Tuesday, 12 July 2011

Art in Conflict


 This is a story of three first years in their practical training:

Ilona, Minttu and I started to work for Pekka Niskanen who was putting up an exhibition to Werstas in the end of May. Our job included building video cubicles, painting and hanging up the art. On top of this I was working on Jyri Jaakola’s interview tape and translating all the piece descriptions. In my opinion the work in the time before the opening, was very helpful for future use.

We also had to get into the art works and their backgrounds for our goal was to make sort of conversational tours. The point was not to be your regular tourist tour guide, but to inspire conversation about the themes around the pieces, violence, human rights and how do people see modern art.

Finally we get to D-Day 31.5.2011. We still had some things to work on at the opening day, but we managed to get all done in time. Facebook informed that around 215 people would be there. Honestly I can’t tell how many their where, but I’d say quite a few. Everything started with a speech from Werstas’s representative introducing the artists and people working behind it and naturally opening the exhibition.

There is a lot of art about the situation of Mexico so all of the serving was following the theme, nachos, Corona and everything. Speaking of food, we also saw a food performance by Riikka Kuoppala, The International Cooking School. It was informative about the situation of people from Thailand working in Finland and all the information was served with delicious cooking. Even tough the performance was quite long, it inspired people to watch all the way and ask questions all threw the performance.

During the opening I was asking people of what they thought of it. Many said that it was visually very strong and sending the message in a provocative but not in a grotesque way. They also said that it made them truly think and see things from a new perspective. Though it was not all seen as good, for some said that it reminded them of intellectual social porn in which people can feel empathy for things they don’t really care about, but can together be horrified of all the violence and feel themselves as good people when being so empathetic. Judging by the comments, it seems that the exhibition came out as provocative as we thought it would. 
So, come and see for yourself how it is or follow our blog about all the conversations and extras that we find in our websites: www.taidekonfliktissa.com. See you there!

Friday, 8 July 2011

We love animation!


The summer is almost half way through, but the IMPs still have something to show: The great works done during the Animation & Multimedia course this spring! These will probably give the next IMPs some ideas on what to expect from their course next year.

Our course started with basic facts about making an animation; it included character design, drawing, tips on how to show the character’s feelings by only changing the way the character stands and 3D modeling with Blender. The main course task was to create either a multimedia presentation or an animation. Most of us chose to make an animation, in 2D and 3D. Here are some of them for you to see:



See animation
A Flash animation made by Anayte Delahay and Heidi Mäenpää


A screenshot of a film made by Heta Tepponen with Adobe After Effects

See animation
“How to find your way to the animation class on the Finlayson campus” by Alex Ostasheva.


See animation
“Kasketa” animation by Tuomas Mikola, Joonas Nissinen and Vesa Rantanen.



A screenshot of a 3D animation made by Joonas Sairiala, Emma Kiiski, Sonja Anzenhofer and Matias Puro


See animation
“Made entirely with Photoshop and Flash Catalyst. Sort of a test on how to create flash with no coding involved. Something we learned during International Week, a workshop on Flash Catalyst”
-Tuomas Lecklin


See animation
A short animation made by Kristina Põldots with After Effects

Story: Heidi Mäenpää
The author is student of Degree Programme in Media
Read more stories from/about IMPs, the Media students
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Thursday, 7 July 2011

World Summit Youth Award deadline Friday July 15!


The World Summit Youth Award (WSYA) is an annual award and a network for young people using the internet, mobile phones or other digital media to put the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) into action. Winners of the Award use websites to fight diseases, innovative radio technology to battle hunger, or social media to raise critical questions and connect those who do good.

WSYA was initialized at the UN World Summits 2003 and 2005, this is the fifth edition, The award is organised by the World Summit Award (WSA) network,  in Finland in cooperation with TAMK and the degree Programme in Media.

All UN member state citizens under 30 (January 1st 2011) are welcome to participate.  The competition has 6 categories:
  1. Fight Poverty, Hunger & Disease
  2. Education 4 All
  3. Power 2 Women
  4. Create your Culture
  5. Go Green
  6. Pursue Truth
Registration by July 15 on: www.youthaward.org

More information:
World Summit Youth Award
UN Development goals

Previous stories about WSYA

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Wednesday, 6 July 2011

Ubimedia Award: Extended deadline July 15 2011


Deadline of one of our coolest annual international projects Friday next week!

Call to participate in the 5th Nokia Ubimedia MindTrek Awards Competition 28th – 30th September 2011 Tampere, Finland


Competition deadline: July 15th 2011

The Ubimedia competition seeks to broaden our understanding of where and how ubiquitous media will influence our future life. We are looking for disruptive artistic visions as well as clever near-to-market solutions off the beaten tracks! This includes any range of innovative ubimedia, pervasive, or ambient products and services. The Ubimedia Award is a highly interdisciplinary competition and we invite Designers, Computer Scientists, Artists, Economists and Engineers to take a stand on the following questions with their entries:

  • What is the particular aesthetic experience opened up by the rise of ubiquitous and ambient media?
  • What constitutes the specific intelligence that drives future media environments?
  • How will location- and context-aware media services change our social life?
  • How will our future lives look like in the era of ubiquitous computation, and how can society benefit from these advanced technologies?
The total award sum for the Nokia Ubimedia MindTrek Award is 6 000€.

The Nokia Ubimedia MindTrek Award is a category of the 2011 MindTrek competition. The category is organized collaboratively by MindTrek, Tampere Region Centre of Expertise in Ubiquitous Computing, New Ambient Multimedia Group (NAMU)/Tampere University of Technology, the Tampere University of Applied Sciences, Nokia, and the Ambient Media Association (AMEA). The award is funded by Nokia and the Tampere Region Centre of Expertise in Ubiquitous Computing.
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Ubimedia Competition home
MindTrek
Read all posts about the Ubimedia Award
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Tuesday, 5 July 2011

Side by Side - Art Photography book by Mirja Paljakka


Side by Side is the final thesis work by Mirja Paljakka, one of the students of our specialisation studies in Art Photography. The author says:

My photographs are inspired by 4 seasons, nature, flowers and ice formations.
Focusing on small close-up details of the world around me, my photographs appear semi-abstract, emphasising colour, shape and texture. My choice of natural elements such as water droplets, the veins of leaves, snow and ice formations, and sometimes man-made materials, is transformed by light and shade into suggestions of the microcosmic world of cells in the body or of surgical procedures.

My three close friends suffered from severe illnesses and these photographs were born of my agony. I hope these sense and emotions can be found through my photographs. Some are suggestive of the dark emotions surrounding illness, while the vivid colours of others allude to diseased tissue, medicine and even the signs of hope for recovery.

Links:
Mirja Paljakka
Side by Side, the book
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