RRTRN: Difference between revisions
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Bio=Joseph Knierzinger[AT] is artist and dilettantish engineer. His artistic output is between installation, intervention, wearable instruments and performances. In his work he explores obsolete media and the implementation of it into our here and now, as well as the mechanisation of the non-sense. Currently he manages his presence between Rotterdam and Vienna. | Bio=Joseph Knierzinger[AT] is artist and dilettantish engineer. His artistic output is between installation, intervention, wearable instruments and performances. In his work he explores obsolete media and the implementation of it into our here and now, as well as the mechanisation of the non-sense. Currently he manages his presence between Rotterdam and Vienna. | ||
|Description=The real-reel-to-reel-network(RRTRN) is a media archaeological platform that investigat'''es a''' fictional, part electronic, part acoustic and part mechanical network. Term'''inals comprising''' a modified reel-to-reel tape deck and a computational work-station are connected in one gigantic tape loop. Every message that a user of the terminal writes, will be modulated into sound, recorded on the tape and sent(=rolled) to the other terminals. There the received audio signal will be demodulated back into the message. RRTRN deals with the materialisation of networks and reveals hidden technological layers '''and deals''' with contingency in the development of technology by considering media of the past and imagining different uses. | |Description=The real-reel-to-reel-network(RRTRN) is a media archaeological platform that investigat'''es a''' fictional, part electronic, part acoustic and part mechanical network. Term'''inals comprising''' a modified reel-to-reel tape deck and a computational work-station are connected in one gigantic tape loop. Every message that a user of the terminal writes, will be modulated into sound, recorded on the tape and sent(=rolled) to the other terminals. There the received audio signal will be demodulated back into the message. RRTRN deals with the materialisation of networks and reveals hidden technological layers '''and deals''' with contingency in the development of technology by considering media of the past and imagining different uses. | ||
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Revision as of 12:47, 20 May 2015
RRTRN | |
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Creator | Joseph Knierzinger |
Year | 2015 |
Bio | Joseph Knierzinger[AT] is artist and dilettantish engineer. His artistic output is between installation, intervention, wearable instruments and performances. In his work he explores obsolete media and the implementation of it into our here and now, as well as the mechanisation of the non-sense. Currently he manages his presence between Rotterdam and Vienna. |
Website | http://joak.nospace.at |
The real-reel-to-reel-network(RRTRN) is a media archaeological platform that investigates into a fictional, part electronic, part acoustic and part mechanical network. Terminals consists of a modified reel-to-reel tape deck and a computational work-station are connected in one gigantic tape loop. Every message that a user on the terminal writes, will be modulated into sound, recorded on the tape and sent(=rolled) to the other terminals. There the received audio signal will be demodulated back into the message. RRTRN deals with the materialisation of networks and reveals hidden technological layers and it deals with contingency in the development of technology by considering media of the past and imagining different uses.
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Steve's light edit 20 May'
Bio=Joseph Knierzinger[AT] is artist and dilettantish engineer. His artistic output is between installation, intervention, wearable instruments and performances. In his work he explores obsolete media and the implementation of it into our here and now, as well as the mechanisation of the non-sense. Currently he manages his presence between Rotterdam and Vienna.
|Description=The real-reel-to-reel-network(RRTRN) is a media archaeological platform that investigates a fictional, part electronic, part acoustic and part mechanical network. Terminals comprising a modified reel-to-reel tape deck and a computational work-station are connected in one gigantic tape loop. Every message that a user of the terminal writes, will be modulated into sound, recorded on the tape and sent(=rolled) to the other terminals. There the received audio signal will be demodulated back into the message. RRTRN deals with the materialisation of networks and reveals hidden technological layers and deals with contingency in the development of technology by considering media of the past and imagining different uses.
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