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  1. Colour Yourself Inspired

    Color Yourself Inspired™ is a generative artwork that creates unpredictable poetic phrases from Benjamin Moore’s paint color database; it is an interdisciplinary exploration of sound, color and language. An online collection of over 1000 unique color names are poetically sequenced using phonetic analysis and parts of speech analysis in a computer program designed by the artists. Instead of labeling color with language as the marketing team has done in the original database, Color Yourself Inspired (a marketing slogan from the Benjamin Moore website) inverts this relationship and uses language to generate visual information. (Source: http://thenewriver.us/color-yourself-inspired/)

    Nikol Hejlickova - 22.09.2016 - 15:38

  2. Radikal Karaoke

    Radical Karaoke consiste en un dispositivo online cuya finalidad es permitir que cualquier usuario pueda enunciar discursos políticos.
    La política, a nivel mundial, se dedica hoy casi exclusivamente a la retórica. Sus discursos se estructuran en base a fórmulas enfáticas y demagógicas, sin contenidos específicos. Su función principal parece ser la de crear clichés lingüísticos cuya única meta, al igual que los virus, es repetirse a sí mismos. El obligado uso del teleprompter en los discursos políticos remite, además, al fenómeno del ventrilocuismo y el karaoke.

    Sondre Skollevoll - 22.09.2016 - 15:45

  3. Untrace

    Détrace est un court récit interactif sur le thème de la trace.

    Un personnage se penche à la fois sur les traces dont il/elle dispose dans la vie et sur celles qu’il/elle laisse.

    Le récit est l’occasion d’un jeu sur les traces numériques laissées par le lecteur/la lectrice,
    volontairement et involontairement, ainsi que sur celles laissées par les autres lecteurs/lectrices.

    Source: http://i-trace.fr/detrace/

    Susanne Dahl - 13.10.2016 - 15:24

  4. Strathroy Stories

    “Strathroy Stories” is an immersive, spatialized sound piece that explores space and place through a series of adolescent and teenage memories of people, places, and events. This work explores the notion of memory as a dynamic, malleable construct that falls somewhere between archival and living narrative. Guided by the memories of a small town boy, the listener will explore sites and events ranging from the prosaic; swimming at the town pool and hanging out at the arcade, to the aberrant; Turkey Festival murder and an ice fishing party gone wrong. Created as a locative listening piece, the end user is encouraged to listen, as they would a music playlist, while they walk to work, ride transit, clean the house, or walk the hedgehog. This piece is intended to enable a hybrid listening experience where the listener will be at times unable to distinguish real from virtual, thus creating a sort of Schizophonic low-tech AR experience.

    Eirik Tveit - 18.10.2016 - 14:33

  5. ELC3 Bot

    This bot is a tool designed to help readers explore the Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 3. Created with Cheap Bots, Done Quick!, a free bot hosting service powered by Tracery, an intuitive JavaScript library developed by Kate Compton, PhD. The bot currently tweets a suggested work from the ELC3 every 3 hours, linking to the work and adding the #ELC3 hashtag. Its Twitter account also compiles two lists of bots: a complete list of its 11 bots and one without Real Human Praise, which posts too frequently to allow readers to appreciate the other bots. Future development of this bot will include random suggestions based on ELC3 metadata, such as keywords, language, location, year, and we may even add some interactivity so it can respond to queries. In the meantime, follow this bot to receive suggestions of works to explore in the ELC3.

    Eirik Tveit - 18.10.2016 - 14:45

  6. Automation | 自動化

    Inspired by the endlessly repeated automated announcements in Tokyo train and subway stations, this is a generative poem called "自動化" in its Japanese version, and "Automation" in English.

    It uses the syntax of the familiar announcement "1番線ドアが閉まります。ご注意ください。" ("The doors on platform 1 are closing. Please be careful"). Every 8 seconds, a script generates a new line by randomly selecting the platform number, subject, verb, and exhortation from a preset list. It displays the result on the screen and then generates a new line. Browsers capable of speech synthesis will also read the text aloud in either English or Japanese.
    (Source: Author's statement, ELC vol. 3)

    Erik Aasen - 18.10.2016 - 15:02

  7. Hey Gorgeous

    "Hey Gorgeous" by Darius Kazemi is one, in a great number of remixes of the generative work "Taroko Gorge" by Scott Monfort. How Darius Kazemi remixes Monfort's work, is by changing the textstrings in the code, thereby changing the generated text which moves up the screen. "Hey Gorgeous" pictures a scene in a nightclub, with focus on men and boys, in relation with women, drugs, dancing etc.

    Guro Prestegard - 18.10.2016 - 15:22

  8. Oko na Donbas

    Oko na Donbas

    Guro Prestegard - 18.10.2016 - 15:58

  9. Sonic Immersions and Sculptures

    Artist Statement:

    “Strathroy Stories” is an immersive, spatialized sound piece that explores space and place
    through a series of adolescent and teenage memories of people, places, and events.
    This work explores the notion of memory as a dynamic, malleable construct that falls somewhere between archival and living narrative.
    Guided by the memories of a small town boy, the listener will explore sites and events ranging from the prosaic; swimming at the town pool and hanging out at the arcade, to the aberrant;
    Turkey Festival murder and an ice fishing party gone wrong. Created as a locative listening piece, the end user is encouraged to listen, as they would a music playlist, while they walk to work, ride transit, clean the house, or walk the hedgehog.
    This piece is intended to enable a hybrid listening experience where the listener will be at times unable to distinguish real from virtual, thus creating a sort of Schizophonic low-tech AR experience.

    (Source: http://elo2016.com/tony-vieira/)

    Susanne Dahl - 18.10.2016 - 17:19

  10. Novelling

    Novelling is a digital novel from 2016 by Will Luers, Hazel Smith and Roger Dean and it is about fiction itself, and how we read and write it. The authors' aim is to analyze and combine the performances of reading-fiction and writing-fiction in order to create a "common system" in which the two activities work together. To make it possible, they employed three key-elements, as text, video and sound. Novelling has been written on a website using the languages of HTML5 and JavaScript and it is available on its website (novelling.newbinarypress.com). The authors created several interfaces which last 30 seconds - then, new interfaces will appear. Anyways, the user may change it whenever he/she wants just clicking on the screen. After 6 minutes, the novel restarts allowing the reader to experience a new reading direction.

    Nikol Hejlickova - 19.10.2016 - 17:17

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