Tag: Tshimologong Precinct

  • Meet the Artists of the 2018 Trans-continental Fak’ugesi African Digital Residency

    Meet the Artists of the 2018 Trans-continental Fak’ugesi African Digital Residency

    The Fak’ugesi Festival is currently underway with their fifth and most expansive artist’s residency to date running from the 8 August until the 9 September 2018, working towards a group exhibition that will take place from the 4th September. The creative residency that was first established in 2014, acts to support creative innovators and young digital creatives. This year’s residency sees artists and technologists from various parts of the world come together in the spirit of technological innovation and digital creativity. Working in one space the shared idea is to learn from one another and to shape thought provoking work in response to this year’s festival theme of Afro Source Code. Supporting regional connection and networks in the digital arts, the residency includes artists from Cairo, Geneva, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Mumbai and Bangalore. Tapping into the patterns, fractals and algorithms of their endemic cultures, each artist will “…explore the role that vernacular and traditional cultures have in digital culture and practices” states Fak’ugesi Director Dr Tegan Bristow.

    As collaborative partners, Fak’ugesi and Pro Helvetia are extending this year’s residency to include North Africa, Switzerland, South Asia – in extension of what is usually an annual SADC focus. The 2018 programme by Pro Helvetia Johannesburg is in celebration of the anniversaries of their offices in Johannesburg, Cairo and New Delhi. This year’s residents are hosted by Tshimologong Precinct’s cutting-edge Maker Space as well as the Wits School of Arts Point of Order Gallery.

    I had an interview with each resident about their practice, the residency as well as the work that they are developing for the coming exhibition:

    Joshua Chiundiza

    Joshua is a Zimbabwean writer, performing artist, DJ and producer. The Monkey Nuts is an arts collective based in Harare that he co-founded. The group perform and record experimental hip hop and dabble in visual, sound and installation art. In addition to this, they host and coordinate exhibition and events.

    The collective has received their tier of success with the signing of a record deal with BBE Music for the release of the experimental ‘Boombap Idiophonics’ album in 2014. A collaboration with the underground French music producer DJ Oil, Joshua acted as a producer for two tracks on the album and performed and wrote for each song, resulting in regular tours for the collective. His style as a producer and DJ has been referred to as afro-futuristic in nature.

    Joshua’s work developed during the course of the residency aims to explore the evolution of traditional music instruments – the music that is produced through their play, their sounds, as well as their role in the social and spiritual aspects of communication in Zimbabwean Shona culture.

    Focused on the sound of Zimbabwe’s most principal traditional instrument the Mbira, Joshua has set forth on digitizing the sound through the process of sample based synthesis. Motivated by the instrument’s popular use as a tool to communicate with God via the ancestors, Joshua’s seeks to question whether his digitized sound of a Mbira can inform a heightened connection with the spirit world. His project will take the final form of a sound installation piece.

    Yara Mekawei

    Yara is an electro-acoustic music composer and sound artist from Cairo. The artist and scholar’s sonic medleys take their influence from city infrastructure and the movement of urban centres. Concerned with the history and philosophy of architecture and building she similarly investigates the connection that architecture has with the emptiness that surrounds it.

    Her working method is to extract musical conversation in visual imagery. Yara is a performance and video artist integrating visual images of society into progressives for her work. She acts as a curator of multidisciplinary events, workshops, concerts and mediations in both Europe and in the Middle East.

    Her project for the exhibition pursues transferring the soundscape of Johannesburg into objects of materiality – 3D printed objects. She shares with me that this project was started while she was in Switzerland and is being continued in Johannesburg.

    She goes on to explain that through her research and work methodology she is attempting to record the frequency of sound waves that exist and travel through buildings and old architectural structures. This sound is placed on sound tracks that are mixed with ambient noise present within these spaces.

    Yara’s interest in partaking in the residency was fuelled by a curiosity to discover the city and learn more about its inhabitants as well as to experience the sounds of the architecture in the city. For her project Yara is unpacking various sounds of the city such as the sounds of markets, the bustling streets, the sounds of different languages being spoken as well as transportation which she then translates into its final format, as a 3D sculptural object – thus making the sound of the city visible in a single identifiable object.

    Nkhensani Mkhari

    A hybrid artist from Mabopane and currently based in Johannesburg, Nkhensani’s chosen mediums of expression include photography, sound, sculpture and experimental film making. The Open Window Film graduate self-published his photobook, ‘Grain: Volume 1’ in 2017 as well as produced and recorded an EP, ‘23’. These projects were concerned with love, mythology, royalty, metaphysics, the intersections of immortality and the space between time and distance.

    In this year, his focus has narrowed in on the anthropological studies of African rituals and Ancient tribes as well as cybernetics. His work aims to function as a stimulant for societal discourse around the afore mentioned themes and their intersection with popular culture, our bodies and space itself. Nkhensani makes use of a multitude of mediums with which he examines the nuances between the spiritual realm and the digital world and futurism’s spatial distribution within the African diaspora.

    On discussing the residency, the artist states, “As an analogue photographer, it’s been interesting to explore collaboration using digital tools and thematics.”

    His work for the exhibition, ‘Image of Transgression’ explores and places an inquiry into humanity’s mutation and the spaces occupied by us with images. With this conceptual backbone, he has taken note of the ways in which western culture has shaped the spaces occupied by African bodies. Exploring ways in which Africans and African philosophy can form future timelines and spaces he shares that this is motivated by the challenge posed by African cultures surrounding the notion that time and space are rudimental facets of the natural world. “African cultures see no boundaries between the physical and spiritual…”

    His work for the show has taken its origin from his ongoing seascape photographic series ‘Mawatle’, delving into the aquatic beginnings of humankind with the South African coastline as its backdrop. Making use of this archival image set as well as images recently developed, he intends to expand upon and disseminate human-beings’ current stage of mutation from what he refers to as “tangible terrestrial spaces” to “intangible cybernetic spaces”.

    The final elements that will come into play in his final display for the exhibition will be expired Konica emulsions placed in an 80’s Kodak analogue camera, coded data extracted from his developed imagery as well as an experimental 16mm motion picture dealing with the subject of mutation. His hope is to make use of projection mapping for the final presentation of his film.

    In a single statement Nkhensani shares the sense of affinity he shares with Fak’ugesi and his reasons for applying, “…The thematic tapestry of Fak’ugesi is inseparable from cybernetics and African culture in its essence. This is one of the primary reasons I applied for this residency, it resonates immensely with my personal artistic thematics.”

    In conversation, he shares what he will take away most from the residency, “The future is already here, it just needs distribution, especially to minorities.”

    Mathilde Buenerd

    Exploring the variety of links found between social relationships, algorithms, and language, Mathilde is an interaction designer and artist with work embodying a multitude of mediums including web extensions, generative art, connected devices and mobile apps. Her overarching interest can be found in the way that technologies open up alien means of perception. After completing a graphic design and media art qualification she proceeded to her master’s degree in interaction design which was obtained through the Geneva School of Art and Design.

    Her work developed during the residency explores the use of universal means of communication – emotions. Additionally, her work will attempt to unravel the way in which computers and algorithms view traditional cultures on a more global scale.

    Her work is taking the shape of an “emotional radio” – a radio that can be operated through facial expressions (an indication of a person’s emotional state and or feelings). The interactive concept is based on human interaction with one person acting as a listener to the music and or radio while the other is able to control the music playing on the device by simply adjusting their facial expression through a smile or a funny face for example.

    For her idea to come to life, Mathilde recorded copious amounts of music from various radio stations in Johannesburg. After this initial stage, she developed a program that identifies the various captured sounds into a wide range of emotions expressed through facial movements. “It’s a collaborative way to listen to music, and also an experience of discovering music from a ‘computational point-of-view.’”

    Her project will be showcased as an interactive, collaborative installation piece displayed in the gallery and as a web platform that can be accessed from anywhere. Although the web platform iteration of the project will not have the collaborative element to it, the radio will still be controllable with facial expressions/emotions. Mathilde expresses that being a part of the residency has influenced the way in which she normally approaches work due to the sheer amount of different languages spoken in South Africa and has had a positive impact steering her focus to ways of communicating universally, transcending language barriers between people.

    Abhiyan Humane

    The artist and scholar from Mumbai has his attention nestled in the analysis of information, manifestation and ways of seeing. Experimenting with cognition, interactivity, kinetics and light-photosensitivity – his interactive artworks traverse the boundaries of art and science.

    Abhiyan’s work simultaneously questions and establishes dialogue around our natural lives and the relationship we have with the planet, expressed in his projects as body hacking, using breath to control a game or making use of devices to listen to signals generated by the planet to name but a few examples. Exploring emerging technologies and platforms that are becoming increasingly relevant in a world of mediated interactions and experiences, his academic history is rooted in Engineering, Communication Arts, New Media and Information Science. A course leader of Experimental Media Arts at the Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Abhiyan is also the founder of Nalanda Lab in Nagpur.

    Abhiyan shares that working in South Africa for the residency has been inspiring due to the technological shift currently taking place in the country, providing a space for innovators from different parts of the world to think about culture, technology and society as a whole.

    For the exhibition Abhiyan is working on a collaborative project with Anoop Saxena centred around water and ways of controlling the natural element and source of life. This project seeks to find a solution to the country’s recent droughts and regular water shortages. The team is taking their inspiration from traditional thinking around water. What is its meaning, which ritualistic practices are performed using water, in which way is water interpreted, which natural forces of the wild can be controlled by human intervention as well as how natural environments grant access to the interpretation of its natural elements in culture?

    “In this particular installation, we are trying to question cognition and look at it empirically as it produces electrical currents in our visual cortex.” In attending the event I am told that audiences should expect a visceral experience where thought has the ability to drive forms in this group’s interactive installation.

    His interest in partaking in the residency equally weighs in on his academic interest and provides him with an opportunity to experience how technology is interpreted and how its backing science is transferred into something tangible, translating into an aesthetic experience.

    “…Our natural lives have always been augmented with tools and technics- just they are advanced now…”.

    Anoop Saxena

    Anoop is a designer and Educator practicing from Bangalore, India specialising in Science Communication and Electronics. He creates customised design solutions for non-government organisations, science galleries and educational institutes. In addition to this he hosts customised workshops on Digital Making, Design Thinking, STEAM learning, Embedded System, Coding, Robotics, Fun Science and loT for a variety of institutions. He is currently an Associate Faculty member in Digital Game Design at the National Institute of Design.

    Anoop explains that for the project he is developing in collaboration with Abhiyan, they are addressing the need for science and digital literacy in modern society. His essential understanding of Science Communication and Electronics is a beneficial quality to the collaboration, assisting in the creation of an interactive experience that the duo is interested in offering to their audience. For Anoop their installation will be an “immersive experience of [the] biological and digital world.”

    With their project, they are exploring a variety of different forms and materials. Making use of an EEG machine they are unpacking ways of understanding the functioning of the prefrontal cortex of the human brain.

     

    The exhibition will take place from the 4th – 9th September 2018 at the Point of Order in Braamfontein. Visit the Fak’ugesi website for more details.

  • Alt Reality // Where art and tech meet

    Alt Reality is a technology studio focused primarily on Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality. The studio investigates other technology forms by looking at their ability to move into virtual reality and augmented reality. These technologies include 3D Printing and iOT data to name a few. I had an interview with Alt Reality creative technologist Rick Treweek to tell me more about the workings and history of the tech studio.

    Rick has worked in mobile game and app design for the last 15 years as well as 3D printing for the last 5 years and expresses that VR and AR were the next likely steps in his career. Rick tells me that within this space of virtual reality, augmented reality and investigation, a great deal of high-level Proof Of Concepts and Projects is executed. With a love for experimentation and art the tech studio makes time to focus on this sector.

    When asked about the kinds of worlds that Alt Reality creates Rick explains that by utilizing AR, VR as well as Mixed reality in amalgamation with one another, they create projects with digital overlays of real worlds in AR and building environments in VR that imitate the real world with the use of 360 cameras. “We often look at developing projects that showcase potentials of how things in the future will look once the technologies have moved away from devices and into wearables like glasses and contact lenses.”

    When asked how Alt Reality started Rick tells me that their journey began started 2 years ago in the Tshimologong Precinct Makerspace. “The idea initially came when I bumped into another maker called Phathwa Senene. I was busy working on a 3D Printed VR headset and bumped into Phathwa who had also just been making a 3D Printed set. We decided to look at getting into VR specific hardware and having a background in Apps and Games it was natural to then start looking at what could be done on the software side.” Gareth Steele joined the team while they were on an IBM research project. His talents as an illustrator, designer and Creative Director took the tech studio’s software to another level. With a resilient curiosity in VR Gareth became the Creative Director of the company.

    In my interview with Rick he took some time to explain tech terms to me. One of these terms that have become synonymous with tech is disruptive software and, as Rick explains, this refers to technologies that challenge rigid notions of how things should be done. An example of this is 3D Printing that challenges traditional manufacturing methods.

    According to Rick a creative technologist is a person with an interest in exploring new technologies with the aim to look at new methods in which technologies can be used. Another term that circulates in the tech realm is Augmented Reality and this refers to technology that overlaps digital data on to actual reality.

    When asked about their involvement with the National Maker Movement Rick expresses, “We are part of the Collective involving maker related events nationally as well as teaching skills and technologies from what’s called the 4th industrial revolution. Through conferences, talks and teaching we are exposing these technologies to a larger public audience, sharing what we have learnt to grow the sector.”

    The kind of work that the studio produces is based around Research and Development, Proof of Concepts and the exploration of technologies. “We do this mainly within Virtual Reality, Augmented Reality and 3D Printing, along with all the new emerging technologies around this sector.” The work that the studio produces is often showcased and utilized during events.

    “We develop a lot of software within VR and AR and also develop a lot of hardware to go along with our projects, such as our 3D Printed Handle headsets. We do this through collaboration with people such as Phathwa who is an electronics and 3D Printing Ninja.” With their diverse nature the studio also works on many collaborative projects, art related activities and exhibitions.

    Alt Reality has worked with IBM Research Africa, WITS, the Origins Centre, SAP, Jaguar, Accenture and Samsung.  “Our main passion falls within the art sector where we are constantly exploring options in this sector and trying to figure out the monetization of this area of work…Currently one of our most exciting projects is working with William Kentridge and The Centre for the Less Good Idea where we are exploring new technologies and their impact on South African Artists.”

    Rick states that the vision for Alt Reality includes how they can align research and development through the merging of art and technology. “We have a vision of a technology building within the heart of Johannesburg where we can make this happen. Ideally a building with each floor focusing on new sectors within these fields such as Virtual Reality/Augmented Reality, iOT, 3D Printing, Robotics and AI. Using Art as the main driving force behind the research. Using these new discoveries, we can then look at scaling what we have learnt to make social impact projects and initiatives that could change the face of Africa. We want to show the world that South Africa, and Africa can be a technology powerhouse.”

    Alt Reality’s innovation, technical expertise and love for art is pushing the way that art and technology is viewed together. They are no longer regarded as separate entities with the emergence of more and more digital artists, festivals such as Fak’ugesi and Alt Reality the barrier is being knocked down and we are moving into an era of hybridity. Rick’s aspiration to show the world what a powerhouse we are can be accomplished with virtual reality and augmented reality at their fingertips.

  • Music and Technology at Fak’ugesi Festival

    Now in its 4th year, the Fak’ugesi African Digital Innovation Festival is a celebration of technology, creativity, collaboration and innovation from across the African continent. The festival includes a range of seminars, talks, exhibitions, workshops, hack-a- thons, films, artists, games, innovation riots and music. With highlights including the Fak’ugesi Conference, Making Weekend as well as Fak’ugesi Beat, a new curatorial partnership with WeHeartBeat that focuses on beats, music and technology.

    The Fak’ugesi Beats program is multifaceted and includes the week-long Fak’ugesi Beats Lab workshop, the curation of panels at the Fak’ugesi Conference and the Fak’ugesi Beats Bloc Party which sees the festival outcomes come to life. Red Bull Studios Johannesburg at the Tshimologong Precinct will play host to the workshop which includes Soulection’s Hannah Faith, videographer Foxy Neela, French Soulection beatmaker Evil Needle, Swiss beatmaker Melodinsfonie, alongside the local Mante Ribane and the Dear Ribane collective working on a collaborative piece the result of which will be showcased at the Block Party and also see the work pressed to vinyl.

    Two of the panels at the Fak’ugesi Conference will be examining the influence of technology on music. ‘Future Beats’ features Joe Kay, founder of Soulection and pioneer of the Future Beats sound, Evil Needle and trap jazz pioneer Masego. The conversation will look at how the digital age as influenced new genres in music and what this means for musicians and artists as a whole. The second panel discussion ‘Sonic Visions’ will be an examination examination of collaboration between film, design and music. With a panel that features singer Nonku Phiri & Rendani Nemakhavhani who collaborated together on a music film, Foxy Neela, Hannah Faith, Mahaneela Choudhury-Reid of WeAreInBloom, and Benoit Hicke of the French F.A.M.E Festival the aim is to have a playful conversation that engages with the audience.

    The Free Workshop Program at the Making Weekend allows the public to gain hands on experience in areas from programming and creating gaming controllers, to robotics and music & film. Led by French/American artist Yann Seznec, the workshop ‘Room to Play’ explores the world of DIY musical controllers and instruments. Making use of everyday objects the workshop will challenge attendees to reimagine what a an instrument is and placing limitations on its function thus challenging the design strategy of commercial controllers. “How do you make a digital instrument that’s more difficult to play? And then thus what kind of questions does that open up?” asks Yann Seznec.

    According to Seznec DIY musical controllers and instruments have had a large impact on the performance of electronic music. “It means that you can do electronic music performances that are more meaningful to an audience. One of the big changes in electronic music in the last 10/15 years was that everything could be done on a laptop. With the downside of it being pretty uninteresting. I think what’s nice about DIY instruments is that it brings new methods of performance to the world,” notes Seznec.

    The Fak’ugesi African Digital Innovation Festival will culminate with the Fak’ugesi Beats Bloc Party which will feature the outcomes of the festival’s various collaborations as well as a selection of some of the finest local and international artists including Masego, Joe Kay, MNDSGN, Melodiesinfonie, Evil Needle, Hannah Faith, Nonku Phiri, Christian Tiger School and Petite Noir. “We’re trying to setup an international beat festival and present artists that we feel are making headway internationally and deserve platforms and deserve to be heard. So we feel like we’ve put together a really beautiful lineup,” says Dominique Soma of WeHeartBeat. “We’ve worked with artists that apply the traditional analog way of music making in terms of playing traditional instruments but then creating it in a digital space or through a digital process,” she adds.

    Unique on the continent in its offering, the Fak’ugesi African Digital Innovation Festival highlights the importance of the cross-over between culture, creativity and technology in Africa. With the addition of Fak’ugesi Beats the festival is examining the relationship between music and technology and this program will expand over the coming years. “We’re still looking to explore the relationship between the two spaces in the long term. Over the next few years you will see that crossover coming to life a little bit more,” notes Dominique Soma.

  • Everything you need to know about Fak’ugesi African Digital Innovation Festival 2016

    Everything you need to know about Fak’ugesi African Digital Innovation Festival 2016

    “Ungaphthelwa Innovation Yako” / “Own Your Innovation”

    In a collaboration between City of Johannesburg, Tshimologong Precinct and Wits University, this year’s Fak’ugesi African Digital Innovation Festival is created for conversations, collaborations and projects for Africans by Africans. It runs from the 19th of August until the 3rd of September. The annual festival is an “African celebration of digital technology, art and culture” in Johannesburg aimed at encouraging people in the city and on the continent more broadly to own their creativity and innovation through thinking about and constructing African visualization of the city, the digital, the playful and the future. With this year’s larger theme being the “AFRO TECH RIOT”, explorations of African knowledge systems, femininity, community and spirituality in relation to technology and the digital are the threads pulled throughout the two-week long festival. Johannesburg’s newly constructed tech hub Tshimologong on 47 Juta Street Braamfontein will be turned into a collaborative space through workshops, talks, installations, exhibitions, performances, pitches, awards, parties and gaming.. The festival asks participants to think about and engage with the idea that relationship between art, technology and creativity are “culturally embedded phenomenon” (Bristow 2014: 168). The revolutionary spirit of the festival is supported by its other partners British Council’s ConnectZA, Goethe Institut, and the Johannesburg Centre for Software Engineering (JCSE).

    Major events this year include old time favourites along with new exciting projects and talks:

    Fak’ugesi Digital African Residency in which local and international digital artists and creatives are invited to be on residency to explore the festivals theme. This year, with Pro Helvetia Johannesburg, saw an open call for creatives within the SADC region. The festival residents will be exhibiting their work and participating in discussions in the Reverse Digital Hustle (with Livity Africa) on the 24th of August, the Fak’ugesi Residents Exhibition from the 29th to the 30th of August, as well as being part of other smaller workshops at Tshimologong and the Fak’ugesi Soweto Pop Up in Orlando East. This year’s residents are Vuyi Chaza from Zimbabwe, Cebo Simphiwe Xulu and Regina Kgatle from South Africa.

    fak'ugesi residents

    The Agile Africa Conference (22 & 23 August) hosts African software professionals to discuss and brainstorm better ways of working with and creating software, as well as what this means within an African context.

    This year also includes a talks program in which digital artists and technological innovators discuss African knowledge systems in technology and the digital space and get a deeper understanding of “cultures of technology” (Bristow 2014: 169). The first being the Reverse Digital Hustle Talk featuring this year’s residents and guest Tabita Rezaire (24 August). We also see Fak’ugesi’s twin festival CairoTronica feature with its Director Haytham Naywar forming part of the second Fak’ugesi Talks (26 August) along with Joshua Noble and The Constitute.

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    The role of women in technology is being given multiple chances in the limelight this year with events including Maker Library Network & Geekulcha Open Data Quest workshop (24 August) which challenged participants to use online data about Women and Human Settlements to put together a story board that explores and tries to address the social relations involved around these social issues. Other events include the Women in Tech @ Fak’ugesi (29 August) which is a discussion and networking platform focused on the need to support and highlight the achievements of women in the tech industry. The Creative Hustle as part of the new Fak’ugesi Talks program with ConnectZA, puts together industry professionals Karen Palmer and Valentina Floris to talk about pushing boundaries and how technology and creativity combine.

    In thinking about technology by African for Africans, #HackTheConstitution (26 August) provides an interactive version of South Africa’s constitution in which lawyers, developers, UX specialists and artists are invited to work on creating a prototype app that can make the Constitution more accessible.

    A MAZE Johannesburg will be adding to the playful aspect of the festival with their events, talks and workshops running from 31st of August to the 3rd of September for gaming enthusiasts.

    The Market Hack, one of the festivals popular events, with ConnectZA and South African Maker Collective (27 August) is a daylong takeover of The Grove at South Point (Braamfontein) involving activities related to play and learning about 3D printing, virtual reality and sound.

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    Maker Library Network & Geekulcha (1 September) will be running 3D fashion experience in collaboration with designers from the Tshwane Fashion Project to explore how the 3D experience can add to the fashion industry.

    Also new to the program is a “future sounds” workshop (25 – 27 August) with Goethe Johannesburg will bring together the Create Africa Collective and Berlin-based digital artist, The Constitute, to mix technological innovation with the re-imagining of sound. The results of this collaboration will form part of the Alight Bloc Party/Tshimologong Precinct Launch (1 September) and will light up the Precinct with featured projects including Future Sounds, installations provided by UK-based creative studio SDNA and light-based installations from South African artists to officially open up the Precinct.

    The A MAZE and Fak’ugesi Soweto Pop Ups (27 and 28 August) will be held at Trackside Creative in Orlando East which will provide a mixture of virtual reality experiences, game design workshops, live digital installations and various projects related to video, performance and other technological forms.

    Visitors can also check out The Rotating Exhibition Room which has an ongoing exhibition until the 31st of August featuring video art from artist Magdalena Kallenberge, Ahmed Esher, Carly Whitaker, Mohamed Allam, Foundland and students from The Animation School.

    To find out more information about the festival and to look up the other smaller workshops and events they will be running check out their website


    References:

    Bristow, T. (2013). “We want the Funk”.

    Bristow, T. (2014). “From Afrofuturism to Post African Futures”.