S.S.S
![nancy4b[1].gif](http://r-echos.net/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/hotlinked-image-cacher/upload//blog/images/nancy4b[1].gif)
Laptop and body performance
S.S.S is a trio — Cécile Babiole, Laurent Dailleau, and Atau Tanaka – performing visual music with sensors and gestures. They create a work of sound and sight, a laptop performance enriched by the intensity of bodies in movement.
Sensors capture gesture and corporeal movement, translating them into digital data:
- Ultrasound sensors measure the distance between the performer’s hands and her machine, allowing her to articulate 3D imagery, navigating in color, scale, texture…
- The Theremin, an oscillator invented in 1919, responds to perturbations of electrostatic fields based on the distance of the hands and body to the instrument.
- The BioMuse places gel electrodes on the performer’s forearms, analyzing EMG biosignals. Muscle tension through concentrated movement allows the musician to sculpt sound synthesis.
Table of contents for un-Realisation
- Sketch Furniture
- $2,400 Home Fabrication Kit
- Fabbing a 2.5D World
- Biomimetic, Dennis Dollens
- Call - Generator.x 2.0: Beyond the Screen
- Architectural Tetris
- Abstract Geology
- Virtuality/Actuality
- [Tangible] Homeplay: a trackball to explore a town
- Muon
- CabBoots
- Tinker.it and Bluetooth Arduino
- traffic dependent bridge lighting
- tactile vest display
- Connecting First and Second Life
- Allergic to cell phones
- Paper Email.
- pierre.archives » commercial architecture for airwaves
- body as a living (pain) map
- Wardive: Wireless Gamescapes on the Nintendo DS.
- trace: prototype
- S.S.S
- Primitive Collections Field
- The aggregated newspaper
- Tracking a BitTorrent Swarm in Google Earth
- Interactive & audible print, by Simon Elvins
- mobile phone sun clock
- Real snail email
- Book: Design Noir: The Secret Life of Electronic Objects
- Carnivore 2.2
- Shawn Decker - «A Small Migration», 2004
- Francobelge Design, toy car interfaces
- Extended Playtime
- Fursr work: Mr Punch and the Musical Particle Accelerator
- New Tech Creates 3D Models of Crime Scenes
