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Category Archives: Review

These robots by artists Katrin Hochschuh and Adam Donovan are the most endearing work in the small exhibition at Impakt, center for media culture in Utrecht. The Empathy Swarm consists of a group of small robots on wheels. They form formations, draw towards each other, tapping gently against your shoe. It seems like they want to make contact. Or are those feelings of affection no more than human projection? [...] It is striking that the Empathy Swarm shows how little is needed to generate empathy for an inanimate object. It raises the question why people sometimes have such bad care for their natural environment.

Empathy Swarm, Review |

December 3, 2018

| adkat

Review of Empathy Swarm in ‘A world without us’ at Impakt

translated from Dutch article “De zieleroerselen van een ‘slimme’ koelkast” by Thomas van Huut for NRC Handelsblad, the Netherlands’ most influential newspaper.

#art&science, #emap, #emare, #empathy, #impakt, #robots, #swarm | Comment
Performance, Psychophysics Machines, Review, Saturn 3 |

February 2, 2018

| adkat

Saturn3 performance clip in Sanatorium Dźwięku 2017 Sokołowsko Synopsis Video

Our collaborator Łukasz Szałankiewicz sums it up in the interview:
“Directional speakers using robotic manipulation and all sounds obtained from magnetic fields. That’s it in a nutshell.”

More about the performance: Saturn3.

“Sanatorium Dźwięku launched in 2015 in Sokołowsko is a festival dedicated to contemporary experimental music and sound art. Its main objective is to present the phenomena and trends in the 20th and 21st centuries, maintaining the balance between traditions of experimental music and the new, still structureless tendencies.” from http://festiwal.sanatoriumdzwieku.pl/en/ .

 

Comment

From stereo, multidirectional sound, to a sound beam of precision. Adam Donovan and Katrin Hochschuh offer a visual manifestation of what we hear, or as Gail Priest encourages us to question, sounds we may see and visuals we may hear. This brings the rare opportunity to sit with a precise point of sound as it moves through space. The Curious Tautophone robot is controlling the inputs here. I am mesmerized with the fine silver lines that form curves in constant motion, evolving in their formations. Some dancing toward the center, others away from it. Gliding and sliding as the sound too circulates, as I move in and out of conscious awareness of it. Both eyes and ears are invited to follow. Is my latent memory darting out before me, as I see spiders’ legs or feel fingers upon my skull? Lines flipping and flicking to create new shapes. Lines splaying from center to periphery or creating rings. The reflection of the metal robotic head running across the fine lines as circles dancing into and out of swirls. What Priest offered in her meditative voiceover tones I feel here in the constant flows of these fine lines.

Curious Tautophone, Review |

January 5, 2018

| adkat

Curious Tautophone mentioned in Experimenta Make Sense review in CLOT Magazine

“Experimenta Make Sense” by Lika Posamari in CLOT Magazine

#art&science, #experimenta make sense, #robots | Comment
Curious Tautophone, Review |

November 4, 2017

| adkat

Curious Tautophone Interview on Australian National TV: ABC The Mix

Lisa Skerrett from ABC The Mix visited Experimenta Make Sense in Melbourne and spent some “machine bonding time” with us and the robot.

The interview was part of The Mix episode broadcasted on 31st October 2017 and was available online from 2nd November 2017 to 1st January 2018 on iview.

 

Comment

[...] Lukasz Szalankiewicz and Adam Donovan counter this with their Saturn 3 showcase, merging live visuals by Katrin Hochschuh with an electronic psychoacoustic gauze generated by moving robotic tripods shifting beams of sound through an electromagnetic field.

Performance, Review, Saturn 3 |

October 25, 2017

| adkat

Saturn3 performance mentioned in The Wire

“On Location – Festivals, concerts, clubs: Sanatorium Dźwięku“ by Richard Jonson

in The Wire – October 2017 (Issue 404) p. 82

Comment

There are some [...] robots that either respond to your presence or condition you to move, like the Curious Tautophone by Adam Donovan and Katrin Hochschuh. This shiny spider of sound and light emits waves in unusually focused webs, making you twist your neck to angle the ears – a bit like a dog whose spatial orientation shifts to make sense of those noisy striations in the air.

Curious Tautophone, Review |

October 18, 2017

| adkat

Curious Tautophone mentioned in Experimenta Make Sense review in The Sydney Morning Harald

“Experimenta Make Sense review: In the future, the past gets its revenge” by Robert Nelson in The Sydney Morning Herald

#art&science, #experimenta make sense, #robots | Comment