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3D Soundclash is a project from Warp & Ninja Tune for the Red Bull Music Academy developed by Field.

It is a new generative real-time animation tool, which motion designers Quayola and Thomas Traum used to design and perform soundreactive visuals for the sets of Plaid, Clark, Mira Calix and many more.

The sound-reactive visuals span 5 screens in line with the immersive sound setup. 3D shapes rendered in realtime, animated textures and shaders, and mouse-controlled camera motion allowed for a huge range of styles and endless flights through an abstract universe.

(via creative applications)

Graphology the study of handwriting. This weekly diagram is an exercise to show that handwriting has a unique Character for each of us. Its a beautiful thing to realize in this digital world…

Feedback is an installation made by Hellicar & Lewis in collaboration with Todd Vanderline, curated by Shane Walter of onedotzero for the Roundhouse CircusFest 2010. The installation is a mirror where people can move, dance or performing and it will capture all these movements to create graphics animations of their body movements.

Have I already said I love these mirror installations?. Maybe, but I say it again.

If you are in London before 16th May you can go to The Roundhouse, Chalk Farm Road, London NW1 8EH, UK.

(via creative applications)

Mimosa is an interactive installation from Jason Bruges Studio for Philips for their Lumiblade OLED lights.

The installation has a behavior that mimics responsive plant systems.The piece was inspired by the Mimosa family of plants, which change kinetically to suit their environmental conditions.

(via today and tomorrow)

Music for Real Airports is the last record from The Black Dog and for its release they have made with Human Studio this interactive installation.

According to them:

Airports are important and revealing. They are dystopian microcosms of a possible future society. The necessity of safety requires that they be systems of human control which only elevate the stress of their transient occupiers. Airports’ promise travel, exploration and excitement but endlessly break that promise with their stale, tedious pressure. They are intense and overwhelming environments. Anyone who travels by air will have been puzzled by the way that airports tend to reduce us to a worthless pink blobs of flesh, the human equivalent of the bags on the conveyor belt. Yet despite the frustration of being in that atmosphere, some of the best of human nature is revealed, alongside some of the very worst. Airports make for great “people watching”.

Dedicated to all the people who are stuck in the airports right now by the ashes in the sky.

(via saturn never sleeps).