Glocal at Surrey’s Fusion Festival!

Writing by Jeremy on Friday, 1 of August , 2008 at 7:07 pm

This screenshot from Glocal’s Motion Sequence Application (MSA) is an anonymous portrait of a tree in Holland Park – one of the many trees that were being showcased at Surrey’s Fusion Festival!

 

 Hello Glocal Blog Readers!

This Summer season has become an extremely prolific one for the info-crew at Glocal… 

In addition to the Canada Day festivities, the Glocal project was also represented by the Fusion Festival in Surrey (July 19-20, 2008), another Cultural Capitals of Canada initiative.

Computers in the tent were used to allow visitors to get creative with a web-cam. An additional computer provided access to the glocal website and blog so that visitors could see first hand how to download the software applications and contribute to the project.

Here are some more pictures from this culturally diverse summer blockbuster event…

 

Two ladies from a neighboring sponsor booth were quite keen to try out Glocal’s software applications.  Our applications were so enchanting, we lured many people working at other booths to see what Glocal was up to.  Every one we talked with was very impressed that our software applications were free for download.

 

One of those participants happened to be one of our immediate neighbors as she worked at the Chase booth next door.  You can see her co-workers in the background.  Just about every nearby participant decided to take their lunch break at our booth. 

 

Here is our volunteer Byron Peters launching our special Balloon Cam camera-kit. The Balloon Cam is made of 60 balloons and is lifting up a tiny digital video camera.  Byron has this special configuration on a leash so it cannot go far.  This Balloon Cam floated all across Holland Park and truly showed the demographic diversity of the Festival’s audience…from above!

 

 

Our summer student Erica Lapadat-Janzen (wearing the pink blouse) explains the Glocal project to some booth attendees while Byron Peters sets up his Balloon Cam for a re-launch.

 

 The re-launched Balloon Cam floats alongside the sky-train  bridge from Surrey Central to King George Station.

 

 

 Here, a family is enjoying learning more about the Glocal project and playing with our Motion Sequence Application on the main presentation monitor.  Yes, that little girl has her eyes closed but that was because she blinked.  It had nothing to do with our application (honest!).

 

 

Ready! Aim! Fire!  The boy in this family of booth participants treats our applications as if it were some sort of video game. This might be due to the success of our applications being as fun and engaging as any commercial entertainment system.  If it was not for the reflective glare off the screen, we would show you what we mean.

We would have had 10 times the amount of expected booth traffic if it was not for the fact that our booth was behind this fire-track for most of Saturday afternoon…sigh!  Audience members made diagonal bee-lines between main stages without seeing our booth along the way… double sigh!  Having said that, just about everyone who managed to find out hidden booth, was very enthusiastic about the project and took home our promotional handbill.

This particular festival had the largest Police presence per-capita that we had ever seen!  As you can see from the above picture, the Police had their own mobile prison-sized paddywagon (the one next to the white van)! We would have also taken a photo of the Police crew themselves since they had their own massive BBQ to the left of this wagon (behind our monitor) but we were too afraid to point anything at them…even a harmless camera!

 

This is what happens to a casual viewer after they have played with our Software Applications…heheheh!  Just kidding.  At least our Applications do not stunt your growth after prolonged usage.  There were many stilt-walkers going for a casual stroll throughout Holland Park for this ceremonious occasion.

You might need to zoom in to see the details of this photo but there were quite a few people doing historical re-enactments that were depicting classic Surrey events. We were quite amazed how interactive their monologues were and they seemed to remain immersed in their role-playing act for quite some time…now, imagine the interactive possibilities if  Glocal also wore period-era attire!  

 

[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]

Leave a comment

Category: Exhibition, Hardware, Local, Toolkits, Uncategorized

No Comments

No comments yet.

Leave a comment

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

About The Glocal Project

Glocal (global + local) is an immense, collaborative and multifaceted digital art project that examines the making, sharing and exhibiting of images in the 21st century. Working out of the Surrey Art Gallery’s TechLab, the artists behind Glocal pose questions about the nature of photography at this point in our history: What is a photograph? What is a camera? What is a photographer?


-read more-

How to Contribute

1. Download our software, hardware, and conceptual toolkits by clicking on the links below or by visiting our toolkits page.


2. Create your own images.


3. Share your work! Upload your images to Flickr - and tag them with 'glocalproject'. Your images will automatically be included in the project!