon blows."

Read it here.

Posted by julian on Saturday, August 18 @ 13:31:14 CEST ( )
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archive: Wayfarer Live Game Space
Art Games


I'm heartin' all this live-digital hybrid game stuff at the moment. Here's an upcoming performance from 5-8 of September at Sydney's Performance Space:

Wayfarer by Kate Richards and Martyn Coutts is a live game space, where teams of audience direct their player through a mysterious, hidden territory. The performer's body-mounted computers send streamed video, audio and locative data to the Wayfarer software, which is projected back to the audience.

Part exploration, part competition, part surreal thriller, Wayfarer is a truly hybrid event, where live and mediated performance, urban choreography, ubiquitous computing, gameplay and site specificity come together in a volatile mix.

Performance Space recommends booking a team of 4 or 5 people. If any readers in Syd get a chance to play we'd love to publish your thoughts on the work afterwards as sadly non of us Parkians will be in town for the event.

Also worth mentioning are the names of Mr Snow and Jon Drummond, tech brains involved in this and other interesting interactive projects.

More info can be found on the Performance Space website.


Posted by rebecca on Tuesday, August 14 @ 07:09:30 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

archive: IGN asks: Is this the year of the Arthouse Videogame?
Exhibitions


The IGN has some fairly comprehensive coverage of the Indiecade titles that appeared at E3 this year, from Bill Viola to Blast Theory.

Aye, I would've posted this earlier but it seems holidays got the better of me..

Posted by julian on Sunday, August 12 @ 14:30:53 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

archive: 50 Really Good Indie Games
Art Games

The Independent Gaming Source has got a nice collection of 50 Indie Games, including everyone's favourites Darwinia, Flow and Gish, plus a bunch of others I'm looking forward to playing!

http://www.tigsource.com/features/games1-10.html

Thx Leon!

Posted by rebecca on Friday, August 10 @ 02:14:06 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

hello: Free Play Conf Melbourne Ticket Giveaway
Opportunities The Next Wave Free Play Independent Game Developers Conference is coming up at ACMI, August 18th. This is the primary Australian Independent Game Developer's conference and we're offering one diligent little games enthusiast a free double pass in exchange for a short review on Selectparks. I'll be speaking there, so get your entries in to [email protected] to check out how rad I am.

“It’s the game equivalent of hand-held, no budget, lo-fi, 4-track, DIY and it’s probably one of the best and most vibrant areas of Australian culture.” Binh Nguyen, past Free Play attendee.

More info about Free Play can be found at http://www.nextwave.org.au/
or http://nextwavefreeplay.blogspot.com/

Posted by rebecca on Tuesday, July 31 @ 05:27:31 CEST ( )
permalink... hello

hello: DIMEA 07 - Call for Participation.
Opportunities Nur writes:

Call For Participation for the DIMEA 2007
.

The Second International Conference on Digital Interactive Media in Entertainment and Arts will be held on the 19th - 21st September 2007 in Perth, Western Australia.

Want to see the robot comedian PaPe-jiro? Take a look at the latest Game Sketching Project? Don't missed this years DIMEA 2007.


Read on for more info.

Posted by julian on Wednesday, July 25 @ 17:02:15 CEST ( )
permalink... read more | hello

theory: Ebert vs Barker: Videogames are not 'High Art'.
Art Games
Says Ebert:

Barker is right that we can debate art forever. I mentioned that a Campbell's soup could be art. I was imprecise. Actually, it is Andy Warhol's painting of the label that is art. Would Warhol have considered Clive Barker's video game "Undying" as art? Certainly. He would have kept it in its shrink-wrapped box, placed it inside a Plexiglas display case, mounted it on a pedestal, and labeled it "Video Game."

Wait.. I'm confused. Do you mean something like this?



Ebert, I think you need to get out more.


Posted by julian on Tuesday, July 24 @ 14:52:36 CEST ( )
permalink... theory

hello: VIDA 1.0: Artifical Life Competition
Opportunities
Monica
writes:

VIDA 10.0 is an international competition created to reward excellence in artistic creativity in the fields of Artificial Life and related disciplines, such as robotics and Artiftcial Intelligence.We are looking for artistic projects that address the interaction between "synthetic" and "organic" life".

In previous years prizes have been awarded to artistic projects using autonomous robots, avatars, recursive chaotic algorithms, knowbots, cellular automata, computer viruses, virtual ecologies that evolve with user participation, and works that highlight the social side of Artificial Life.

The first prize is a cool €10,000. Read the application guidelines in English and in Español.

TY Monica!

Posted by julian on Monday, July 23 @ 17:00:30 CEST ( )
permalink... hello

archive: Old school game commercial
Geek


Check out this antique Atari Pong commercial. Via Kotaku.


Posted by christo on Monday, July 23 @ 03:52:29 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

archive: Low-fat 3D Scanning.
Tools
Friedrich Kirschner
has made a great little D.I.Y 3D-Scanner, software and all.


The ingredients:
  • 1 Webcam
  • 1 Tupperware Bowl
  • 3 cups of Milk
  • 1 custom LEGO rig
Nice work fiezi and thanks to Brandano for putting me onto it. Watch the Milk-Scanner in action here.

Posted by julian on Friday, July 20 @ 16:25:43 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

Marketers pulling out of Second Life
Notes
A vocal number of SL players consider themselves more citizens than users and they aren't at all pleased with the brave new-world of trans-corporeal capitalism.

"The LA Times is running a story today saying that marketers are pulling out of Second Life, primarily because — surprise, surprise — the 'more than 8 million residents' figure on the game's Web site is grossly inflated. Also, as it turns out, the virtual world's regular visitors — at most 40,000 of them online at any time — are not only disinterested in in-world marketing, but actively hostile to it, staging attacks on corporate presences such as the Reebok and American Apparel stores. The companies aren't giving up on virtual worlds altogether, though, but moving on to games like There, Gaia Online and Entropia Universe.

This does beg the question: if commercial interest continues to pull out of SL - and the real-estate market slumps as a result - will Linden Labs have to increase subscription costs to stay in business?

Thankfully the world my body is dependent on isn't supported by a subscription model! Oh, wait... nevermind..

Perhaps even more interesting is:

"The article also contains some commentary from a marketing executive who conducted an informal survey of the game and discovered that 'One of the most frequently purchased items in Second Life is genitalia.' What company wouldn't want to be in on that action?"

See, SL isn't just about flirting and real-estate. Who said that anyway?

via /.

Posted by julian on Saturday, July 14 @ 22:23:06 CEST ( )
permalink...

hello: Little Big Good.
Notes



At the expense of sounding like an ad, this E3 trailer of Little Big Planet has me twitching in the direction of my wallet. Perhaps it's time to cave-in and buy that lounge-invader they call PS3 afterall.

I had no idea the collaborative level editing would be quite so loose.. I wonder if it's possible to distribute levels/maps?


Posted by julian on Saturday, July 14 @ 11:21:39 CEST ( )
permalink... hello

archive: Experimental Games feature at E3
Exhibitions
Thanks to the pioneering work of Celia Pearce and friends, several experimental games will appear as a part of an IndieCade showcase at E3 this year.


Some of the games featured include EveryDayShooter, And Yet It Moves, and Can You See Me Now. Pix and I were also very lucky to have been invited to put something in the showcase too. Thanks!

This is certainly something of a milestone for experimental/artistic game development, if only to let Goliath know that David exists.. bah, you get the idea ;)

Posted by julian on Thursday, July 12 @ 22:48:03 CEST ( )
permalink... archive

latest by an SP member
levelHead
by Julian




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old articles
Tuesday, July 10
· Basho's Frogger
Sunday, July 01
· Seriously Fun.
· Global DoD Sim puts you in the picture.
Monday, June 18
· New art game added to archive: Pollen Sonata
Tuesday, June 12
· BF announces open-source game project, 'Apricot'.
Monday, June 11
· Laboral Game Development Workshops
Monday, June 04
· Torrent Raiders
Friday, May 25
· SAMD 2007: CFP
Wednesday, May 23
· Second Life Artist Residency
Tuesday, May 15
· Synthetic Performances
Monday, May 14
· RMIT student project: Terra Transeo
Friday, May 11
· Cryptic Studios releases in-house anim tool under GPL.
Wednesday, May 09
· New submission: Domestic Tension.
· Stringwalker: VR with strings attached
Monday, May 07
· Intimate Game Controllers
Saturday, May 05
· 2ndPS2: Second Person Shooter for Two Players.
Thursday, May 03
· Teenager suspended for making map of schoolgrounds.
Saturday, April 28
· Ecriture Videoludique: New French blog on Art and Games
Wednesday, April 25
· New Paper Submission: The Rendered Arena - Axel Stockburger
· WiiHelm: Casual gaming for the sleep deprived.
Wednesday, April 18
· Not a Wall
· AcmiPark - A Case Study of a Virtual Public Place
Tuesday, April 17
· Darkgame: 2P Sensory Deprivation Skirmish.
Monday, April 16
· Roy Block
· Nude Avatar Descending a Staircase
Friday, April 13
· Reload
Thursday, April 12
· Philosophical Games
Wednesday, April 11
· Top Ten Gaming System Hacks
Tuesday, April 10
· Invitation to register for Urban Play Space Seminar, Melb.au
Thursday, April 05
· Women in Games 2007 Conference
Wednesday, April 04
· Coverage of Gameworld at Laboral
Wednesday, March 21
· Exhibition: Trash This City
Tuesday, March 20
· The Narrative Exploration Engine
Monday, March 19
· LAMP - Story Of The Future Residential Lab
Sunday, March 18
· 2007 Bitfilm Festival
Wednesday, March 14
· Flowery Twats
Wednesday, March 07
· Mixed Realities: Turbulence Commissions
Tuesday, March 06
· Videogames and Art, the book.
Saturday, March 03
· Rapid prototyping for the Wiimote using Blender
Friday, February 23
· CFP 4th Australasian Conference on Interactive Entertainment, 2007
Wednesday, February 21
· Free Tickets to ACMI Machinima Festival
· Long exposure games
Tuesday, February 20
· Blender 2.43 Released
Monday, February 19
· ACMI Machinima Film Festival, Melbourne, Australia
Thursday, February 15
· Living Game Worlds at Georgia Tech
Thursday, February 08
· Fijuu2 packages released for Ubuntu
Wednesday, February 07
· Psychoanalysing Horror Games
Sunday, February 04
· ACE 2007 reminder. Feb 9 DL for demos and short papers.
Thursday, February 01
· Packet Garden 1.0 Released for Linux, Windows and OS X.
Wednesday, January 24
· Get a First Life

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