Exhibitions and Availability
The Central City net artwork is available in a signed edition of 10, including all the software and artwork on a signed disk. This also includes the HTML and javascript files that aren't in the touch screen edition. It is available under licence and available for museums and collectors to buy.
A version of The Central City artwork is also available on touch screen in a signed edition of 10 and several versions have been sold privately to collectors in 2004.
Provenance. This net art project in various forms has also been exhibited at.
International Awards for this project.VIDA 6.0. 2004. Links first prize Porto 2001, Videobrasil Sao Paulo 2001 first prize, Cynet art 2000 first prize.
museo tamayo arte contemporáneo 2002 + fluxusonline 2002 + cosign germany 2002 + fcmm montreal 2002 + physical vs. logical space , austrailia + cinemania(c) croatia 2002 + arte digital cuba 2002 + isea japan 2002 + Garage Festival Germany 2002 + Senef korea 2002 + nimes 2002 + emaf 2002 + siggraph usa 2002 + soundtoys 2002 + cybersonica 2002 + Fused 2002 + Sao Paulo Bienale 2002 + Zeppelin Barcelona 2002 + Net.art in 4L Istanbul 2002 + Immedia 2002 usa + Net-working 2001 + Soeul Net art 2001 + Generative Art 4th GA2001 + A Fair Place Turkey.2001 + McLean Project Casting a Net USA 2001 + Art Image Graz 2001 + Video Lisboa Lisbon 2001 + Impakt Utrecht 2001 + Medi@terra Greece 2001 + Cynet 2001 Dresden + E.I.I.Festival edinburgh 2001 + Garage Festival Germany 2001 + Urban Myths.Israel 2001 Independent Newspaper best site of the week 2001 + DLUX 2001 Austrailia + Moscow International Festival 2001 + Sonar 2001 + net-z-lab 2001 + Vdor21/Break21 2001 + Thaw 2001 + arco 2001 + Transmediale 2001 + Architettura in Video 2000 + Netart 2000 + Independent Newspaper best site of the week 2000 + Macromedia's UCON 1999 + BIMA shortlist UK 1999 + emaf 1999 + Seafair 1998 +
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THE CENTRAL CITY
INTRODUCTION.
The idea is to go deeper into analogies for the organic identity of the city. The micro city becomes an organic networks of grids and diagrams.The form and content of this work is a visual world of the city and its structure. Networks of information technology are contrasted with organic networks and city networks. The project fuses the sounds of specific places.The sounds of language impose a rhythm that the visual narrative can interact with. ‘The central city ‘, is an audio visual, interactive, internet art, experience. The central city consists of text pieces, embedded sounds, all made for the internet. The city becomes an organic network of grids and diagrams, juxtaposing urban sights and sounds.
I wanted to develop analogies for the organic identity of the city as an urban community and make links with electronic networks and virtual communities. This organic interplay is contrasted with man made structures, as well as patterns and forms of urban design. The online spaces are for dreaming, thinking, meditating and transience. The form and content of this work is a visual world of the city and its structure. A visual labyrinth, a maze of circumstance. The city itself is always changing; it is always in flux. Each aspect of city life seems to demonstrate specific characteristics, which can be developed into individual parts of the labyrinth, making up the images that will be used. A city experience consists of small unit blocks and cells which inter-relate and lock together to form the composite city identity. The city has moved from metropolis to megalopolis to the ecumenopolis. The city is everywhere, with lifeless design spreading upwards and forming a conundrum of physical objects in space. A city form is a conundrum of physical objects in space. Cities become "insect colonies", spreading upwards with giant towers looming over vacant lots, and empty spaces.
TOWARDS THE MATRIX. GRID CITY
My artistic intervention tries to look at fragments of our experience of cities, that make up the whole city. The central city, is a place which appears out of control, but which we try to control through design. The city as grids, and repetition, can appear sublime or it can confuse and appear prison like. Giant cities paint a gloomy picture, of mass urban sprawl; the megalopolis is spreading upwards and everywhere to house a population of which 70 - 80% now lives in cites worldwide.
These online works represent spaces, they are idealised spaces. I don’t see ‘the central city’, as a simulation. In fact, I am not aiming or particularly interested in simulation. I view the final evolution of the project as a experience, an online internet experience, which can be viewed inside the white cube of the box which is a computer. The framework, the grid, that contains this work is the computer and the internet. Images of maps redrawing and reprocessing themselves. This allows the city a perpetual evolution, no single similar path need be followed.
THE CITY AS SOUND
I am interested in the sounds of specific places, and how the sounds reflect this identity and re-impose characteristics back onto the location or environment. Cities all have specific identities, and found sound can give us clues to the people that inhabit these spaces, as well as provoking us and stimulating our senses in a musical way. The sounds of language impose a rhythm that the visual narrative can interact with. The intention within newer sections of the central city, is to create an audio visual experience that evokes place, both as literal description but also developed musical composition. These are the ideas that are informing my new ‘soundmaps’ series , and ‘soundcity’. The city codes itself up into a growing patterns, based on algorithmic patterns. The digital city experience. This is a playfulness not far or dissociated from the playfulness of the situationist critique. And like the situationists, they also wanted to build cities.
My initial response in the central city project for example was to deconstruct a language of the urban and city environment, and then to build it back up as an art image to try to constitute both a new form and new meaning. By placing oneself in the middle of this particular structure, the meaning or the aesthetic experience is only encountered when you decide to move from any one place to the next. I use these small fragments as rhythms, to interact with the next part, and evolve into something new. These parts are cells, or parts of a whole that generate itself. The nature of the sounds and noise of cities varies in tone and language. A background rhythm can come into the foreground. It mixes itself, and evolves. The city is its own music, constantly evolving, a beautiful composition of squeaks, clanks, and pulses. We are familiar but distracted as it bombards our conscious slipstream. Yet the sounds evolve, generate, move, die, fade and shift. The sounds of the city are out there all the time, there is no silence, the code does not stop. The children, the trains, the drills, the animals, the micro sounds, the sounds of our bodies, the sounds of the street, the insides of our souls. Familiar forms, identities and sounds are common to all cities, and yet each have special forms that separate and identity particular places and spaces.
All the sounds are recorded from mini -disc and originally sourced they are then fed into the central city. The sounds files work in differing way, some are looped, some are mixed, and some are generative. There is even a jukebox section, where sounds stream down off the juke box from the server and you can re-enact you own karaoke at home, by reciting the words over the top of the industrial city soundtrack.
THE INTERACTIVE CITY
‘The central city‘, moves away from these ‘linear’ pieces, into a more non linear and interactive experience, giving the audience some control over the artwork. The city allows you to experience different artwork depending on how you choose to navigate. There are also random ways to experience this. As well as this non linearity, some of the pieces change over time. Evolving pieces exist, that the "user" has to control to make them work, the user also can input changes of sound and picture. This change in the relationship between the audience and the artist could be said to change our perception of the artwork. I am evolving a situation where the audience may not only participate but also by giving them some control, contribute to the form and content. The work is exploring this changing relationship between the audience and artist. The user makes the decision to change sounds and pictures, where to go, what to see, what to hear. This can be done by movements within the grid. This change in the relationship between the audience and the artist changes our relationship to the artwork. The user can choose what they experience, synthesizing converging media, systems, and phenomena in the process.
THE CITY AS CODE
The city codes itself up into a growing patterns, based on algorithmic patterns. The digital city experience. This is a playfulness not far or dissociated from the playfulness of the situationist critique. And like the situationists, they also wanted to build cities. ‘The central city’ has become an amalgamation of ideas from art, architecture , design and urbanism united within the spirit and the ethos of the situationist movement.
THE DIGITAL DOMAIN
Mouse down events pull in different sounds and allow the user some control over what users experience. As well as this, generative sections allow images to morph and change and move about the screen in a three d space. The sections are position controlled or mouse controlled. Small buttons can attach generative sounds to images and these build up and decay over time.
The Central City project was made specifically for the internet as a piece of internet art. My design and technical restrictions therefore meant that the graphics sound etc, are all targeted for general internet use. The work is made available primarily for the internet because of its potential to reach a much bigger audience. I now define net art as work which use the protocols of the net as a medium. The work has to be net specific, designed for the internet, will use elements of html, javascript, and could also incorporate flash, shockwave and java. Net art is global, interactive communication. It is also relatively cheap to make and it is not a restricted by the economics of the art world. The nature of the web allows greater freedom from censorship at this present time, and because its is still evolving its language this also allows a greater freedom of expression.
Most of these works have extensive mouse control. As the user moves the light and the image changes. A copy of the whole internet project is now also available on cd rom; and versions exist that can be exhibited as an installation for larger spaces with bigger facilities. The has work evolved since 1997 to its current version and form. This version now online is version 5 circa 2003.
A copy of the whole internet project is now also available on cd rom for exhibition purposes; and versions exist that can be exhibited as an installation for larger spaces with bigger facilities. A performance is also in development which allows the website to be played on multiple computers. The website is projected using several projectors. While at the same time the sounds are then sent to new and especially written software in max msp. This software remixes and fuses the sounds. This has been performed live now of several occasions within an exhibition context .
HISTORY OF MY IDEAS. OTHER PROJECTS
‘The central city’ has become an amalgamation of ideas from art, architecture , design and urbanism. Previous works using the motif of urbanism, includes the LP ‘Conundrum’ and linear video works. These works throw you into the land full of precisely constructed sounds creating gloomy atmospheres aimed to provoke listeners vision about urbanistic landscapes. Conundrum from 1987, is a concept LP and video release, about the nature of London’s urban environment. The video is shot in South London and edited in TV studios with extensive post production. The LP uses found sounds mixed together into a heavy industrial landscape. Also from this period are the ‘Artitextures’ built into a video wall. Motifs of urban design de-constructed and repeated in a grid. This is a series of continually edited and reprocessed urban images and forms containing isolated fragments of our city experience. Also of interest are a whole series of large paintings and photo based works. The series "Control" resulted large large black and white oil on canvas images from 1990 - 1992 and the "New Decayed" from 1989. (see www.stanza.co.uk)
The central city draws its influence from these urban works in other media but as an online interactive work it has evolved over several years to its current version and form. The work started in 1996 and the first version went online in 1997. It is now in version four and the website also include other works like soundcities, and inner city which developed out of this.
Technical points. You will need shockwave for some areas and will not be able to listen to my music or experience this work unless you get shockwave. You must have downloaded and installed the shockwave plug-in available from the macromedia website. Thanks to all who have helped on various parts of the site particularly architects, planners and urban dwellers. Thanks also to all who have helped with code when I needed some help. Thanks to all browsers that allow you to see the work, to software companies, and special thanks and shout outs to adam hoyle, director online, atty, danny brown, vicky forrester, dug group, open source, the net and all freeware.
Text 2001. Stanza (c) www.stanza.co.uk
Other texts.
1."However, also featured on the first floor was one of the best new cinema interactive concepts I had seen at the festival: 'The Central City Projects' by the UK artist Stanza. Quite simply, intelligently and elegantly, the Stanza works - including the variations he presented in a special workshop on his concepts and web technologies - re-define the idea of 'recording', editing, and 'projecting' film. He utilizes numerous audio - video sources from worldwide locations, combines them using interesting algorithm editing schemas, and projects them on the world wide web using a standard (IE in the demos) browser. That's streamed media brought into the gallery and it really hit home with the workshop audience. Stanza's work redefines 'cinema' and the 'motion-picture' experience as a programmable browsing event. Find his works on the web, you know the searchable way." Al Razutis
2. "This net art work, made over four years, is an impressive collection of interconnected environments created using generative procedures. The focus is on urban environments, resulting in a vast web site of interconnected idealised spaces and polyphonic neighbourhoods. These environments explode with ideas from art, architecture, design and urbanism. Visuals from live web cams and pre-recorded audio are controlled by the user to make spaces that fragment and are reconstituted in real time. The ever-changing nature of the city is foregrounded in the way that its features flow through the site; streets and buildings seem to change right before our eyes in visual compositions reminiscent of Dziga Vertov’s avant-garde documentary “The Man with the Movie Camera.” Users of The Central City interact with the piece by selecting from multiple menus based on an iconic language. Starting from recognizable imagery that is either pre-recorded or live, viewers can morph images and algorithmically change sounds. Through these processes, ordered and grid-like cities slip into disorder, and surveillance systems are subjected to processes that make them “bleed”, that “torment” them and subject them to “earthquakes”. The sophistication and subtlety of the image generation reflects Stanza’s earlier paintings, and provide a sophisticated, adult alternative to SimCity. The user is encouraged to take a painterly approach to image transmutation, resulting in a subtle and ironic convergence of art and civic issues." Jury Stament Life 6.0 competition in Madrid – Daniel Canogar, Chris Csikszentmihalyi, Machiko Kusahara, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Jane Prophet and Nell Tenhaaf – reviewed 71 artworks that utilise artificial life concepts and techniques.
3. A web within the Web, a network within the network, the on-line oeuvre The Central City is labyrinthine and tentacular, as illustrated, with a good deal of humour, by the proliferation of organic, hive-like forms, part animal, part plant, that begin their voracious growth as soon as we enter the site, then gradually and wholly take over the layout we first got a glimpse of. Nevertheless, before the tentacles cover everything, visitors still have time - especially if they think of pausing the Shockwave animation - to make out a central circle from which cables or roads of some kind lead out to connect to peripheral loci - central city, sonicity, soundcities, photocity, soundscraper, inner city, soundmaps, biocity, ccityv,
Each of the latter constitutes a work within the work, a city within the city, and visitors have full leisure to explore each of them, make discoveries, get lost, and double back, over and over again. Thus, the work within the work that is itself entitled "The Central City" includes no less than thirty subsections: universa, constructor, videotron, megalopotron, univercity, smallworlds, textourama, elevator, jukebox, sounder, maputor, proser, city central, citoxity, fostexity, textus, sounder, randomizer, cubix, matrixity, advercity, fibrinet, advercity, fibrinet, envirus, germix, …"Each has multi soundtracks and multiple choices of pictures, using generative audio and image environments built into 3 d spaces and user controlled 3 d areas."2 In all, more than 200 little films.
Thus, in exploring the nooks and crannies of Central City's subsections, and those of other cities-within-cities - sonicity, biocity, etc. -, one finds collages of images - often re-touched or processed photos or films of "real" cities, like London, Barcelona, etc., and computer-generated abstract drawings - and sounds - sampled in cities or electronically created -, along with pictures of futuristic buildings and improbable skyscrapers. One thinks of the city plans one typically finds in science-fiction. Yet these ones often become philosophical ruminations on the current state of cities, on what they are, what they can be, at the most abstract yet most important level, that is, beyond their status as concrete housing projects, on the relationships and interactions between their settings and their residents.
As its author emphasizes, The Central City is not a "simulation" or representation, it is an "experience"3, as much for its creator - who has been "in progress" with this work since 1997 - as for the visitor, whom the many interactive elements of the work draw into participating in the creative process.
Centralization on the one hand, rampant proliferation on the other: doesn't that sum up in a single image the modus vivendi and modus operandi of today's megalopolis, and all the more so of the Web, the centre of which - like God - is everywhere, its circumference nowhere?" by Anne-Marie Boisvert
Steve Tanza aka Stanza.
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