Announcement
Professor Emeritus Helen Mayer Harrison and Newton Harrison: Looking Forward, Looking Back-Nevada Museum of Art--Apr 4-Jun 7 '09
Submitted by yolietorres on Mon, 04/27/2009 - 12:45pm. Announcement | Faculty ShowProfessor Emeritus Helen Mayer Harrison and Newton Harrison
Looking Forward, Looking Back:
The Collection in Context
Exhibition runs April 4, 2009 through June 7, 2009
Nevada Museum of Art, Donald W. Reynolds Center for the Visual Arts, E. L. Wiegand Gallery, 160 West Liberty Street, Reno, Nevada 89501
For nearly 80 years, the Museum has worked to develop a permanent collection of fine art unparalleled to that of any other public arts institution in the state. Held in trust for future generations, the collection helps to define the institution’s mission and identity, and continues to grow with each passing year. This exhibition surveys highlights from the permanent collection, emphasizing how past acquisition strategies have helped to inform the Museum’s current collecting focus on artworks that engage with natural, built, and virtual environments.
*Becoming Dragon* a Project Discussion by Micha Cardenas at New Media Lounge / Cal(IT)2 - Apr 15 '09 6PM
Submitted by yolietorres on Mon, 04/13/2009 - 1:39pm. Announcement | Events | Student Project
*Becoming Dragon*
a Project Discussion by Micha Cardenas
Wednesday, April 15, 2009 @ 6PM
Refreshments will be served.
New Media Lounge / Cal(IT)2, UC San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla, California 92093
The New Media Lounge is excited to bring MFA Candidate, Micha Cardenas for an exclusive motion capture demonstration in the Performative Computing Lab at the Center for Research in Computing and the Arts (CRCA). Micha will be discussing her recent project /*Becoming* *Dragon*/, a 365 hour, (2 week long) performance in Second Life. The performance is believed to be the first of its kind in Second Life, and Micha will talk about her experience and research, in addition to a techie demonstration of the motion capture setup involved.
Performative Computing Space in CRCA is located in Cal(IT)2, (Atkinson Hall) in Warren college, on the first floor. Make a right past the elevators, follow the hallway to the right once again, and you can't miss it. There will be signs posted as well.
For more information on Becoming Dragon please visit:
http://www.calit2.net/newsroom/release.php?id=1431
Celebrate the Launch of 'Version' Online Arts Journal
Submitted by sghanbari on Tue, 03/31/2009 - 6:33am. Announcement | Events | Faculty ProjectApril 2, 2009 | 5-7PM
UC San Diego / gallery@Calit2, Atkinson Hall
Version, a new online journal based at the University of California, San Diego, is experimenting with Web 2.0 sensibilities to explore the space where art, viral publishing and multitasking collide. The public is invited to celebrate the launch of 'Version' at a reception from Thursday, April 2, at the gallery@Calit2, located in Atkinson Hall on the UCSD campus. The reception will include a presentation on the history and development of Version.
Laida Lertxund: Farce Sensationelle! October 2009 - April 2011 - From Ecstasy to Rapture. A 50 Year Retrospective ...
Submitted by yolietorres on Tue, 03/24/2009 - 1:28pm. Announcement | Film Screening | Faculty Show
Laida Lertxundi
From Ecstasy to Rapture. A 50 Year Retrospective of Alternative Spanish Film /
Del Éxtasis al Arrebato: 50 Años del Otro Cine Español
October 2009 - April 2011
Farce Sensationelle!
Laida Lertxundi's 35mm
Australia | USA | Japan | Spain
January 2010
Anthology Film Archives, 32 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10003 – (212) 505-5181
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
January-March 2010
National Gallery,National Mall between 3rd and 9th Streets at Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20565 - (202) 737-4215
http://www.nga.gov/home.htm
January-February 2010
Bass Museum of Art of Miami, 2121 Park Avenue (between 21st and 22nd Streets), Miami Beach, Florida 33139 - 305.673.7530
http://www.bassmuseum.org/
(to view complete schedule please click on "read more" below)
Xcentric packs its bags. The CCCB’s film programme is setting out to travel the world with a cycle of Spanish experimental films.
“From Ecstasy to Rapture. 50 Years of Alternative Spanish Film” is the title of the programme of Spanish experimental film going on show as of October in cities such as Melbourne, New York, Washington, Miami, Tokyo, Madrid and London. It offers a retrospective of the experimental film made in Spain between the 1950s and the present day. “From Ecstasy to Rapture …” is the brainchild of Xcentric, the regular film programme at the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona.
Neal Bociek: 9th Annual Art Gala at Powerhouse in Del Mar, CA - Mar 21 - May 21 '09
Submitted by yolietorres on Tue, 03/24/2009 - 7:41am. Announcement
Neal Bociek
Surfrider Foundation San Diego Chapter
9th Annual Art Gala at Powerhouse in Del Mar
Saturday, March 21st at "Trimaran" - 704 1/5 Grand Ave
Saturday, March 28th at "One Sea Horse Ocean Sleigh" - 738 Felspar Aven
Saturday, April 4th at "Pugsly" - 4862 1/2 Ocean Blvd
Saturday, April 11th at "Tree Breeze" - 827 1/2 Coast Blvd
Art Auction Fundraiser on Thursday May 21, 2009
All Meet and Greets are from 2-4pm; rain or shine.
Join the Powerhouse in Del Mar on Thursday May 21st from 6-10pm for an evening of beautiful art, fine food and drink, and coastal conservation.
Tickets will be available online in late March.
Neal Bociek brings a new dimension to our collection with "Rock and Roll". Meet the sculptor at his works through out the city at the following dates and locations:
For more information about the artist or the Meet and Greets, please Click Here.
Sheldon Brown: UC San Diego and IBM Launch Center for Next-Generation Digital Media to Power Tomorrow's Virtual Worlds-UCSD News
Submitted by yolietorres on Tue, 03/24/2009 - 7:10am. Announcement | Awards & Honors | ReviewUC San Diego and IBM Launch Center for Next-Generation Digital Media to Power Tomorrow's Virtual Worlds
IBM Shared University Research Award of a System z10 Mainframe Computer Will Support New UCSD Campus Center
(http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/newsrel/general/03-09IBM.asp)
By Doug Ramsey for UCSD News Center on March 17, 2009
Researchers at the University of California, San Diego today announced plans for a new campus center dedicated to invent the next generation of virtual worlds, multiple player online games, and high fidelity digital cinema, using one of the world's most sophisticated computer servers -- the IBM System z mainframe.

IBM (NYSE: IBM) provided a Shared University Research (SUR) award to help the university jump-start its new Center for Next-Generation Digital Media on the UC San Diego campus. In addition to multiple peripherals and additional support, the IBM award consists of the company's newest System z10 Enterprise Class server with the Cell Broadband Engine (Cell/B.E.).
"Students will have access to IBM's newest hybrid computing system with blazingly fast and powerful capabilities. UCSD students can now tap into security features and 'specialty engines' designed to handle a new generation of virtual world applications, where massive numbers of simultaneous users can share a single environment," said Bernie Meyerson, IBM Fellow and vice president of Systems and Technology Group.
"We want to facilitate the invention of the next generation of digital media," said Sheldon Brown, a visual arts professor at UC San Diego. "By significantly increasing the experiential richness of virtual worlds, we think they will become a proving ground for creating and interconnecting digital media of all forms, starting with games and cinema. As virtual worlds and digital cinema develop more visual sophistication and cultural literacy about how we use them, they will start to intersect and will become much richer and more complex."
Initially, Brown and his team in UCSD's Experimental Game Lab will use the IBM System z server to develop and operate a virtual world based on Brown's museum installation "Scalable City," extending it to be experienced by potentially thousands of simultaneous users worldwide 24 hours a day and seven days a week. Users could potentially experience a more visually and behaviorally complex virtual world than current efforts as seen in Second Life, The Sims or other massively multiplayer online role-playing games, such as World of Warcraft.
Professor Emeritus Faith Ringgold
Submitted by yolietorres on Fri, 03/20/2009 - 8:36am. Announcement | Faculty ProjectProfessor Emeritus Faith Ringgold

Faith Ringgold received a commission to design 52 mosaics for the Civic Center Metro Subway Station in Los Angeles, California. Mosaika, the fabulous company in Montreal is fabricating the designs. Here are photos of Faith's recent visit to check on the progress of the mosaic panels.
For details, please click on "read more" below.
Sheldon Brown: New Research Center to Design 'Next Generation' of Virtual Worlds - The Chronicle of Higher Education
Submitted by yolietorres on Wed, 03/18/2009 - 12:06pm. Announcement | ReviewThe Wired Campus
Education-technology news from around the Web
New Research Center to Design 'Next Generation' of Virtual World
Watch out, Second Life.
(http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/index.php?id=3666)
The Chronicle of Higher Education on March 17, 2009
The University of California at San Diego announced today the creation of a new research center aimed at creating the “next generation” of virtual worlds, which designers hope will be more visually rich and have more features than Second Life and other popular online environments.
UC San Diego and IBM Launch Center for Next-Generation Digital Media to Power Tomorrow's Virtual Worlds
Submitted by sghanbari on Tue, 03/17/2009 - 3:19pm. Announcement | Awards & Honors | Faculty Project
Sheldon Brown (far right in foreground) is the PI on the project that will use the donated IBM mainframe to help build a global virtual world based on Brown's "Scalable City" interactive museum installation (pictured above in the gallery @ calit2).
IBM Shared University Research Award of a System z10 Mainframe Computer Will Support New UCSD Campus Center
San Diego, CA and Armonk, NY, March 17, 2009 -- Researchers at the University of California, San Diego today announced plans for a new campus center dedicated to inventing the next generation of virtual worlds, multiple player online games, and high fidelity digital cinema, using one of the world's most sophisticated computer servers -- the IBM System z mainframe.
IBM (NYSE: IBM) provided a Shared University Research (SUR) award to help the university jump-start its new Center for Next-Generation Digital Media on the UC San Diego campus. In addition to multiple peripherals and additional support, the IBM award consists of the company's newest System z10 Enterprise Class server with the Cell Broadband Engine (Cell/B.E.).
"Students will have access to IBM's newest hybrid computing system with blazingly fast and powerful capabilities. UCSD students can now tap into security features and 'specialty engines' designed to handle a new generation of virtual world applications, where massive numbers of simultaneous users can share a single environment," said Bernie Meyerson, IBM Fellow and vice president of Systems and Technology Group.
"We want to facilitate the invention of the next generation of digital media," said Sheldon Brown, a visual arts professor at UC San Diego. "By significantly increasing the experiential richness of virtual worlds, we think they will become a proving ground for creating and interconnecting digital media of all forms, starting with games and cinema. As virtual worlds and digital cinema develop more visual sophistication and cultural literacy about how we use them, they will start to intersect and will become much richer and more complex."
Initially, Brown and his team in UCSD's Experimental Game Lab will use the IBM System z server to develop and operate a virtual world based on Brown's museum installation "Scalable City," extending it to be experienced by potentially thousands of simultaneous users worldwide 24 hours a day and seven days a week. Users could potentially experience a more visually and behaviorally complex virtual world than current efforts as seen in Second Life, The Sims or other massively multiplayer online role-playing games, such as World of Warcraft.
To date, a lack of computing power has limited what users can see in virtual worlds, which may have thousands of users and hundreds of thousands of objects. When users have moved to different parts of the virtual world, they moved to different computer server nodes in the computing cluster, which resulted in making the experience of the total world very fragmented.
According to Brown, IBM System z mainframes offer just what the virtual worlds of tomorrow will need. The system's high volume processing capabilities combined with the dense computing power of IBM's Cell/Broadband Engine multiprocessor technology puts real-time interaction in a virtual world within reach for users.
"The IBM mainframe can look like a couple hundred computers in a cluster, or look like one giant computer. We can optimize tradeoffs between storage and processing, which we can use to change the shape and nature of the virtual world experience," Brown explained.
While IBM mainframes can enhance the real-time nature and verisimilitude of virtual worlds, the experience of users will always be limited, in part, by the 'client' side -- the personal computers with which users enter those virtual worlds. To that end, the UC San Diego researchers are already experimenting with multi-core processors for client-side computing, including the Intel chip code-named Larrabee, which won't be commercially available until early 2010, along with the IBM Cell processor. With partners at three other universities, Brown has also won a planning grant from the National Science Foundation for an industry-university collaborative research center on hybrid multi-core computing.
"With so many processors being crammed on a chip, the home computer now starts to look like four or eight or 16 or 32 computers within the box," said Brown. "They are more powerful but they also have to finish their computation 60 times a second in order to provide real-time experiences in the virtual world. We cannot tell a person to wait around while we wait for the result."
Brown's team will also continue to explore new approaches to networking using very high bandwidth data backbones. With Peking University, they are currently studying techniques to share virtual-world serving between San Diego and Beijing.
Roads, landscaping and houses build themselves in Brown's "Scalable City", but in the future virtual-world version, thousands of users will be able to tap into the process.
UCSD hopes that would now encourage other partners to participate in the newly announced Center for Next-Generation Digital Media at UC San Diego. "In a radical way, we have to envisage what the next generation of digital media will look like," said Brown. "How do significant breakthroughs in computing and infrastructure really change the landscape for what these digital media forms are going to be? The two emerging forms are virtual worlds and digital cinema. We can view each of these as separate entities, or as merged, interrelated entities."
Initially, the center will focus on new production platforms for digital cinema, building on existing relationships with Hollywood studios and additional support for the new center from the Center for Research in Computing and the Arts (CRCA), the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2), and the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC). The IBM mainframe computer is being hosted by SDSC, connecting directly to Calit2's digital cinema facilities with dedicated fiber optics and very high bandwidth connections to the Internet and global fiber-optic networks.
"Massively multi-user virtual worlds are increasingly important as media and social environments," said Calit2 director Larry Smarr, a pioneer in supercomputing and high-bandwidth optical networking. "Calit2 has made a major commitment to digital cinema through our CineGrid project, and we believe this center can significantly further state-of-the-art practices in digital media of all kinds."
Added SDSC director Fran Berman: "The boundaries have blurred between technology and the arts, and the synergistic environment represented by the Scalable City project represents the paradigm shift that is beginning to emerge. SDSC is excited to be hosting the machine and partnering in this important project."
"I'm using this virtual world as a platform for developing very high fidelity digital cinema," concluded Brown. "The virtual world can become a way to prototype cinema making -- working through camera shots, scenery, and even actors through avatars. Cinema production can be done faster and with more flexibility."
Sheldon Brown: UC San Diego and IBM Launch Center for Next-Generation Digital Media to Power Tomorrow's Virtual Worlds
Submitted by yolietorres on Tue, 03/17/2009 - 2:47pm. Announcement | ReviewUC San Diego and IBM Launch Center for Next-Generation Digital Media to Power Tomorrow's Virtual Worlds
IBM Shared University Research Award of a System z10 Mainframe Computer Will Support New UCSD Campus Center
(http://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/26960.wss)
IBM
SAN DIEGO, CA and ARMONK, NY - 17 Mar 2009: Researchers at the University of California, San Diego today announced plans for a new campus center dedicated to invent the next generation of virtual worlds, multiple player online games, and high fidelity digital cinema, using one of the world's most sophisticated computer servers -- the IBM System z mainframe.

