Shawnee Main Street Expedition
The following images are an early iteration of exhibition of my time travelling body of work.
The video seen on the screen and / or in the head mounted display unit is the following:
Shawnee Main Street Expedition from Jeff Lovett on Vimeo.
The following video is objective documentation of the Shawnee Main Street Expedition:
Shawnee Main street Expedition Documentation from Jeff Lovett on Vimeo.
have a seat by yourself
have a seat by yourself: 2009
close the door
behind you
have a seat
by yourself
take your time
have a seat by your self is an installation consisting of four small video cameras, four projectors a chair and two modeling lights.
Each of the four cameras is positioned off the four corners of the chair and are focused on a single point above the chair. The projectors each receive the live video feed from one camera which are projected on one another creating a single image with four views.
Paul Nutter on New Straitsville Ohio
Local resident, writer and historian Paul Nutter discusses the history of New Straitsville.
Paul Nutter on New Straitsville Ohio from Jeff Lovett on Vimeo.
A Plastic River
Video of the log jam in the Hocking River that is collecting all the garbage that normally floats down the 20 something miles to the Ohio not quite 800 miles later it merges into the Mississippi River only 950 miles from it's new home in the Gulf of Mexico and the greater Ocean System.
Plastic River from Jeff Lovett on Vimeo.
APOV Interview with Julie Cruse

I think a lot of what I was experiencing or maybe even paying attention to was… I was noticing moments when I felt power or lack thereof and how that was being affected by the interface. I kept noticing that there was a conflict for me between how learned a specific way of interfacing through my body and…
I’m very much trained in dance. I anchor myself and orient myself through what I’m sensing. Then that sensing generally becomes an impulse that I can guide and direct. Having something limit that, which is not what I think this device was intended to do, but it sort of, it did.. it did. You know, it opened up some sorts of exploration and closed off others. I kept feeling that tension between wanting to do what I wanted to do and somehow being inhibited or in some ways how the inhibition would enable other things.
I was experiencing a lot of dealing with that conflict and deciding which impulses to override and how that would… hmmm it’s difficult to articulate.
Yeah.
…and how overriding some impulses would then affect the next choice that was made. There was a series of feedback that was happening that, depending on my level of discomfort in a moment, with whatever consequences that I was dealing with as a result of my choice. I would then feel moved in another direction. So it was interesting just balancing. Yeah.
Tell me about how you think it dealt with your experience in movement and how you battled between using your body in a traditional way, that you’re comfortable with and then dealing with the sight.
I felt responsible for the visual environment and sometimes I needed the visual environment, but more often than not, I ended leaning toward one or the other. I would either be moving and ignoring the images, just having them be a backdrop so that I could see what it was like to move in this way with a suit on. Or I would not really be paying attention to myself, my projected image of myself visually.
I wouldn’t be paying attention to how I’m choreographing my body because I would be choreographing images. I kept trying to bridge those two things. How I was seeing and how I was seeing myself… using my body to see. It was really difficult for me to find a way to bridge that and that’s the area where I feel compelled to work. To find a way that makes both of those things interesting or attended to in a way.
APOV Interview with Pelham Johnston
My name is Pelham Johnston, I’m from Columbus Ohio. I go to Ohio State University for Art and Technology. I am a senior hopefully graduating soon and I’m mostly interested in digital video like experimental digital video, robotics sculpture as well as sound environments, noise and working with sound design.
Tell me about that project that you were just working on.
The most recent project I made is called Synesthete and it explores the neurological condition synesthesia in which your brain interprets your senses as other senses, so you can hear colors or you can see sound just to give a few examples. They can be cris-crossed in a bunch of different ways. My piece explores visual to sound synesthesia. I basically use two solar panels and some circuitry to control the pitch and amplify the signal from the solar cells to amplify and create sound from a TV screen. So the sound that you hear directly corresponds to what you see on the TV and it does it live. Then I have another box that use a microphone and an amplifier to convert the sound back into a video signal that sends it into a second TV. It’s all setup across four podiums in a line so you can see live a direct correlation between the four objects.
Go ahead and tell me what interests you about my project and what you experienced today.
What I saw today was basically exactly what I’d hoped to see. I was interested for a while in developing a system to put cameras on the limbs to do a dance performance and then project the images live so you could see the perspective of your limbs and Julie told me about you and you developed a system. I saw the video and it was awesome, it was exactly what I had in mind. So what I’d like to do then is use the video signal or not even necessarily video, but any signal coming from the limbs and convert that into sound live. So the dancer can act as an instrument and control various aspects of the live sound tracking based on their movements. Then find a way to have all of those things meet and be harmonious, you know what determines what, what’s the cause and effect and let the audience see the direct relationship that’s occurring.
Just talk about your actual experience.
Today, wearing the thing, it was an augmented visual reality. I was seeing and I had to learn a new way to move based on the input and it was strange at first but I got the hang of it relatively quickly. What do you want me to describe exactly?
Yeah, describe… Tell me about your experience instead of an analysis of your experience, just, what it was like.
I put on the headset and it was just strange. It was kind of like what I expected but it was more disorienting than I thought. You know. I really liked watching the footage of riding the bike. I thought there was a really nice relationship between… because all the limbs had a task. I thought there was a nice smooth motion of my feet. The fact that the pedals were opposite, you had this like locked in opposing nice smooth motion, and I thought that really utilized it well, the system.
There was a process of experimentation that you went through, movement. You were doing some pushups and things, you lost a camera there, but how did that experience work out?
I definitely reverted back to… I don’t know if I would have done it naturally or… Seeing Julie do it and you kind of talking about it. I was able to use one of my arms as a reference and then move with my other one. But I also found it relatively comfortable to walk around just with my arms free and doing what they’re doing because I had a good enough sense of the environment I think, so I could figure it out, but it took a second. I tried to play around with it a little bit and visually do some interesting things with my movement.
What do you think about the difference between using it as a way to document action or using it as a way to experience action? Because you experimented with both of those, you took it (the goggles) off when you were riding the bike and just recorded it without watching.
Yeah, that was nice because there’s a certain amount of danger of course. I wasn’t comfortable enough yet and I don’t know if I ever could be with just the system as it was with riding and just looking through the augmented version of reality.
How do you feel about recording it vs. experiencing it?
I really like the live experience of it. I had no idea that that’s what you were coming with. I thought that it was, maybe I missed it when I was watching the video, I didn’t know that it was going to be a live feed into your eyes of what you are seeing from the cameras. I thought it was… you record it and you move around or you feed it live and you can view it somewhere else. But to have the rest of the world cut off… I thought it was really interesting and it was nice to let my brain develop this new path way and figure out how to work with it… compromise with it, like what I could do or the restrictions on what I could and couldn’t do. I definitely slowed down. I was moving at a different speed, a more delicate speed because of the comfort level, but I feel like if I had more time I could get a lot more comfortable with it and my abilities would increase.
What direction do you see the project going?
My heart and mind have been set on using it for a dance piece and having this live streaming footage for the audience, or for anyone else to experience what the limbs are experiencing. To really suggest the vocabulary of each limb in space, to know what it’s doing. And then, of course, converting those signals into sound and having it all come together as a whole in this cohesive work… a performance
Animation Inspiration Art114 Sp09
Stop Motion Animation:
Flip Book Animation
http://mattshlian.com/video%20frame1.html?user=mattshlian(EmptyReference!)
Jan Svanmkajer: Tma Svetlo Tma (Lightness Darkness Lightness)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LuBwXfg3Mr4
Coraline
Rex the Dog
http://www.creativereview.a.uk/crblog/great-new-videos-8/
Cadbury Egg Suicide
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDjc_jgMsZc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HLBVMfYKaNc&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_TldVbUWPUQ&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eqrgr4G-xTc&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=quu4DiE4uz4&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NXZCp6aAp58&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8s1OCghguU&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kYmeI0ET69s&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GS5e7tDJ18k&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKJ6TrAdzIg&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pgCa6nS-Os4&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYGdyb_aENM&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SwoDNwKBv7U&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F5SRcxAI9ek&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xrNAugEvPV0&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zm4A7iio0G4&feature=related
Cadbury Twisted
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=06PXIPFrgeg&feature=related
Ten Thousand Pictures of you:
Drawn Animation
Cellphone Caprice
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQM3lRPcZs0
Oneironaut
Graphic Animation
Bars and Tones:
http://vimeo.com/2537115?pg=embed&sec=
Song by: http://www.penguincafe.com/origins.htm
Symbol Man:
Money by NASA
http://www.creativereview.a.uk/crblog/great-new-videos-8/
Little Red Riding Hood
http://vimeo.com/3514904?pg=embed&sec=&hd=1
History of the Internet:
http://vimeo.com/2696386?pg=embed&sec=
Digitally Augmented Video
Ratatat Predator Video
http://www.theimagist.com/taxonomy/term/2487
Kanye West Video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYR2Z1MDyiI
Leave by VV Brown
http://www.creativereview.a.uk/crblog/great-new-videos-8/
3D Mapping Video Projection
http://laughingsquid.com/3d-mapping-video-projections-by-easyweb/
Puma Lift Commercial: this is is very those
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TM8DA830xng
Cadbury Egg Commerical:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TVblWq3tDwY
Machinima
Red Vs. Blue
-First Episode: http://rvb.roosterteeth.com/archive/?sid=rvb&season=1
-Relocated: http://rvb.roosterteeth.com/archive/?id=569
APOV Video
This is the documentation of the first "public" testing of the APOV (adjustable point of view) harness. The wearer is John Sanders and the crowd is the New Media Graduate class at Ohio University with professor David Colagiovanni The left portion of the video is all that John was able to see during the experience. The image on the right is a video I recorded during John's experience. The two were synced up and composited in Final Cut Pro.
APOV Camera Test
Today I received my AIPTEK A-HD camcorder which will record from a video input. This is the first video I've been able to record with my board cameras.
APOV Harness
The Adjustable Point Of View (APOV) Harness is the base structure for four small (1.25" x 1.25" x .5") board cameras to be positioned on and around the body in various configurations. The images from these cameras are viewed through a Head Mounted Display (HMD) unit. The APOV Harness and HMD combination are the foundation for an exploration into the mind's ability to adapt to experience from a different and multiple points of view.
The Slide show below reperesents the prototyping, patterning and fabrication of the primary harness that holds the Quad Processer and Battery. At a future date, the HMD conversion box and the portable recording device will be mounted to the primary harness as well.
