Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Final Project: Personal Mobile-Spatial Sound Projection Device #2
Here is my second "Personal Mobile-Spatial Sound Projection Device". For this project I thought to construct a device that could be pushed around within a public space such as a gallery. The sound projected here is being emitted through two small monitor speakers and is powered by one minidisc player. The sound itself was recorded from an aviary in the virtual space Second Life. Artificial flowers were added in order to reinforce the concept of the participants engagement with the projection device as being somewhat fictitious or imaginary.
Self Portrait Sketch
Bio
John Mata is an artist based in San Antonio, Texas. Currently Mata is attending the University of Texas at San Antonio and is majoring in Art with a minor in Anthropology. The focus of Mata's current work is directed at the utilization of art as a means to conveying a message through personalized projection devices constructed with the concern for mobility. Mata has shown nationally and internationally and in January '09 recently held an exhibition with Sala Diaz Gallery in San Antonio, Tx. The purpose of this blog is to introduce another component to Mata's work. One which will provide information for the readers and introspectively provide feedback for the artist as well.
Monday, April 13, 2009
"South Town Dreaming Itself" Beto Gonzales
So I just thought to add FutureWorkerGirl's (aka: Leslie Raymond) blog of the site piece PBL (Potter-Belmar Labs) contributed to my show at Sala Diaz at the start of 2009 entitled "Sala Diaz is Open"... You can read all about it here as she wraps it up with a quote from artist Beto Gonzales.( I just had to borrow it for the title of this entry). Nice job PBL/FWG/SPOKENINE !!!
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Second Verse Same As The First
After spending three loads of laundry time ( approximately 220 minutes) in second life I came to a conclusion, the virtual world is a very quiet place. Inside Second Life virtual sounds surrounded my flights and teleportations. The ambience developed through sounds tended to sooth and put me in a state of relaxation. This feeling of relaxation kept me wandering about the feelings of anxiety I have in my everyday life and asking a couple of social questions. Are we living in a constant state of anxiety and are the sounds that we produce in the "First Life" one of the main contributors to such a state? So I am proposing for my next project to create an environment in first life that utilizes sounds for animated spaces. A few speakers and some amplifiers should suffice.
John Mata
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Documentation of room created for Future Utopia at Luminaria in San Antonio
The image above and following were taken during the process of de-installing the piece for Luminaria titled "Room made of mostly cardboard and masking tape, containing various media relating to the idea of New Media and Future Utopia". Chronologically I am presenting them from the last image captured to the first, including the loading of materials onto a pushcart and the stack of cardboard left for clean-up and recycling.
The first image (above) is of the area that I was provided with for the construction of the room. I decided to utilize the niche allowed by the convention center's design to serve as a structural support for the walls and rooftop of the room. This space was especially challenging in that I had to provide proper access to the fire hose without losing space within the cardboard room.
On a personal level, how materials are transported to a site are key to the process of understanding how a space will be organized and also allows me to be aware of scale and spacial limitations. It is for this reason that I have provided the following image of the cart I used for this piece and the materials and media that were placed within the cardboard room. I would like to note that the moving of materials without allowing them to be destroyed or damaged is considered as a "successful transfer" for me.
The next image is of the cardboard and wood that were used to provide roof and wall support.I thought the use of these materials were an efficient way to devise a structure and express the concept of "the obsolescence of art as a vehicle for creative expression and self exploration" I referred to in my proposal for the exhibition. Also, the cardboard seemed to be a much more inviting and "fun" material, given it's availability. Also, it poses as less of a liability if damaged or destroyed.
I will conclude with two images, the first is of two exterior shots taken during de-installation. The second image was taken during the opening of the exhibition. In this image a viewer becomes engaged with the room and the media devices within the space.
Sunday, March 1, 2009
Project proposal for Luminaria
For the project at Luminaria (San Antonio, Tx), I have chosen to provide a "Safe house" from which information concerning "New Media" can be received and conveyed by the participants/audience of the event. The shelter or safe house will hold an assortment of different media such as dvd's and monitor, books, and an audio listening station that will allow those who enter it's area to listen, watch, or read materials that are related to "New Media". A live performance will also be scheduled, and will take place at a given hour during the events six hour duration. The shelter and all of the materials to be experienced within it's area will be transported by use of bicycle and bike trailer. Portable power converters will provide power for the electronic utilities and will be charged prior to the time of exhibition. My intention is to create an informative work of art that encourages interaction between the constructed space, the media within and the audience/participants. Currently I am working on an illustration to visually accompany the project proposal.
This piece is part of a group exhibition which explores the idea of Future Utopia. My inquiry into the concept, Future Utopia, is concerned with the obsolescence of art as a vehicle for creative expression and self exploration.
John Mata
This piece is part of a group exhibition which explores the idea of Future Utopia. My inquiry into the concept, Future Utopia, is concerned with the obsolescence of art as a vehicle for creative expression and self exploration.
John Mata
Sunday, February 1, 2009
Berlin-based artist Annette Krebs
On Friday, February 20, Berlin-based artist Annette Krebs will be giving a performance at Sala Diaz as part of John Mata’s exhibit, Sala Diaz is Open. The performance starts at 9:30 pm, and is free & open to the public.
Annette Krebs has worked extensively in the crossover area between improvisation and composition, exploring the possibilities of the prepared guitar with regard to sound, structure, noise, the mixing of materials, and space. Various preparation methods are used to produce noises and sounds, which are then enlarged through the use of sometimes high levels of amplification. The sound of the amplification and mixing boards, additional tapes, radios and objects are used as musical material.
Krebs was a member of the groundbreaking post-minimalist creative ensemble Phosphor, and has collaborated with Keith Rowe, Sachiko M, Kaffe Matthews, Robin Hayward, Toshimaru Nakamura, Taku Sugimoto, and many others.
“Annette Krebs has propelled herself into the front rank of guitar improvisers.” — Clive Bell, The Wire
“When the guitar, tape, acoustics melt into each other it’s a joyous thing.” — Stylus Magazine review of Annette Krebs’ “Guitar Solo”
[Supported by the Berlin Senate Cultural Affairs Department]
Randy Wallace Scheduled to Perform at Sala Diaz as a part of current exhibition.
Existence is Fertile: Losing Millennium
A presentation by Randy Wallace
Location: Sala Diaz, 517 Stieren, San Antonio, TX
Date: First Friday, February 6
Time: 7PM-11PM
Duration: one night only
Context: Within, among and integrated into John Mata’s current installation “Your Black
Majesty: My Facade Says A lot About Who I'm Not".
Mr. Mata has invited Randy Wallace to present a project-in-tandem within the confines of
his multi-media exhibition and joint venture with 180 Grams proprieter, Jesse Garcia.
”Wallace’s “Losing Millennium” project will employ a variety of the inferior arts --
object in situ, performance and audiovisual presentation.
“Existence is Fertile” is an accumulating narrative in which pasts and futures collide.
The characters that are introduced or implied navigate fictional realms like phantoms.
The subject is life itself, human life, and conflicts that ensue.
The individual works, such as “Losing Millennium”, function as chapters or asides within
an expanding directive.
This particular chapter expliots the topic of metaphorical journeys and questioning out of
sync with immediate stimuli.
Randy Wallace is an artist working in the vernacular of sculpture.
His current trajectory is true to the path which is to say “off course”
A presentation by Randy Wallace
Location: Sala Diaz, 517 Stieren, San Antonio, TX
Date: First Friday, February 6
Time: 7PM-11PM
Duration: one night only
Context: Within, among and integrated into John Mata’s current installation “Your Black
Majesty: My Facade Says A lot About Who I'm Not".
Mr. Mata has invited Randy Wallace to present a project-in-tandem within the confines of
his multi-media exhibition and joint venture with 180 Grams proprieter, Jesse Garcia.
”Wallace’s “Losing Millennium” project will employ a variety of the inferior arts --
object in situ, performance and audiovisual presentation.
“Existence is Fertile” is an accumulating narrative in which pasts and futures collide.
The characters that are introduced or implied navigate fictional realms like phantoms.
The subject is life itself, human life, and conflicts that ensue.
The individual works, such as “Losing Millennium”, function as chapters or asides within
an expanding directive.
This particular chapter expliots the topic of metaphorical journeys and questioning out of
sync with immediate stimuli.
Randy Wallace is an artist working in the vernacular of sculpture.
His current trajectory is true to the path which is to say “off course”
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Mark Jones covers "Sala Diaz is Open"
On Tuesday, January 20th, local artist and DJ John Mata sent out an interesting email that began simply, "For his exhibition Sala Diaz Is Open John Mata will utilize the east and west rooms of Sala Diaz to present an art show and record store respectively." Given John's focus in both art and music, the exhibit suggested a perfect synthesis of these two parallel interests.
The next line in the email quickly turned enigmatic and hilarious, rejecting the typical academic artist statement: "In the East Room, Mata will be presenting an installation entitled "Your Black Majesty: My Facade Says a lot About Who I'm Not". Mata's work incorporates drawings, collages, and sculptures containing images of Apocalyptic Cartoon Landscapes, often referencing the fall of the common person to the hegemony of cycloptic mountains in molten pits of hellfire and sunflowers."
Through his statement's abstractness, pre-conceived notions for the show were somehow both rejected and reborn. How the molten pits of hellfire and sunflowers would relate to the record store in the adjoining west room was unclear, assuming clarity was even the intention.
On Friday January 23rd, when Sala Diaz opened, more questions surfaced. In the east room, surprisingly, there were no Apocalyptic Cartoon Landscapes, drawings, or collages. Instead, there was a massive tower of black amplifiers in the center of a dark room, emitting a loop of synthesized dissonance. Was there a last-second change of plans? Or was the email all part of a purposefully misleading façade?
In contrast, the west room was a scene of illuminated order. Jesse Garcia (of the now- defunct 180 Grams Records store) had set up shop, literally, and was selling vinyl again. There was a rack of t-shirts. Select records were on display on the walls, with most items priced around $13.99. Two records players sat on a bench in the middle of the room, and almost always there was a customer listening while contemplating a purchase.
Business was fairly brisk, which was odd for several reasons. If business had always been this good, Jesse’s store on San Pedro would probably still be open. As a part of an artist exhibition, Jesse had actually found his home ⎯ perhaps not permanently, but at least for the month.
From my experience visiting 180 Grams Records in the past, I was struck by the monumental challenge Jesse faced in trying to make a living selling obscure vinyl in an age of mp3 overabundance and complacency, especially in San Antonio, a city not known for supporting unique niche ventures. In fact, I remember once walking in the shop and finding Jesse alone, asleep on the sofa. The moment made me think of 180 Grams as its own performance art piece. 180 Grams existed, but more as a high concept than a working business, and now with Jesse setting up shop at Sala Diaz, the moment had come full circle.
So where was John in all of this? At first, it seemed like the art show was a way to help support a good friend sell records again, as well as allowing John to spin records behind the gallery for the large party to follow. One patron observed that this show, more than most, epitomized how the ensuing party often overshadowed the art opening.
To consider this art opening only in that light would be a mistake, for in reality the party was just as much a part of the exhibit as was the record store or the installation. It's as if Jesse and John were working in perfect symbiosis. It seems too easy to understand: Jesse sells the records, John spins them, and then people dance and have fun. The line about hellfire and sunflowers was a distraction from something more pure.
Art is ultimately supposed to touch people's lives; however, the path in doing so is often purposefully tortured. Is a dance party too direct? For art purists it probably would be ⎯ I found it to be completely refreshing, however. There's at least one very successful artist in town known for creating festive spectacles. And in the end, it is the artist, not the art, that is remembered. In that regard, John Mata has already succeeded, and perhaps, added another brick to his façade.
JOHN MATA: SALA DIAZ IS OPEN Sala Diaz 517 Stieren
For the run of the exhibit, John and Jesse will be keeping daily hours at the gallery and plan to coordinate weekly musical events by local and regional artists. Though the opening has passed, it seems as if this exhibit is actually gaining momentum.
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