Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Project brief
Project description: Through subtle adjustment to the saturation and duration of the videos, various spaces atmospheres and experiences consisting of different audio and colour effect will be created for the audience to revisit the physical site in a digital experience.
Technical description:
Hardware: Mac computer, projector, Arduino, speaker
Software: MaxMSP
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Project 2 Concept-Visual music
In this project, I want to evoke an environmental atmosphere through Vjing for people to experience.
Visual+Interface
The visual will be a series of short video clips that show different components of natural environment such as forest trees, dogs, birds and playing children, etc. At the beginning, the videos will be stopped seems like still images. Actually, it is an interactive vision that people have capability to control the videos playing or stopping simply by using their shadow of movement. The videos that covered by their shadow will be played and those not covered will keep still. That means the visual is going be still or running at different time and different position depends on the movement of people.
Audio
Meanwhile, audio will play a significant role in this interface, the audio will come through as well and all of them will be short duration. Audio from different videos will be mixed together when videos playing. By such a way, people will be their own DJ as well. They also will find an interesting way to play rhythm of the audios by playing their movement.
The aim I want to achieve is get people involve into this space and playing with the visual music that I create.
Sunday, September 7, 2008
Thursday, August 14, 2008
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Project description
The installation I create is trying to retell the story and get people more interacted with the story. The outcome interface is a combination of images and video that shows the old and present Cuba Street. The video of Cuba Street is set as background for people to walk through. The idea is intended people to know the old vision and story of Cuba Street while experiencing the present.
Design of the hacking mouse is inspired from the Bucket Fountain on the street. I intend to get people more involved in this street when they interact with this installation. If people tip the mouse left and right, the ball in the middle will hit left and right to get forward and backward of the images; if people move the mouse in left and right way, they will move backward and forward on the street.
Old images of Cuba street
Cuba Street, 1855, showing Mr. R. Miller's bakery, locality of Godber's, now Dustin's.
Cuba Street in the 'seventies. Barber's dye
works to the right. The Nag's Head and Wesleyan
Church in the distance, to the left.
Cuba Street, 1900. The Royal Oak is on the extreme foreground to the left. The Nags Head
(Alhambra) by the clock on the right. Te Aro House (with the tower) has been converted into the
Burlington Arcade.
Winder's Corner (now James Smith), 1904, corner of Cuba and Manners Streets, near the locality
of a former residence of Mr. W. B. Rhodes. The Grand Opera House is on the extreme right.
Cuba Street, extended, in 1841, from the water front behind Manners Street, to Ingestre Street (now Vivian). In 1845, a worthy citizen of Wellington plodded his way through fern and ti-tree to Te Aro flat in search of the surveyor's peg, which had been driven in at the corner of Cuba and Dixon Streets. Upon this spot a small house and shop were erected in which a very successful drapery business was carried on by two ladies named Smith. Later, Mr. J. Smith (no relation to the Misses Smith) bought the business, which became long and favourably known as Te Aro House.
There was only one house in Cuba Street in 1850. In 1857 a five-roomed house and garden was offered for sale by Mr. W. H. Rotermund. The garden was stocked with fruit trees of every description, a well of water, and outhouse.
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
Annual Wellingtonista Awards:Best public space
What's going on here? Cuba Mall is not a park at all ... or is it? It has trees for greenery and shade, benches to relax on, a playground for the rugrats, interesting things to see while you walk through, a fountain and public art; in fact, everything that some of us could ever want from a park. Plus, it has shops and cocktail bars, and how can a mere park compete with that?
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
Cuban revolution: Cuba St
Cuban revolution: Cuba St
Sunday Star Times | Friday, 21 September 2007Grant Smithies reveals his love affair with Cuba, the street.
Is it just me, or are most of our urban centres as boring as batshit?
Our inner cities have more cafes and bars than ever, but less personality. Our meeting places are meticulously designed, beautifully lit, carefully decorated, but feel emptier.
Throw a stone on Auckland's Viaduct and you hit a high-end eatery with an astounding wine list, but their ground concrete and stainless steel interiors are curiously devoid of soul.
Gimme some dirt, some character, some individuality! Throw in a few winos, junkies, punks and nutters for local colour, and you have a neighbourhood that's as messy and unpredictable as life itself. In Auckland, you have K' Rd. In Melbourne, you have Fitzroy. In Sydney, it's Newtown. And in Wellington, you have Cuba St.
Packed with agreeable grimy old Edwardian and Italianate buildings and, until recently, resolutely low-rise, Cuba St was named after the New Zealand Company ship, Cuba, which arrived in 1840, carrying some of Wellington's first settlers.
It is my favourite street in the country. It feels like home to me, or perhaps a well-worn old armchair. I've been flopping myself down in Cuba St for over 30 years now, and it has always adjusted itself to my changing shape. When I was young, skinny and broke in the late-70s, I drank cheap beer, chased expensive women and watched punk bands here. Now that I am middle-aged, tubby and decently paid, I eat great tucker here, drink decent wine, buy clothes and books and indulge numerous other grown-up predilections.
I have squandered my rent money on rare soul and jazz LPs in Slow Boat Records, which has been here for 21 years, and where Jeremy and Steve can be relied upon for dubious musical recommendations and wit as dry as desert sand.
I have had my aesthetic sensibilities rewired by the art in Peter McLeavey's gallery, which opened 39 years ago and has since hosted everyone from Colin McCahon to Yvonne Todd in the same pair of peaceful white rooms at 147 Cuba St.
I have stood on the pavement outside Sanjay's Cuba St Fruit Mart, clearing my head of exhaust fumes with the crisp, fresh smell of apples, mangos, coriander and celery that has been wafting from this same doorway, seven days a week, for the past 40 years.
And most of all, if I'm honest, I have gotten drunk here. The street is more densely studded with great bars than any other street in the country. Favourites? Warm as the womb and dim as a cave, The Havana Bar is a tiny cottage-turned-rum bar down a little alley called Wigan St (left off Cuba on to Abel Smith St, then left again). The Good Luck Bar (downstairs at 126 Cuba) is a narrow basement club with Cambodian food, kick-arse cocktails and so much black-lacquered wood you feel like you've stumbled into an opium den.
The proudly kitsch Mighty Mighty bar (upstairs at 104 Cuba) is a long wooden room painted a poisonous Granny Smith green, with gold tablecloths, ancient armchairs, beer by the jug, and a teensy stage where a band might rattle your fillings with surf rock.
But the imbiber's motherlode is surely the Matterhorn (106 Cuba). Founded in 1963 by Swiss immigrants and taken over by the current owners 10 years ago, The "Ho" has won the best bar in New Zealand and best drinks selection awards at the NZ Bar Awards for the past two years, and was included in US magazine Bartender's 20 best bars in the world. Why? Great decor, superb live music, and switched-on staff. Wander off the street with a powerful thirst and an obscure cocktail request ("Blood And Sand, thanks") and the bartender will tell you it got its name from a 1922 movie starring Rudolf Valentino while he mixes it for you.
Such arcane knowledge! Such rare devotion! Such blinding hangovers!
Cuba St is a live-and-let-live sort of a place, a testament to the diversity of human appetites with its dense thickets of strip clubs and tattoo parlours, boutiques and bars, galleries and secondhand stores, and of course, its homeless people, its alkies and junksters, its bright and tangy salad of youth subcultures.
There's always been something slightly other about Cuba St. Talk to the long-term shopkeepers here and they remember a time when people from central Wellington were suspicious of the place, seldom wandering far above that famous slosh-clank-slosh bucket fountain in the then-flash Cuba Mall, which opened in 1969. At that time, upper Cuba St was full of fishmongers and junk shops, and had a strong hippie element. The smell of patchouli oil drifted out of vegetarian cafes, and the smell of strong pot from the upstairs flats above the shops.
Around the same time the flamboyant drag queen Carmen, a former farmer's son from Taumarunui, opened one of the country's most infamous early brothels near here. It was called Carmen's International Coffee Lounge, on Vivian St. Downstairs, you could get coffee and toasted sandwiches. Upstairs, the menu was of a more carnal nature.
There's still a couple of strip clubs and sex shops in the area, and you can still stumble across some al fresco sexual activity if you cut through many of the little car parks behind the shops, but overall, Cuba St is low on glamour and sleaze compared to its 70s heyday.
In many ways, I love Cuba St as much for what it isn't as for what it is. In particular, I love it because it's not Courtenay Place. Turn the corner from Cuba St into Courtenay Place and you encounter the depressing sight of a major metropolitan centre acting like a small town.
Generic bars overflow with pissed teenagers and office workers. Bad nightclubs bash out techno remixes of old pop hits that were terrible the first time around. Takeaway bars churn out appalling tucker, much of which will end up chundered into shop doorways.
Young petrolheads race each up and down the street, and cops walk the beat, keeping a jaded eye on the usual trouble spots.
Cuba St is just a five-minute walk away, yet Courtenay Place's staggering hordes seldom venture there; the place is "too weird". This is good news for Cuba St. There is a concern, though, that as rapidly increasing rents force many of the smaller owner-operated stores out of Cuba St and developers build more apartment blocks and themed bars the character of this very special street may be lost.
In the meantime, Cuba St is a place that embraces diversity and steadfastly refuses to be boring. It's a comfortable, homely little inner-city bunker where eccentrics and individualists of every stripe peacefully coexist, a vibrant urban community that has somehow managed to stave off the kind of ho-hum homogenous development that has sucked the personality out of most of our other major cities.
With its lovely hills and bays, its thriving music scene, its palpable cultural and political energy, Wellington has many other things to recommend it, but without Cuba St, it becomes just another New Zealand city with bountiful assets and no heart. Thank God, then, for Cuba St.
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Concept of Project 1
The mouse will be addressed in the characteristic of Cuba Street. The Bucket Fountain is well known as a landmark of this city. I am thinking that if the form of mouse designed as an element of the street such as the form and tipping action of Bucket Fountain for users to navigate the interface, it will make the re-tell story more interesting.
Intended response from users: to know those un-known stories and explore interesting things of the place through interacting with interactive screen.
Monday, July 21, 2008
The Bucket Fountain on Cuba St.
-The newly opened mall featured a "Water Mobile". Since its construction in 1969, the water feature has been much loved, and has become universally known as 'The Bucket Fountain'.
History
Cuba Street was closed to traffic in 1965 to remove the unused tramlines. During this time a campaign started to keep Cuba Street closed to traffic. In 1969, the Cuba Street pedestrian mall was officially opened by then mayor, Sir Francis Kitts.
Designed by architects and town planning consultants Burren and Keen, the Bucket Fountain was constructed as part of the Cuba Street Pedestrian Mall. Before the fountain was installed in Cuba Mall, an off site mock up was created to test and adjust the tipping buckets.
Cuba Mall has received two facelifts, in 1980 and in 1998, but the Bucket Fountain continues to remain remarkably faithful to its original construction (although regular maintenance is required to keep it operating).
The Bucket Fountain is recognised as one of Wellington quirkiest and most well known landmarks. The Wellington City District Plan includes recommendations on how best to develop Cuba Mall. Within these recommendations the plan states, The much maligned/much enjoyed sugar-scoop bucket fountain should resume pride of place in the Mall.
In November 2003, the Bucket Fountain was removed from Cuba Mall so that it could be painted and repaired in time for the world premiere of The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King. The revamped fountain is brighter and splashier than ever!
Links:
The opening
How it works
Before and after
Sunday, July 20, 2008
Research of Cuba Street
The most fascinating mix of people in the country
The Bucket Fountain
The Bucket Fountain is recognised as one of Wellington's quirkiest and most well known landmarks.
Wellington's Cuba Street is pedestrian-only from Manners Mall to Ghuznee Street, where it is called Cuba Mall. With its retailers ranging from leading retailers like Farmers and Whitcoulls through to R18 shops and tattoo artists, its numerous cafes and bars, clothing, book and record shops draw people from all around the region for what only Wellington's Cuba can offer.
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Re-telling tales
After visiting the "Telling tales" exhibition at the Museum of Wellington, I have chosen one of the stories that I am intersted in. The srory comes from 1969 and it tells the story about Cuba street which is a popular shopping area. Starting to think about how to re-tell this story by using new form of input.
"The revenge of the pedestrian"
When Wellington's Cuba Mall opened in 1969 it was the first New Zealand street to be transformed by the removed of traffic.
Cuba street had once been a popular shopping area, but after World War II(1939-45), spreading suburbia drew people away from the central city. In 1965, the street suffered a further blow which the withdrawl of the tram service. However, while the street was closed to remove the tram tracks, retailers soon noticed that the lack of traffic was an attraction. Sales increased and letters to newspapers showed the public like the temporary pedestrian mall. The cuba street Businessmen's Association presented a petition signed by more than 5000 people to the Wellington City Council requesting that the mall become permanent. The city council agreed.
Since then the mall has been revamped twice. The prominent signs that marked each end have been removed, but the mall's most controresial feature, the Bucket Fountain, has survived, Critics detest the icon, but intrigued tourists and children love it.