You are through the looking glass: go to LightHerder.blogspot.com AKA TheLightHerder.com.
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Made of maple, mahogany, aluminum, three cameras, five HD feedback monitors, three Roland video switchers, two viewing monitors, two sheets of beam splitter glass, and a video input.
The device now has two monitor structures.
Both structures have two HD monitors (with analog hue/contrast/saturation knobs) at right angles to one another, with a sheet of beam splitter glass between them. The feedback loop between these two monitors, the reflection in the glass, and the camera, creates fractals in real-time, without a computer.
Using the video switchers, the left monitor structure can interact with the right monitor structure, and vise-versa. When they both interact with each other at the same time, yet another feedback loop is created, producing unexpected and strange results.
There is also a feedback loop between the third camera and the rotating
HD monitor. The output of this loop can be folded into the other loops.
Music:Toyo y Moi, The Medium
The operator at the helm of the Device uses high definition analog video feedback fractals to create spirals
within spirals, loops within loops, galaxies, cell structures, strands of DNA, trees, insects, tentacled primordial creatures, and classic fractal images. It really is the
God machine.
"It really is quite tangled...very impressive. Lots of wonderful fern-like stuff, also some jellyfish-like stuff, and the Sierpiński gasket now and then. Congratulations!"
- Douglas Hofstadter
"I like what you are doing very much. It's fascinating. Reminds me of the days when I was playing - experimenting - discovering."
- Heinz-Otto Peitgen
See the Device in Make Magazine, on boingboing, again on boingboing, on kottke, on hackaday, on slaschcam, on reddit, watch an artist's interpretation, and read a review by Rich Walkling.
The HD Video Feedback Kinetic Sculpture creates fractals and
organic-looking images in real-time, without a computer: this is
old-school video feedback.
The device has evolved
naturally since the first iteration, as have the images it creates.
Check out more videos, explanations, and a detailed account of building and testing the Device on my blog:
Two Year Retrospective
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A 2-year retrospective from the project's beginning to present to be played at the exhibit when I'm not around to operate the Contraption.
Segments:
0:00 First and Second Video Shoot
4:13 Phase 3.5 Description
5:00 Phase 1 Description
5:35 Phase 1 Images
6:07 Phase 2 Description
7:25 Phase 2 Images
7:57 Phase 2.5 Description
8:27 Phase 2.5 Images
9:32 Phase 3 Description
10:36 Phase 3 Images (TV Boy Logo Video)
12:00 Fractal Set Made of Another Fractal Set Description
13:20 Fractal Set Made of Another Fractal Set Images
Bach Segment
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This is a portion of the Exhibition video.
Check out how this was made here.
Bach's Musical Offering used as a tribute to Douglas Hofstadter.
Zemlinsky Segment
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This is a portion of the Exhibition video.
These images were made with Phase I of the Device.
Lafayette Electronic Arts Festival [LEAF]: April, 2022
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It’s kind of crazy how much could have gone wrong in the 2000 mile trip to Colorado. I brought everything I could think of to be prepared for things going wrong. In the end, a couple things did go wrong.
One of the slider rails came unglued from one of the monitors. I should have opened the box and noticed this when I first arrived, but I didn’t. I noticed it at 12 noon the day of the performance. I had JB Weld Kwik-Set glue, and this worked perfect, was dry in 4 hours. There was a bit of a chemical glue smell in the space for a while, but I think it was fine by the time people started showing up.
Shortly before the performance the little light I use to illuminate the starfish on the blue screen stopped working. It was fully charged - it just stopped working. I was able to improvise with the little flashlight I brought - worked perfectly.
The biggest issue was not being able to set up (or even load-in) the night before, or even early in the morning. I couldn’t start until 10:30 that morning. This didn’t leave enough time to set up the Jiggler. It also didn’t leave enough time for me to practice all the things I wanted to do. I didn’t get to the most complicated shapes that look like weird tentacled creatures.
When everything is set up again, I’ll recreate the performance, but how I would have liked it to go, with the audio from Matt.
I also had an idea while talking to Karla when I drove her to the Denver airport - build a box that has everything hooked up and connected to power. You would just need to plug it in, and connect the 8 BNC cables and 12 HDMI cables to it. This would save several hours.
TV Boy Fractal Logo Treatment (Feb, 2022)
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TV Boy in New York gave me a great deal on some monitors in return for making them a video feedback video with their logo.
Thanks again, and here's your video!
Music: Wilco, Kicking Television
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Phase 3.5: Fractals Made of Fractals Made of Fractals!
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This is a brief ontogenetic overview of Phase 3.5.
Phase 3 was the addition of the second monitor structure. Now, Phase 3.5 is the addition of the 3rd Roland Switcher, 5th (rotating) Panasonic monitor, and 3rd camera.
Fractals made of fractals made of fractals. Plus, the Insanity Loop!
See the previous video shoot with the Device here (and an alternate music version here).
Thanks to TVBoy Production for a great deal on these monitors.
Music: Apache 98 by Rich Walkling
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Phase III: A New Complexity (Aug, 2021)
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This is the latest build of the device using t-slot aluminum. Here in Phase III two monitor structures sit side-by-side. The fractal made in the right structure can effect the fractal made in the left structure - and the fractal made in the left structure can effect the fractal made in the right structure, and since they are both effecting each other, another feedback loop is created between the structures. This is madness!
This takes things a step beyond the last iteration where I had one feedback loop influencing another, but the other didn't not influence the first, and expands on the 5 Iterations concept where I took the recorded output and put it back through as an input. In this build, however, it all happens at once, and there are not just 5 iterations, but an infinite number - of course you can only see as many as the system resolution allows (this would be amazing with all 4K equipment!).
The next step is adding a 5th Panasonic monitor on the end of the 2nd dowel where the 4th Panasonic used to be (and putting the 3rd camera back). Schematic to come when this happens.
If you're not interested in the explainy stuff, skip to 2:58 in this video for images created with this build (or see the video of just these images here).
The fractal created on Loop A can
influence the fractal created on Loop B, and the Fractal Created on
Loop B can influence the fractal created on Loop A. When both of these
things are happening at the same time, there is a feedback loop between
the two structures, creating even more intricate complexities.
When the monitors are on Input 1 they see the camera directly. When they are on Input 2, they see the output of the Roland Switcher.
Input 1 on the Switcher is from the camera, and Input 2 is from the output of the other loop (so Switcher A’s Input 2 is the output of Loop B, and Switcher B’s Input 2 is the output of Loop A).
An HDMI splitter could have been used instead of converter box C (I used this because I like the slight delay these boxes create, and it’s what I had).
See previous schematics here.
New Monitor Structures for Phase III
2nd Video Shoot: The God Machine (May, 2021)
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This video is 4K (3840 x 2160) but the images the device creates are still HD (1920 x 1080). Maybe one day they'll be in 4K...
The HD Video Feedback Kinetic Sculpture creates fractals and organic-looking images in real-time, without a computer: this is old-school video feedback.
Check out an alternate version of this video with different music.
This is part sculpture, part performance art, and may make the most complex video feedback ever created, using three cameras, two video switchers, a sheet of beam-splitter glass, and an HDMI input from a phone or live video feed.
Much like a musical instrument, the operator at the helm of this device plays it, but instead of making sounds, makes entire worlds, spirals within spirals, loops within loops, galaxies, classical fractal imagery and primordial organisms, leaves, trees, and insects. It really is the God machine.
The device has evolved naturally since the first iteration, as have the images it creates. This is the most recent video, shot almost exactly one year to the day from the project’s beginning.
I'd like to thank David Kislin and Federico Baldeschi at JEL Developement for being nice enough to let me use one of their empty properties (free of charge, no less!) to make this video.
Music:
"3 Birds" by The Dead Weather
"Starless" by King Crimson
"We Did it Again" by Bongwater
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1st Video Shoot: Fractals Come Alive (June, 2020)
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This is old-school video feedback - no computers were used (or harmed) in the creation of these images.
The output of the camera goes to the upper monitor (which the camera sees). The camera's output also goes to the lower monitor (which the camera also sees in the reflection of the sheet of beam-splitter glass between the two monitors).
It's this feedback loop, with the two images combined together, that creates emergent behavior and fractals made in real-time - and it's the feedback loop between the Device and the person at its helm that creates organic movements, plants swaying in the the wind, sea creatures, cells, ancient insects and galaxies.
This is a little self-contained universe, and the laws of this universe, which dictate what images are created, are the angle of the glass, the height of the upper monitor and position and rotation of the lower monitor, plus the position of the control dials of both monitors and rotation and position of the camera. Through iterations, worlds are created. It looks like magic, but it's really mathematics.
Credit goes to Peter King for his 1997 diagram that inspired this configuration of the device.
Music: Nils Petter Molvær
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A Rebuilt Device (May, 2021)
Approaching the Infinite: Loops Within Loops (Feb, 2021)
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Loops within loops within loops: maybe the most complex video feedback ever made? This is one of my favorites, and I've not been able to replicate it.
Music: John Lurie, Alone
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Fractals Made of Fractals: 2nd Rotating Monitor Added!
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The Canon’s output now not only goes to the original Panasonic Rotating Monitor through the Roland Switcher, but goes to the new Panasonic Rotating Monitor through the Blackmagic Video Converter (to make a signal the Monitor can see).
The Phone’s camera sees the 2nd Rotating Monitor and its output goes to Source 2 of the Switcher. When this image is luma keyed (bright areas are included but dark areas are not) over Source 1 (the Canon feedback), fractals are created because the two feedback loops influence each other. This keying of the feedback does electronically what the beam-splitter glass does on the Primary Loop.
The Phone can still be used to supply images to do what's done in the previous video.
Note: I say the output of the new monitor is from the Canon - meant to say the input is from the Canon.
Dual Loop / Dual Switcher / Dual Rotating Monitor Schematic
This is getting kind of crazy!
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2nd Roland Switcher Added! (Feb, 2021)
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Some description of feedback, and what the switchers are for.
Music: Los Guitarlos Dangeroso by The Kingdom of Leisure, live in Sliver Lake, July 26, 2013
Dual Loop / Dual Switcher Schematic (Feb, 2021)
The first layout switched between the main Nikon feedback loop (with the two monitors and the half-mirrored glass) and the second input (which started out as just the phone, then the phone’s output on the rotating monitor, then evolved to the Canon feedback loop).
Now, the layout itself is fractal in nature, and the main switcher switches between the Nikon feedback loop (with the two monitors and the half-mirrored glass) and the Canon loop, which itself has a switcher that goes between that loop and the phone (or the phone keyed over that loop). Or, the main switcher keys that second input Canon loop (with phone involvement) over the main Nikon loop. Yikes.
Once again I’m not sure what all this will look like, and once again I’m posting before it’s all setup and ready to go, because, ya never know.
Notes (mostly for myself)
Preview Out of the Roland Switcher is just used to access the Switcher settings.
I’m using the Blackmagic Video Converter in place of a simple HDMI to SDI converter to see what effect a delay caused by converting from one video format to another will have on the feedback loop.
A 1 in 3 out HDMI splitter could replace the two HDMI splitters in the Secondary Loop, and an HDMI splitter could be used in the Main Loop.
This is an updated schematic that puts the Phone back on the Rotating Monitor (I had somehow forgotten about that aspect). Now, the Canon sees the Phone’s output on the rotating Panasonic Monitor when Switcher 2 is on Source 2, then when switched to Source 1, the Canon sees its own output on the Rotating Monitor. Switching quickly between Source 1 and 2 will have the effect of the Phone's image going into a feedback pattern.
On the Main Loop, when the Panasonic Monitors are on Input 2, they show the Nikon when Switcher 1 is on Source 1. When Switcher 1 is on Source 2, they show the Secondary Loop. Switching quickly between Source 1 and 2 will have the effect of the Secondary Loop going into a feedback pattern.
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Dual Feedback Loops: Particle Accelerator Images?
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I thought this looked a bit like the images made from particles smashing into each other in a particle accelerator (and it was at the Edwards particle accelerator at Ohio University, when I was 13 years old, that I learned what a crowned pulley was when someone working there - I don't remember his name - made a couple of them for me for the Van de Graaff generator I was building. A crown in the pulley keeps the belt from slipping off, and is what I'm using - made from PVC and Gorilla Tape - on the Device).
Music: Jerry Sneede
Dual Feedback Loops: The Nautilus (Jan, 2021)
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In this video, there are two dots keyed over the Canon feedback as the seed for the 2nd loop - as opposed to the one dot in the previous video (below). This creates nautilus-like shapes, and 3D looking wave-like curves.
Music: Russill Paul
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Dual Feedback Loops: Spirals Made of Spirals
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Last night I spent hours trying to get something good out of the Device. It was another time of complete frustration where I just wanted to give up. There have been many of these times.
I was trying to recreate what I had done the night before, with a spiral on the Canon loop, but I was only getting circle-type shapes.
After a few hours I finally looked at that video again, and realized the spiral was created from the reflection of the red record light on the front of the Canon - and, since I wasn’t getting anything good tonight, I hadn’t hit record (this, creating it’s own frustration feedback loop).
Tonight, with some rewiring, I keyed a small dot in the lower left corner of the Canon feedback as a seed for the spiral.
Watch galaxies being created, matter flowing between them.
Music: Pink Floyd
Phase 2.5: Dual Video Feedback Loops (Jan, 2021)
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A brief explanation and a quick test. I knew this setup would create something interesting. I didn't know it would be so beautiful.
Inspired by the Phase III idea. Some description here.
I've made a version of this video with the Canon loop in the corner (to better understand what's happening) here.
Music: Anandamayi Ma
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Phase 2.5: Feedback Made from Feedback, Explanation
Phase 2.5 is replacing the Elecrow monitor with a third Panasonic monitor with the analog knobs.
And then - controlled video feedback between the Canon and the new rotating Panasonic monitor will be the 2nd input to the switcher. So, instead of the text “Merry Christmas,” for instance, influencing the Nikon feedback, now another entirely different feedback loop will.
It’s kind of hard to picture what this new setup will create, especially since both loops will be locked together, the Panasonic moving in unison with the Nikon.
This was inspired by the Phase III idea, two devices next to each other, two people working synchronously.
In a couple days the Blackmagic Mini Converter arrives, which will make the Canon work with the Panasonic monitor. Very exciting.
Some Explaning Before Phase 2.5 (Jan, 2021)
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If you're not quite sure what the half-reflective glass does, or what the rotating monitor is for, this might clear things up a bit.
To see the setup, go here and here.
[There's a small inaccuracy at 3:02. Some of the words are rotating, and some are not.]
Music: Phish
Merry Christmas, 2020
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Real-time Christmas Fractals with the HD Video Feedback Kinetic Sculpture.
Music: Thinking Fellers Union Local 282 with some Stylophone mixed in
Dance of the Wu Li: A Plan for Phase III (Dec, 2020)
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The second iteration of Chrystal's Tree Spirit - the output is now input.
Painting by Josh Ford
Music: Ravi Shankar
Five Iterations: A plan for Phase III
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This is a simulation of a what it might look like if two people were using two Video Feedback Kinetic Sculptures in unison.
Originally I thought the next step for the device would be replicating it in 4K. I have an idea for a step before that though - Phase III: Two Video Feedback Kinetic Sculptures next to each other, two people working together to create the final image.
Setup 1: Person 2 operates Device 2, and just the upper monitor is used. The feedback created by this device is displayed on the lower monitor of Device 1 (by way of the rotating monitor). This image is mixed into the feedback created by Person 1. This is a pretty straightforward way of combining the two feedback loops.
Example: Person 2 has a lot of rotation on the camera and is making a circle. Person 1 has very little rotation on the camera, and a “tail” is created with the circle. As the circle changes, the shape of the creature with the tail changes.
Setup 2: The same as Setup 1, except now the output of Device 1 (the combination of images from Person 1 and 2) is displayed on the lower monitor of Device 2 (by way of the rotating monitor). This mixes the images from the two devices back into the image from Device 2. This is a much more complicated way of combining the two loops.
Example: This is kind of hard to wrap your mind around: Person 2 makes a circle, which is displayed on the lower monitor of Device 1, which puts a tail on it, but now this circle with a tail is on the lower monitor of Device 2, which means Device 2 is no longer sending a circle to Device 1, it’s sending the circle with a tail in a circle, which means Device 1 is putting a tail on the circle with a tail in a circle, and so on...
I did an approximate recreation using just the one device, recording each step, and playing it back on the lower monitor as if it were from Device 2. It’s still a mystery what this would truly look like beyond just the five iterations.
I think this feedback of the feedback is somehow something important.
Music: Edgard Varèse
Phase II - Chrystal's Tree Spirit
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This is an example of how small changes over many iterations can create complex looking emergent behavior.
Painting by Josh Ford
Music: Zappa, Watermelon in Easter Hay
Some Monitor Input Explanation (Nov, 2020)
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Each monitor has two inputs. Here I explain what's what with that.
To see the setup, go here and here.
Phase II: Typography Test (Sep, 2020)
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This is a quick test using the rotating monitor with text as the 2nd input. This is with just one word - a story, poem or maybe song lyrics is the logical next step.
To see the setup, go HERE and to see a demonstration of what the rotating monitor actually does, go HERE, and the beginning of Phase II HERE.
Music: Maybe She’ll Fly by The Daily Evening
Phase II - Synced Rotating Blue Screen / Monitor Test
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This is the first test using the input from the synchronized rotating blue screen (and monitor). This allows actual physical objects to be used as the keyed secondary input to influence the fractals being created (here I had some leaves taped to the blue screen), or the monitor can be used instead of the blue screen (starting at 1:14).
The Roland switcher/keyer gets Input 2 from the Canon, which is looking at the rotating blue screen/Elecrow monitor. The Elecrow monitor gets its input from the phone. This image is keyed over the switcher’s Input 1.
The switcher’s Input 1 is from the Nikon, which is looking at the upper Panasonic monitor, which gets its input from the switcher’s Program Out. The lower Panasonic monitor get its input from the Nikon.
This adds movement synchronized to the Nikon to an otherwise static keyed object.
Check out the video HERE to see this setup.
Music: Rubba
Phase II - Synced Rotating Blue Screen / Monitor Added
I added a second dowel through PVC tube that moves in unison with the main dowel. The rotation is transferred from the main dowel using a rubber belt for a Van der Graaf Generator (tape is wrapped over the belt to keep it from being springy). The transfer of forward and backward motion was harder to figure out (I later use a thin strip of tape wrapped around the dowel on either side of the PVC segments to catch and push and pull the second dowel).
On the end of this dowel is a monitor/blue screen that's used to give the static 2nd input motion.
Now the Roland switcher/keyer gets Input 2 not from the phone, but from the Canon, which is looking at this new rotating blue screen/monitor (which gets its input from the phone).
Phase II - A Weird Mix of Video and Feedback (Aug, 2020)
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Some experimenting with mixing video I shot with feedback.
Music: The Kingdom of Leisure's last show - the The Velvet Lounge, Washington, DC. 1999
Phase II: First Test with Roland Switcher
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Check out the Phase II setup here, and the schematic here.
Music: Greta Van Fleet
Phase II: Roland Switcher / Keyer Added (Aug, 2020)
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Phase II incorporates the Roland V-02HD Switcher / Keyer. This allows smooth switching between an image and feedback, and the keying of an image over the feedback.
Perfecting the Image (Aug, 2020)
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In this video I play around with variations on one camera / monitor setup.
This marks the end of Phase I.
Stranger things to come in Phase II...
This Music is from Bach's Musical Offering as a tribute to Douglas Hofstadter and his book Gödel, Escher, Bach (where I first learned about video feedback).
Live Audio Weirdness: A Creature is Born (Aug, 2020)
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A little Stylophone Gen X-1 circuit bending and rewiring and mounting to the device. In this video I created the audio at the same time as the images.
Large Viewing Monitor Added and Audio Integration
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The large viewing monitor makes it easier to see what's going on, and the Stylophone Gen X-1 makes it weirder.
See better wiring for the viewing monitor here.
Dual Integrated Feedback Loops (July, 2020)
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In this video the upper and lower monitors have different input sources. Instead of both monitors displaying what the Nikon camera sees, now the lower monitor is getting its input from an iPhone camera. Go here to see this setup (I'm using the 50/50 glass for the first time here).
How the previous videos were made
Originally, both monitors were showing the same thing - the output of the Nikon camera on the rod (what I'll call the main camera). This created the feedback loop between that camera and the upper monitor. The glass between the two monitors is beam splitter glass with a rating of 50/50 - that is, 50% transmission, 50% reflection (this is the kind of glass used in teleprompters). This glass allows the camera to see through to the upper monitor, and also see a reflection of the lower monitor.
Depending on the rotation of the lower monitor you get different fractal patterns. The jellyfish-like images are created when the lower monitor is positioned so the upper and lower monitors' bottom Panasonic logos are next to each other. This makes the top right corner of the upper monitor reflected on the top left corner of the glass. The fern-like patterns are created when the lower monitor's bottom logo is facing out. This makes the top right corner of the upper monitor reflected on the bottom right corner of the glass. The Sierpiński triangles are created when the bottom monitor is perpendicular to the upper monitor. This might be a bit confusing when read, but if you look at the photo it becomes easier to understand.
How this video is different
Instead of the lower monitor having the same input as the upper monitor, it gets its image from an iPhone. Originally, I was going to put something on the lower monitor like a photo of a face, and have that, in effect, be half-dissolved with the feedback in the upper monitor. The way this works is the main camera would be looping with the upper monitor, but also see the face from the iPhone in the lower monitor in the reflection of the glass. This image of the face would influence the feedback. When I made the above-mentioned video on my tumblr site explaining the new second input setup, I realized that having two feedbacks loops would be more interesting than just having the image of a face on the lower monitor.
Since the phone's camera is looking down through the beam splitter glass, it is not only feeding back with the lower monitor, it's influenced by what is on the upper monitor in the reflection of the glass. And, since the main camera is also looking through the glass, it is not only feeding back with the upper monitor, it's influenced by what is happening on the lower monitor in the reflection of the glass - which, of course, is influenced by what is happening on the upper monitor, and on and on...
This creates a feedback loop of a feedback loop. I'm not sure if this is the infinite squared or the infinite to the power of infinity, or what. I just discovered this setup a few days ago, and haven't really been able to wrap my mind around everything that's going on here. I'm not sure if anything like this has been tried before.
There are so many more things I'd like to do with this new two input setup. For instance, it might be interesting for the second camera to be looking at the entire structure while I'm using it, or just at the main camera as it moves around, or even at my hand on the rod as it moves, so the movement of the structure as it is being used influences the feedback made by the structure.
And it occurs to me that pointing the second camera at the device itself (either the full thing or a piece of it), is also a feedback loop of sorts - not a direct one like a camera looking at a monitor that is displaying what the camera sees - but one involving the operator as an intermediate step. So let's say the second camera is looking at my hand on the rod that moves the main camera. This image is mixed in, and influences the feedback created by the main camera, which I, as the operator then see, which influences how I move my hand (and on and on).
More to come.
Music: Russill Paul
Practice Four (June, 2020)
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This is one of the first tests of the new HD device using both monitors. Here I'm still using 60/40 glass.
Practice Three
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This is a test of the HD device using only the upper monitor.
It's difficult to maintain feedback in an interesting way without the screen going all white or all back. Here's a pretty good 20 minute block.
Music: Pink Floyd
Practice Two
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Testing the HD device using only the upper monitor.
Music: The Grateful Dead
Practice One (2020 Incarnation - May, 2020)
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First test using only the upper monitor.
I've built a third incarnation of the Video Feedback Device. This one uses two High Definition monitors and a Nikon D810 for the camera.
For a complete chronicling of this build, go HERE for reverse chronology and HERE for forward chronology.
Music: Jerry Sneede (this track and this track)
Original Light Herder Header and Sculpture Concept (2010)
"...This is like opening up the brain, poking around, and trying to find the mind or soul. These things grow through iterations, through cycles that start small and flourish, and can't be seen once they are gone (or the screen has gone blank). Imagine a dark room where the camera is looking at a dark screen. It will stay dark this way forever (no life, no soul) until a 'spark of life' (say the lighting of a match) brings forth an image, which will then perpetuate itself on and on. But, then imagine something blocking the camera's view of the screen, just for an instant. All of a sudden, the image goes out (death), never to return exactly as it was. To me, this is what the mind is, just a complex pattern."
To read the full text, go here.
One (2007 Incarnation)
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This is old-school analog light herding using a standard definition prototype of the Video Feedback Machine. No computers were used (or harmed) in the creation of these images.
This was created with the second incarnation of the (2007) with an old standard definition cathode ray tube TV. I de-soldiered the hue / contrast / saturation / brightness knobs and removed them from the TV's circuit board, then lengthened the wires going to them so I could change the camera's position and rotation while turning these analog knobs (it's all about the knobs).
Music: Einstürzende Neubauten
Two (2007 Incarnation)
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This was also made with the second (2007) device.
Music: Jerry Sneede & Harmon Leste
Three (2003 Incarnation)
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This was made with the first incarnation of the feedback device (2003) with a standard definition CRT TV and a Sony Mavica MVC-CD500, and it starts with a "spark of life."
Music: Russill Paul
First Prototype (2003)
This is the first incarnation (Provincetown, MA, 2003). Max "Baby Noodles" Mueller helped me find what I needed for this at the hardware store. The second iteration (Hollywood, Florida, 2007) had the television's hue / contrast / brightness / saturation knobs de-soldered, rewired, and brought up to the yoke (unfortunately I have no photos of this incarnation of the device). This photo is slightly faked. Since I had only one camera, this picture was taken with the camera that would normally be sitting in the wooden box (with the output wire going to the TV), and the image on the TV is playback from VHS of a previous recording session. The camera in this first prototype was a Sony Mavica MVC-CD500, and the camera in the second prototype was a small mid-90s era security camera. |
Well, you've scrolled this far...
Here's some more work you might be interested in:
Experiments in Text-to-Image 1 Smooth Transitions of Zoom, Rotation, Pan, and Learning Rate
Experiments in Text-to-Image 2 Your Dreams Are True
Experiments in Text-to-Image 3 You're Going to Fly Away
People Photography / Animal Photography / Landscape Photography
Gazing into Middlespace A 21st Century Koyaanisqatsi
The Golden Record II
Soundcloud weirdness
Enlightened Editing Shortcuts, used to edit the West Wing 2002/2020 Intercut Video (see the relocated version here)
Video Demo Reel
Video Reel 2 An addendum to the video reel
DaveBlairLeft / DaveBlairRight Two Instagram feeds that, when placed side-by-side, make up one whole
Experiments in Instagramming Playing with the form's conventions
Some Circuit Bending of a vintage transistor radio
Empty Knot (MTNOT) Music To Nod Off To
A Family Zoom from Hell
The Live Photo Retrospective Collection
Future Gifts from the Past A series of odd glimpses into the past - including some very early innovative video feedback expermimenting