by pixelpusher on Wednesday 6 May 2009
[Blog, video]
The Science Museum’s Dana Centre
165 Queen’s Gate
South Kensington
London
SW7 5HD

Pitch Control still image of installation
Pitch Control is a musical instrument that allows you to play a projected choir of (mostly) amateur singers.
Here’s some further information on it:
http://mlstudio.co.uk/pitch-control-photos/
http://www.takeawayfestival.com/
http://www.danacentre.org.uk/
There’s a viewing night on May 19th. If you’d like to come along, please email me as I’ve got to book spaces.
The instrument will be played by a select group of keyboard players, and then available to be played by anyone who’d like to.
Alternatively, the installation runs between May 19th – 30th, between 10am and 5pm.
Please feel free to come down and tickle the ivories.
2 Comments
by pixelpusher on Friday 26 September 2008
[Blog, Software, images]
This is my suped-up version of the old flight404 and toxi Processing sketch – it uses Perlin noise to create a moving field of very organic-looking daggers. toxi used it for hairs, and now I made an intricate version that uses 3D daggers drawn using OpenGL.

Noise Spears - PixelPusher (after toxi and flight404)
Read on for more plus source code
One Comment
by pixelpusher on Wednesday 6 August 2008
[Blog, Software]

The first rule of blogging is to blog often. So much for that. I’ve been traveling the world, and moving, and generally sans internet (that means “without internet” for all you non-French speakers). In spite of this blog silence, I’ve been working on a lot of new things. Like more experiments and sketches in Pop Art and Processing. Here’s one (source code included):
PopArt 01
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by pixelpusher on Thursday 5 June 2008
[Blog, Software]
A software art project that remixes the skylines and sights of cities I’ve lived in and visited. Download at: NYLONCityBlob

Awhile back, in 2006, I put my lifelong obsession with New York City’s buildings to good use. 2006 was the year my wife and I moved to London to start a new life as expatriates, reversing the colonial journey that started our home country in favor of the old country on the edge of a new, powerful-again Europe.
Leaving New York, I felt like a traitor. New York is in my family’s blood. My grandfather loved nothing more than to take us around the sights – the Empire State, the Twin Towers, Macy’s, the countless delicatessens shining as culinary diamonds in the rough preserve of Mexicans making Chinese food and Chinese baking Pizzas. My grandfather spent all his years in New York, knew every inch of the serpentine BQE (Brooklyn-Queens-Expressway) slithering over and through industrial Brooklyn on its way up north to upstate and sweet oblivion, finally exploding into the Hutch, the Cross-Bronx, and the Bruckner.
Not that he would have ventured that far north – he hated grass, and crickets. Especially crickets.
I don’t want to give the impression that my family is parochial; they’re well-traveled and world-wise, but they always come back. I still haven’t returned.
I ‘ve turned my world travels into an art project – just as the skylines of all the places I’ve visited and lived get jumbled in my head over time, this software remixes them and rescales them and blends them into a chimera of a city. I’ll add to it over time but right now it is NY (New York City) LON (London). Sometimes it gets intimate, and small places crowd out the big, important, impersonal ones. Use the mouse to navigate. Mac-only (for now). Enjoy.
If you’d like to show it somewhere, please contact me at pixelpusher@flkr.com, I’m open to the idea.
2 Comments
by pixelpusher on Sunday 27 April 2008
[Blog, Software]

Originally uploaded by da mad pixelist on flkr
I’ve been playing with the offsetcircles patch from before, and came up with a whole bunch of nice results. Taking a page from Claude, I made the drawing recursive (hmm… makes me want to use Scheme…) and rendered out these two short videos. These are fun experiments in basic, rotary motion. Its really amazing what fun you can have with simple math, rotations, and some blending.
There’s also this one.
Here’s the actual sketch plus code (the last version, anyway):
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