design / research

Last week I mentioned that I would be DJing at the launch event for FITC Toronto on Saturday April the 19th. FITC is a roving interactive and new media conference that hosts events in cities like Los Angeles, Chicago, Amsterdam, Winnipeg and Toronto, which serves as home base for the festival. FITC has been around for almost a decade and routinely features engaging rosters of speakers that include designers like Joshua Davis, Zachary Lieberman and Mario Klingemann discussing their work in Flash, Processing and in an increasingly broad range of platforms. Over the last few years as the idea of the "integrated audio visual performance" has propagated, more involved installation and performance type events have been featured in the FITC program. This year, DJ and production designer extraordinaire Tom Kuo will be using the launch event to premiere Superspace, an AV collaboration with VJ Markus Heckmann. [see previous post which mentions Markus's Wüstenarchitekten project].

The goal of Kuo and Heckmann's Superspace project is to increase the amount of interaction between DJ and VJ. Given that live video sometimes gets relegated to wallpaper status, I'm curious to see the methodology the pair have developed for this project. I'm quite familiar with the work of both these artists and am looking forward to seeing what they've cooked up. Over the past several years, Tom has done a lot for Toronto nightlife and raised the bar for production design and live video (most notably with his involvement in the Peter Mettler live cinema event at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2006). I'm excited to see how these high standards will translate into a project explicitly bent on building bridges between VJ and DJ culture.
The FITC kickoff party will take place at the Burroughes Building at 639 Queen Street West this coming Saturday from 9pm to 2am. If you're on on the prowl for some stimulation next weekend, look no further. I'll definitely make a point of checking out their setup and following up with a post in the near future. Taking place earlier that evening, Pixel Gallery will be hosting a free talk by Evan Roth of the Graffiti Research Lab at 6pm at their Kensington Market location.
j culture
vj culture is dj culture!
vj culture
I agree with you and I don't. I think there is a weird co-dependence between sound and image in a live performance setting. If there was a 1:1 correlation between VJ and DJ culture then we'd see a lot more of what Cut Chemist and DJ Shadow are doing right now.. mixing image and sound with the same sets of hands. I don't think this is really necessary though and beyond that I think good things come from the tension between these two (somewhat aligned) disciplines.
Regardless, thanks for pointing out my error in the original text - it has been edited/updated.
not about the vd but the c!
I think all you are saying is great!
I just don't see the point in understanding 2 differents medium and way of interpreting the music as 2 differents cultures you seemed to describe as far away from each other that they need bridges!
For me vjs, dancers, djs are all making somewhow the same culture. You can call it party culture or how to enjoy music with common codes and style...
That is all I wanted to say:)
As you I love Dj Shadow ad Cut Chemist and any experiments exploring the way people are watching music and I can't wait to see Markus & Tom perf on Saturday!