The Ways Things May Go

[INT]

The Ways Things May Go“ (2012, ongoing)

Generative Art / Computational Art class at UdK Berlin; Hannes Hoelzl, University of the Arts Bremen; Julian Rohrhuber, Music Informatics / IMM Duesseldorf; the Digitale Klasse at Angewandte Kunst, Vienna.

"The Ways Things May Go" is a meditation on invented causality in a networked world. Taking the first cue from Fischli / Weiss' "Der Lauf der Dinge", Alberto de Campo, Hannes Hoelz, Julian Rohuber and students built little causal processes with two or more possible outcomes: For example, a series of falling domino stones could split into two, and thus provoke a random decision in the physical world. Which end of the process is reached determines which causal process is activated next, so a dynamic topology of invented causal relations emerges within the network of available elements. For the CTM.13 Exhibition, more than a dozen modules are carefully assembled into a relatively small space to create the image of a highly complex, sound-producing kinetic machine. "The Ways Things May Go" is a joint project between UdK Berlin (Alberto de Campo), HfK Bremen (Hannes Hoelzl), IMM Düsseldorf (Julian Rohrhuber) and Angewandte Wien (Nico Kirisits, Klaus Filip), and open for future extension.

 

The works in TWTMG shown at ctm 2013 are realized by students of Alberto de Campo / Hannes Hoelzl and guests.

 

List of works:
Alberto de Campo "Hamster-Gestüt"
Constantin Engelmann "Time To Say Goodbye"
Sascha Hanse "Assembly Line"
Katharina Hauke "Kniffel"
Sara & Dominik Hildebrand Marques Lopes "Horses On Fire"
Hannes Hoelzl "SpeakerPendulum"
Philipp Klein "I Dance Alone" 
Stephan Orendi "Quirl"
Monai de Paula Antunes "Poema Solo"
Eva Pedroza "Atmosphere"
Tobias Purfürst "SinPong"
Elisa Storelli "The Millennium Between Sunlight and Rain"
Ljupcho Temelkowski "Music Search"

Alberto de Campo (AT) is an artist, musician, and composer. Since 2009 he holds a professorship at the Berlin University of Arts. His main fields of interest are algorithmic art, just-in-time programming, imrovisational practises, sonification of data, and self-regulated systems. He plays music and works on a variety of projects with Hannes Hoelzl, Julian Rohrhuber, Florian Hecker, Marcus Schmickler, Mario de Vega, Andres Bosshard, and the ensembles powerbooks unplugged, Republic111, Trio Brachiale, and Quiet Noise Quartet.

Hannes Hoelzl (IT) is an artist and educator in sound and media arts. His work spans from site-specific audio installations to live performance in the context of contemporary, jazz and noise music. He has worked and played, amongst others, with Alberto de Campo, hans w. koch, Josef Suchy, Mario de Vega, and the ensembles earweego, powerbooks_unplugged, a qu__tet lectric and the Solar Sound Ensemble. He has taught numerous workshops and masterclasses in Europe, USA and eastern Asia. Currently, he is a guest professor at UdK Berlin and a lecturer at HfK Bremen.

Julian Rohrhuber (DE) is an artist and professor for Music Informatics and Media Theory at the Music Academy in Duesseldorf. His installations, performances, and video projects focus on art as a form of theory.

In That Weird Age

Kunstraum, Fri 25.01.2013, 19:00

Opening of the CTM.13 Exhibition

In That Weird Age

Kunstraum, Mon 28.01.2013, 12:00

CTM.13 exhibition

In That Weird Age

Kunstraum, Tue 29.01.2013, 12:00

CTM.13 exhibition

In That Weird Age

Kunstraum, Wed 30.01.2013, 12:00

CTM.13 Exhibition

In That Weird Age

Kunstraum, Thu 31.01.2013, 12:00

CTM.13 Exhibition

In That Weird Age

Kunstraum, Fri 01.02.2013, 12:00

CTM.13 Exhibition

In That Weird Age

Kunstraum, Sat 02.02.2013, 12:00

CTM.13 Exhibition

In That Weird Age

Kunstraum, Sun 03.02.2013, 12:00

CTM.13 Exhibition