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Thu June 21, 2018

Binary Salon 03 + Halation Opening Reception

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*FREE WITH RSVP*

Our third Binary Salon will be held in conjunction with our opening reception for Halation: Without Light There is No Shadow, featuring installations by LED artist Christopher Schardt, and interactive artist, Marpi.

Please join us for an evening of drinks, conversation, and collaboration. Our Binary Salons are a place where artists who are working at the intersection of art + technology can come together to share ideas and practices.

On June 21 @ 6pm we will feature a new set of artists who use technologies to engage the public in unique and thoughtful ways. Following presentations by Lauren Bedal & Travis Bennett, Cere Davis, and Christopher Schardt, guests are invited to gather under Schardt's enchanting canopy, Constellation, and play with Marpi's immersive projection, Aquarium.


Lauren Bedal & Travis Bennett: This duo creates collaborative performances built with OpenPerform. OpenPerform is an open source platform for generating real-time, virtual dance performance with motion capture technology as well as other motion capture VR films.

Lauren Bedal is an interaction designer and contemporary dancer based in San Francisco, CA working in the areas where dance and technology intersect. She has performed both nationally and internationally with companies such as SBDP, RAW Dance, and Kinetech Arts. Lauren also is an active collaborator and contributor in Dance Hack, San Francisco Dance Film Festival, Playscape, as well as a long term collaboration with Travis Bennett on Open Perform. Lauren currently works at Google ATAP where she combines her knowledge of dance and design to define new ways to interact with technology through body language and gestures.

Travis Bennett is an interactive technology artist who’s work explores the complex nature of society’s relationship with emerging technologies such as AI, VR, Computer Vision, Real-Time Motion Capture, Brain Computer Interfaces, and 3d Imaging.



Christopher Schardt: Christopher Schardt has been creating large-scale sculptures since 2000, focusing on LEDs since 2014. He works mainly in aluminum and stainless steel. Schardt’s LED pieces are of various sizes and configurations, anywhere from 1,800 to 21,000 individually controllable LEDs. The animated imagery they display depends very much on the setting. Sometimes a slow, perhaps organic pattern is appropriate. Sometimes something photorealistic works better, particularly with closelyspaced LEDs. Other times, energetic, even psychedelic patterns are what is called-for. By accompanying these visuals with music, Schardt vastly increases their impact, and likes to incorporate this whenever possible. He seeks to create sights and sounds that delight and surprise, while staying in concert with the surrounding environment. INTERACTIVITY | LED Lab, the software that controls Schardt’s pieces can respond to various kinds of input: A live camera feed can be mixed into its animated output. It can respond to audio to modify such things as color, position, rotation, and image size. External hardware can send it signals to modify various parameters. IMMERSION | Many of Schardt’s pieces strive to be a place to BE. Rather than just coming up to Firmament, looking for a while at the pretty lights, and moving on, visitors would come, smile, sit down, and then lie down looking up at the lights, sometimes for hours. This piece had many nicknames like “Permanent”. Firmament transcended some art-role boundary. It stopped being just a thing of beauty and became an environment with an emotional impact - calmness, serenity, safety.

Christopher has an immersive installation currently up at The Midway Gallery for the Halation exhibition and is represented by Building 180



Cere Davis: Cere grew up in west coast of the US fascinated with physics and real-world manifestations of dynamic imbalance. After researching volcanic lighting in Alaska and wintering over at South Pole, Antarctica she moved to the Bay Area of California in 2013. Inspired by her creative surroundings, she began using her creative energy and professional background in physics & engineering to explore her passion for creating improbable embodiments through fusing the worlds of sculpture, science and technology. Her works aim to inspire conversations which illuminate the magic and wonder of the physical world. She utilizes materials common to our everyday experience as a way of revealing what is hidden in plain sight and uses her exhibits, lectures and exploratory research to connect seemingly disparate fields of study. In doing so, she aims to broaden our normative utilitarian view of nature through re-framing phenomenon common to our everyday experience. Her work is best described as a form of neonaturalism, whereby inherent material properties are re-contextualized to reveal their natural response to surroundings. She aims to inspire creative learning through her interactive exhibits and offer a refreshing counterbalance to our increasingly isolating and sterile urban environments.



Past Salons have featured artists: Inigo Quilez (IQ), Can Buyukberber, Chelley Sherman, Eccoscreen, Osman Koc, Jeffrey Yip, & Swan
*FREE WITH RSVP*

Our third Binary Salon will be held in conjunction with our opening reception for Halation: Without Light There is No Shadow, featuring installations by LED artist Christopher Schardt, and interactive artist, Marpi.

Please join us for an evening of drinks, conversation, and collaboration. Our Binary Salons are a place where artists who are working at the intersection of art + technology can come together to share ideas and practices.

On June 21 @ 6pm we will feature a new set of artists who use technologies to engage the public in unique and thoughtful ways. Following presentations by Lauren Bedal & Travis Bennett, Cere Davis, and Christopher Schardt, guests are invited to gather under Schardt's enchanting canopy, Constellation, and play with Marpi's immersive projection, Aquarium.


Lauren Bedal & Travis Bennett: This duo creates collaborative performances built with OpenPerform. OpenPerform is an open source platform for generating real-time, virtual dance performance with motion capture technology as well as other motion capture VR films.

Lauren Bedal is an interaction designer and contemporary dancer based in San Francisco, CA working in the areas where dance and technology intersect. She has performed both nationally and internationally with companies such as SBDP, RAW Dance, and Kinetech Arts. Lauren also is an active collaborator and contributor in Dance Hack, San Francisco Dance Film Festival, Playscape, as well as a long term collaboration with Travis Bennett on Open Perform. Lauren currently works at Google ATAP where she combines her knowledge of dance and design to define new ways to interact with technology through body language and gestures.

Travis Bennett is an interactive technology artist who’s work explores the complex nature of society’s relationship with emerging technologies such as AI, VR, Computer Vision, Real-Time Motion Capture, Brain Computer Interfaces, and 3d Imaging.



Christopher Schardt: Christopher Schardt has been creating large-scale sculptures since 2000, focusing on LEDs since 2014. He works mainly in aluminum and stainless steel. Schardt’s LED pieces are of various sizes and configurations, anywhere from 1,800 to 21,000 individually controllable LEDs. The animated imagery they display depends very much on the setting. Sometimes a slow, perhaps organic pattern is appropriate. Sometimes something photorealistic works better, particularly with closelyspaced LEDs. Other times, energetic, even psychedelic patterns are what is called-for. By accompanying these visuals with music, Schardt vastly increases their impact, and likes to incorporate this whenever possible. He seeks to create sights and sounds that delight and surprise, while staying in concert with the surrounding environment. INTERACTIVITY | LED Lab, the software that controls Schardt’s pieces can respond to various kinds of input: A live camera feed can be mixed into its animated output. It can respond to audio to modify such things as color, position, rotation, and image size. External hardware can send it signals to modify various parameters. IMMERSION | Many of Schardt’s pieces strive to be a place to BE. Rather than just coming up to Firmament, looking for a while at the pretty lights, and moving on, visitors would come, smile, sit down, and then lie down looking up at the lights, sometimes for hours. This piece had many nicknames like “Permanent”. Firmament transcended some art-role boundary. It stopped being just a thing of beauty and became an environment with an emotional impact - calmness, serenity, safety.

Christopher has an immersive installation currently up at The Midway Gallery for the Halation exhibition and is represented by Building 180



Cere Davis: Cere grew up in west coast of the US fascinated with physics and real-world manifestations of dynamic imbalance. After researching volcanic lighting in Alaska and wintering over at South Pole, Antarctica she moved to the Bay Area of California in 2013. Inspired by her creative surroundings, she began using her creative energy and professional background in physics & engineering to explore her passion for creating improbable embodiments through fusing the worlds of sculpture, science and technology. Her works aim to inspire conversations which illuminate the magic and wonder of the physical world. She utilizes materials common to our everyday experience as a way of revealing what is hidden in plain sight and uses her exhibits, lectures and exploratory research to connect seemingly disparate fields of study. In doing so, she aims to broaden our normative utilitarian view of nature through re-framing phenomenon common to our everyday experience. Her work is best described as a form of neonaturalism, whereby inherent material properties are re-contextualized to reveal their natural response to surroundings. She aims to inspire creative learning through her interactive exhibits and offer a refreshing counterbalance to our increasingly isolating and sterile urban environments.



Past Salons have featured artists: Inigo Quilez (IQ), Can Buyukberber, Chelley Sherman, Eccoscreen, Osman Koc, Jeffrey Yip, & Swan
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The Midway 26 Upcoming Events
900 Marin Street, San Francisco, CA 94124

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