Memory Fragments
Images created by rendering fragments of raw binary data from a memory core dump as 432px wide 6-bit RGB image files.
Memory Fragments
Images created by rendering fragments of raw binary data from a memory core dump as 432px wide 6-bit RGB image files.
Transcoding raw binary data into fabric at 100 threads/cm using 8 colors and 32 different weaving patterns. @ the TextielLab in Tilburg, NL.
(Source: glitchtextiles)
Excerpt of Idol No More
A Remix of Idle No More, by Stine Marie Jacobsen, for the 2013 Turku Biennial in Finland.
Sound and Video Processing by Phillip Stearns
Example of abstraction utilizing datamoshing techniques, mirroring and layering via various blend modes in Adobe Premiere.
Phillip Stearns electrocutes unexposed instant film with 15,000 volts.
He also pours various household chemicals (like bleach) onto the prints to make the colors and corrosion you see. The process is about as beautiful as the end result. You can watch how it’s done here.
We asked Phillip a few questions about his process:
What inspired you to apply electricity to film as opposed to just chemicals?My explorations were guided most by what materials I had available. A big batch of this instant color film was being thrown out, presumably by a photographer in my building transitioning out of analog film. Two years ago, I received a batch of neon tubes and high voltage ballasts to drive them. After tinkering with interrupting the process of developing the film (after exposing to light) and discovering the painterly qualities such physical manipulations produced, I started to think about how else I work with the film.Through experimenting with digital cameras a couple of years prior to these experiments in film, I became aware of Hiroshi Suigimoto’s work of subjecting photopaper to electric discharges and thought that I could try something similar with the neon ballasts and the color film itself.
How did you go about making sure your process was actually safe to do?I caution, again, this is not safe. No one should try this on their own, unless assisted by a qualified electrician trained in dealing with high voltages, and a physician. Death by electrocution is quite real.Any other tips or comments you have for photographers who want to explore analog or digital experiments?Look at what you have around you. Use it differently. Look for potentials that exist just beyond, hidden within the normally prescribed perception of things. Play, but be smart about it. Be safe.
I have been trying to understand the idea of “analog glitch” only to come away with processes that reveal the glitch as invisible with only the artifact remaining as a trace of its having been.
(via phillipstearns)
Attention Fellow Glitchers! I have an awesome new tool to share with you:
Written by Paul Kerchen, whom I had the pleasure of meeting at NOTACON 2013 where I was presenting the Glitch Textiles project. After talking about some ideas for the future of the project, we sat down and designed a simple utility that allows you to visualize RAW data in a wider variety of ways than available through applications like Photoshop or Gimp (even Irfanview!). Currently it’s WIN only but am hoping that the community can expand this application or integrate it into other image manipulation environments.
Visualized above is the raw data for the LoomPreview executable file as a 3-bit RGB image 384 pixels wide.
Help me support an emerging NY Experimental Media Art organization: Signal Culture, by contributing to their fundraising campaign on Indie GoGo:
http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/signal-culture
Contribute at the $525 level and receive an iTunes executable Binary Blanket (pictured above).
Your contributions don’t have to be massive, every bit helps!
Top 10 Student Works from my Illuminated Errors course on Skillshare
#1
Glitch Textiles presents: Binary Blankets
A collection of blankets aimed at making visible the hidden data structures that give shape to everyday life. The materiality of our digital age is composed of binary data encoded on electronic devices and transmitted through the airwaves on invisible frequencies of light. As an alternative to the screen, Binary Blankets literally gives you a way to experience the fabric of this otherwise invisible and intangible side of our digital world.
This initial collection features designs from a handful of binary files from programs such as Microsoft Word, iTunes, Google Chrome, and Mac OSX.
Each Design Limited to an Edition of 5.
$350 USD + $15 Shipping (see site for details)
#2
SPACE CATS 4th major updateTop 10 Student Works from my Illuminated Errors course on Skillshare
#4
See the full project here: http://www.skillshare.com/Illuminated-Errors-Create-Visual-Glitch-Art/663009154/28747861/projects/7451
Top 10 Student Works from my Illuminated Errors course on Skillshare
#9
See the full project here: http://www.skillshare.com/Illuminated-Errors-Create-Visual-Glitch-Art/663009154/28747861/projects/7372