Posts By Thomas Grill

Kick-off public session @ spiel|mach|t|raum, MDW, May 11, 3pm

From May 11 thru 13, the project members will gather for a formal kick-off meeting in order to flesh out the goals and strategies for the months to come.
One important part of this meeting will be a public discourse session. There will be a number of short presentations where team members explain their respective personal perspectives on the project, and, more prominently, an open discussion, where we invite the interested audience to contribute their ideas and wishes for the project to our kick-off event.
The open discourse will be guided by performer Charlotta Ruth. The event will be held in English.

Friday, May 11 2018, 15-18h
spiel|mach|t|raum, room S0225
University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna (MDW)
Anton-von-Webern-Platz 1, 1030 Vienna, Austria

Presentation and discussion @ Applied Practice, AIL, May 2

Right after the official start with May 1, Thomas Grill and Almut Schilling will present concepts and strategies of the rotting sounds project as part of the Applied Practice lecture series, both from their respective angles of sound art and digital preservation.
Following will be an open discussion session led by media expert Michael Iber where the audience is cordially invited to share their thoughts on the topic with us. The talk will be in held in German language.

May 2 2018, 17h
Angewandte Innovation Laboratory (AIL)
Franz-Josefs-Kai 3, 1010 Vienna, Austria

Contribution for the isaScience conference accepted

Thomas Grill and Almut Schilling have put forward a proposal termed “Libre tools and strategies embracing the temporal deterioration of digital audio” for the isaScience 2018 conference with the topic of “Participatory Approaches to Music & Democracy” in Reichenau/Rax to be held on August 10-14.
Our proposal has been accepted by the organizers and we are looking forward to presenting our perspective.

Abstract: Most of today’s media output is produced and stored in the digital domain. The efficiency as well as its ease of use, also in the arts, has led to an overwhelming abundance of data representing audio and video content.
The practice of a digital artist, specifically also a digital musician, is typically bound to a complex ecosystem of commerical hard- and software. End-of-life of one of the tools causes a chain reaction of obsolescence in the entire system, also necessitating the acquiry of new know-how.
On the other hand, published products of digital arts practice appear on media dependent on technological reproduction devices. The material embodiments as much as the logical formats of these representations are subject to deterioration over time, demanding perpetual actions of media migration for successful preservation.
The global accessibility of digitally stored media implies that it is not a scarce good any longer. The cost for the consumer is low, but so is the quality of the experience. The act of music listening has shifted from physically interacting with an audio sculture to subjecting oneself to an infinite succession of “tracks”.
Our project of artistic research “rotting sounds” investigates the causes, processes and ramifications of degradation and technological obsolescence within the domain of digital audio. The hypothesis is that by providing pertinent knowledge and respective means to encounter digital deterioration in a constructive fashion, the inevitable is no longer a source of irritation but rather an æsthetic benefit.
For this, we will put forward open technology fostering self-empowerment and independence for digital artists from commercial constraints. On the other hand, we will propose artistic strategies to work with the fleeting nature of digital data, especially exploring the qualities of ephemerality.
In the context of the isascience conference, we will outline some focal points at this early stage of our project. We hope to open up a discussion on the present condition of digital media arts, and about strategies for regaining control of artistic means of expression in the field.

Rotting Sounds @ Knowing in Performing symposium, April 4

Our upcoming research project Rotting Sounds will be presented at the Knowing in Performing symposium for artistic research at the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna.

4 April 2018, 9.30 am – 6.00 pm
MDW – University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna
Fanny Hensel Hall
Anton-von-Webern-Platz 1
1030 Vienna

Artistic research as it has emerged and evolved over the last three decades is related to an increasing interest in epistemological questions as well as an interrogation of how artistic practices constitutively support and instigate processes of knowledge creation. Art is thus being looked at both as an object and a medium of research, becoming part of a general discourse on knowledge regimes and research models.

The symposium will investigate this dynamic, ever-renewing field of interrelations with a special focus on the performing arts. Highlighting the issue of various implementation models in curricula and study programmes in higher arts education, it will critically analyse international institutional policies and facilitate an open debate on how to integrate current practices and discourses into future teaching and research structures.

Rotting sounds poster presentation at the MDW science conclave, February 27

Yesterday I had the chance to present the upcoming Rotting Sounds project at the science conclave, an internal steering meeting of the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna. I had some interesting discussions and got really nice feedback. Very much looking forward to the project start in May.

Contribution for the POM Copenhagen conference accepted

We have submitted a proposal “Embracing the temporal deterioration of digital audio – A manifesto” for the EVA conference with the overarching topic “Politics of the Machine: Art and After”, held in Copenhagen on May 15-17, 2018.
Our contribution is in the form of a manifesto, targetted to the “Returns of the machine” track of the conference. It has been strongly accepted by the conference comittee.

Research project “rotting sounds” funded

Today, we have received the news that the 3.5 year project of artistic research rotting sounds has been approved by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) as project AR445-G24.
The core team of Thomas Grill, Till Bovermann and Almut Schilling, as well as the experts of the technical pool and the members of the advisory board are looking forward very much to jointly work on the topic.