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October 2010, Week 5

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Subject:
From:
Lev Manovich <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 29 Oct 2010 14:48:25 -0700
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sualization of temporal patterns in media and art - please share
To: [log in to unmask]


MAPPING TIME: Visualization of temporal patterns in media and art

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http://lab.softwarestudies.com/2010/10/mappingtime.html

Exhibition by Lev Manovich, Jeremy Douglass, William Huber

With: Adelheid Heftberger, Agatha Man, Alex Avrorin, Bertrand
Grandgeorge, Bob Li, Chanda L. Carey, Christa Lee, Christine Pham,
Colin Wheelock, Daniel Rehn, Devon Merill, Jia Gu, Kedar Reddy, Laura
Hoeger, Michael Briganti, Nichol Bernardo, Ong Kian Peng (aka Bin),
Rachel Cody, Sergie Magdalin, So Yamaoka, Steven Mandiberg, Sunsern
Cheamanunku, Tara Zepel, Victoria Azurin, Xiangfei Zeng, Xiaoda Wang.

October 4 - December 10, 2010
gallery@Calit2
University of California, San Diego


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Since 2008, the Software Studies Initiative has been developing new
methods and techniques for the analysis and visualization of visual
and interactive media.  The exhibition "Mapping Time" includes
visualizations of novels, video game play, web comics, manga, motion
graphics, feature films, and mass media publications presented via
large-scale prints, animations and real-time generative projections.
The visualized data sets range from 4535 covers of Time magazine
(1923-) to 1 million Manga pages. The exhibition coincides with the
lab releasing a number of open-source tools which were used to create
all works in the exhibition.

The lab uses the term Cultural Analytics to refer to its techniques
for the analysis and visualization of large cultural data sets. For
the "Mapping Time" exhibition, the concept is to render the "shapes"
of cultural time. According to Manovich, "our goal is to demonstrate
how we can visualize gradual changes over time at a number of scales -
from a single minute of a video game play, to 11 years of the popular
manga title Naruto, to 130 years of the journal Science (1880-2010).”

The lab is directed by Lev Manovich, UCSD Professor of Visual Arts and

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