Monday, December 20, 2010

specs + info

High end date projector: http://www.projectorcentral.com/NEC-NP4100.htm
NEC data projector hire: http://www.rentalstogo.com.au/office-equipment-rental-office-equipment-hire-item.php?itemid=354
      http://www.rentalstogo.com.au/contact-us.php

Will the projector fit the space: http://www.projectorcentral.com/projection-calculator-pro.cfm
contacted NEC with question about specs for projector for show:
http://www.nec.com.au/About/Contact/Contact-Us.html


NEC NP4100 Projector Specifications
 
Street Price (USD) : $4,799
MSRP (USD) : $6,499
Brightness (Lumens) : 6200 ANSI
Eco-Mode (Lumens): 5270 ANSI
Contrast (Full On/Off) : 2100:1
Variable Iris:      **
Audible Noise: 38.0 dB
Eco-Mode: 34.0 dB
Weight: 17.5 kg
Size (cm) (HxWxD) : 21 x 50 x 39
Optional Lenses:
  NEC NP06FL Fixed Lens
  NEC NP07ZL Zoom Lens
  NEC NP08ZL Zoom Lens
  NEC NP09ZL Zoom Lens
  NEC NP10ZL Zoom Lens
Digital Zoom:      **
Digital Keystone: Horz & Vert
Lens Shift: Horz & Vert
Warranty: 3 Years
Performance:  
H-Sync Range: 15.0 - 90.0kHz
V-Sync Range: 50 - 85Hz
Compatibility:
HDTV: 720p, 1080i, 1080p/60
575i, 575p
EDTV/480p: Yes
SDTV/480i: Yes
Component Video: Yes
Video: Yes
Digital Input: DVI-D (HDCP)
Computers: Yes
Display: Type:
2 cm DLP (1)
Color Wheel Segs: 6
Color Wheel Speed:      **
Native: 1024x768 Pixels
Maximum: 1600x1200 Pixels
Aspect Ratio: 4:3 (XGA)
Light Source: Type:
280W     **
Life: 2000 hours
Eco-Mode Life: 3000 hours
Quantity: 2
Speakers: 3.0W+ 3.0W
Max Power: 710W
Voltage:      **
FCC Class: B
Special: RS232 Port
USB Port
Wired Networking
Status: Shipping
First Ship: Aug 2009
     ** this item is either not applicable, unpublished, or unknown
Comments: 4- and 6-segment color wheels for maximum brightness and appropriate color reproduction
The NEC NP4100 is manufactured by NEC.  

  

craig walsh


Digital Odessey


http://www.digitalodyssey.com.au/#/Home/North%20Bombo%20Headland%20quarry%20projections%20documentation

10 Days on the Island
http://tendaysontheisland.com/_webapp_727955/Craig_Walsh__Digital_Odyssey

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

contested sights




from : Total Recall
Contested depictions of the Romantic Tradition

Professor Peter James Smith
A second instance of take-up of The Sublime by the general public involves Australian national identity. On a recent trip to the "Red Centre of Australia", to Uluru, the spiritual, sacred and nationalistic heart of Australia, I experienced the traffic jams at this famous rock as thousands of people arrived by car to view the sunset. It is a long journey to reach Uluru, from any corner of the country. On any given day, at sunset, hundreds of cars line up as if in the parking lot of a shrine, the occupants spilling out into deck chairs and vantage points to watch a religious spectacle of fading light across the rock face. Since this massive rock is 348m in height, it remains sunlit even after the sun has dropped below the horizon, almost into the period of astronomical twilight. The occasion is quiet and solemn. The parking lot holds vehicles with Australian flags draped across their windows. Is this is a different sense of nationalistic identity from Neudecker's apparent undercutting of German Romantic traditions? There is an air of serious homage at Uluru as people seek a transcendent and authentic viewing experience. Although this is a sacred place for the Pitjantjatjara Aboriginal people, and is protected by their custody, it would seem to represent the spiritual heart of all Australians. Unlike Neudecker's mountains, it is a place of pilgrimage, where we are drawn to a completely memorable and sublime experience.

Conclusion
In the late postmodern period of our time, post-9/11, The Sublime is alive and well. This paper gives contemporary instances to suggest that the interpretation of the Romantic Tradition is heavily contested. I have argued that the currency of the Romantic Tradition has substance beyond a shallow focus on nostalgia.
If, in her diorama manufacture, Neudecker is singing the German tradition of Romanticism and at the same time being wary of German nationalism and history, then the response must be that her work is received on a whole world scale. It is received in far-flung places such as Australia and New Zealand, where a reading may be informed by post-colonialism. In the same places, other readings may be informed by the commercial imperatives of advertising and the clarity of communication that this requires. Still in Australasia, readings of the romantic tradition are through both an Aboriginal and a European filter. For example, the local lessons from famous Europeans such as Mattias Zurbriggen are etched with naming rites onto the slopes of Aoraki Mt Cook in New Zealand: the Zurbriggen summit route on Aoraki Mt Cook is recallable indeed to those who have experienced it.
I have argued that the Contemporary Sublime is not a let-down, pause, interruption, nor interrogation of banality: it is still a territory of uplift that feeds the positive drivers of the human psyche. It is the line-up of cars at the Uluru sunset. It is the Tasmanian wilderness photograph. The positive psyche reveals itself in film, contemporary art, documentary photography, mountaineering, advertising, and in the 3D digital realm. Just as David Caspar Friedrich foregrounded human figures and human motifs in his vast sublime landscapes, so scale still implies majesty and is conveyed with helicopters on icebergs, ships in bottles, falcons in clifftop sunsets, carparks at Uluru, and battle stations in digital warcraft. As a contemporary landscape artist, I question how to capture the engagement that the public has with sunset at Uluru. I can identify a need to paint that which draws us all to the spiritual heart of this place, but the image of Uluru remains profoundly local in a profoundly international contemporary art market. Even so, contemporary creative practitioners are indeed working with this material: the viewer is invited to reconnect with the past, to satisfy a yearning, or a longing for something better in the future, and to take action now. Clarity of recollection ascribes importance to some events over others, and helps guide us in what we keep. At best, it affords the stubbornness of a residual lift that takes your breath away.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 Australia License

http://secondnature.rmit.edu.au/index.php/2ndnature/article/viewArticle/8/10

Sunday, December 5, 2010

epiphany



Time, Synchronicity and Evolution
F. David Peat
                                http://www.fdavidpeat.com/bibliography/essays/saur.htm
It is the condition of life in a modern, industrial world that we so often experience a sense of isolation and dislocation from the natural world and those around us....


Yet there are also moments in the life of each one of us when we touch what the Irish writer, James Joyce, termed an epiphany, so that "the soul of the commonest object.... seems to us radiant"...

This experience of epiphany is the essential feature of what the psychologist Carl Jung termed a synchronicity. In turn, synchronicities reveal the larger patterns of the cosmos, including those movements of growth, realization and renewal we call evolution. ...

A sense of numiniousness meaning is the key to recognizing the occurrence of a synchronicity. ...

Synchronicities provide us with into the inner structures of both nature and mind but with this proviso - synchronicities do not operate in linear, didactic ways but through metaphor, image and allusion. ...

It opens the door to the suggestion that one may be able to participate, in a direct way, with the inner workings of matter. Or suggests the possibility for the individual, and society as a whole, to enter into a cooperative relationship with the movements of nature and the cosmos. ...

The use of a linear time as the ultimate arbiter of progress is an aberration within the world's cultures. Creativity lies outside time. It embraces both the emergence of new, the unconditioned, and the renewal of the familiar ...

Modern science pictures life in terms of stable eco-systems, and eco-systems interacting through patterns of cooperation and self-organization. In this sense it is the responsibility of each individual to engage and renew their subtle, yet vital connections with the whole. ...

Synchronicities are connections between the internal patterns of the organism and its environment. They can occur both as acts of renewal and in order to catalyze necessary change, or as parts of a person's creativity. ...

Times of crisis occur in the life of an individual, and of a society or species. When old forms of behavior are insufficient to meet a new challenge, the boundaries between inner and outer, individual and collective consciousness, external pattern and internal behavior, dissolve. This may lead to a period of numinous dreaming, collective social fantasies and desires, and great artistic expression - and finally, a sudden surge within "the spirit of the age". ...