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Exploring the Link Between Digital and Literary Art PDF Print E-mail
Written by Doug Ramsey - UC San Diego   
Sunday, 16 November 2008

"Scalable City" artist Sheldon Brown (at right) demonstrates the interactive art installation produced in his Experimental Game Lab. The exhibition in the gallery@calit2 runs through December 15San Diego, California - “Scalable City” - a new exhibit in the newest gallery space on the UC San Diego campus - will be the backdrop for a talk by the artist and readings by two well-known writers reflecting on the meaning of the interactive artwork - and how digital and literary art intersect.

The session, “Speculating on Nature and Culture through Art and Literature,” will take place on Tuesday, December 2 at 5:30 p.m. in UC San Diego’s Atkinson Hall. The UCSD division of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2) and the Center for Research in Computing and the Arts (CRCA) will host the evening in connection with new-media artist Sheldon Brown’s “Scalable City,” currently on display in the gallery@calit2.

The artist talk and readings by writers Geoff Ryman and Kim Stanley Robinson will take place in Atkinson Hall’s Calit2 Auditorium, with those on stage dwarfed by the vast digital-cinema screen displaying a version of the “Scalable City” digital artwork in the highest-resolution video project format. Commonly called 4K – a reference to its roughly 4,000 horizontal pixels – Calit2’s state-of-the-art projection system offers four times the resolution of high-definition TV.

“Scalable City” is an interactive piece in which viewers steer through a replicating urban environment. It opened to the public on Oct. 23 and runs through Dec. 15 in the gallery@calit2.

Artist Sheldon Brown – who is Calit2’s Artist in Residence and also Director of CRCA – will talk about the genesis of the project and its multiple incarnations – including the large-format 4K video, as well as the interactive version, prints and sculptures on display in the gallery@calit2.

Widely acclaimed and seen in various versions at international venues including Austria’s Ars Electronica, The Exploratorium in San Francisco, and the Museum of Contemporary Art Shanghai, “Scalable City” has resonated with critics, the public, artists – and writers, including Geoff Ryman.

Photo of landscape of Scalable City
Computer algorithms create a landscape, carve roads and distribute houses in the “Scalable City” as imagined by Calit2 artist in residence Sheldon Brown.

The Canadian-born, UK-based writer is currently Writer in Residence at CRCA, which is also based in Atkinson Hall. “I want games that build things. Many of them do, but few so deliriously as Scalable City, which does several delicious things at once,” wrote Ryman in an essay for the exhibition catalogue. “It grows at high speed, like life. It expands and becomes more complex and gives me more and more to see. That’s how the world seems to me. I go to a new country and suddenly it’s as if the world grew a new arm or leg. It is gratuitously exciting.”

Ryman has written a new short story, “Care,” set in the world of the Scalable City, which he has described as a “breathtakingly visual” artwork. The story will have its premiere during the reading.  The author will also read from his just-published novel, “The King's Last Song.”

Distinguished science-fiction author Kim Stanley Robinson, who received his B.A. from Muir College and his Ph.D. in Literature of UC San Diego, will be reading from his Orange County trilogy, also to a background of early digital artwork from Sheldon Brown.

Unusually, Ryman and Robinson will also be performing from each other's work. Both are skilled performers of their own writing, but in this case, they are looking forward to the chance to act each other's fiction. Kim Stanley Robinson and Geoff Ryman have worked together in the past through their affiliation with the Clarion Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers’ Workshop, now held annually at UC San Diego (http://clarion.ucsd.edu/).


“I've long admired Kim Stanley Robinson's novels, and we've been friends for years, so this will be a treat,” said Ryman. “I can't wait to read aloud the selection I've made from his novel, ‘The Years of Rice and Salt.’ For years Stan has been known as a humanist science-fiction writer, partly because of the depth of his characters.  They're very actable, performable.”

Geoff Ryman is also known for creating one of the earliest online hypertext novels, 253, winner of the Philip K Dick Award. The novel is still available at www.ryman-novel.com.  As a visiting professor from the United Kingdom, Ryman is also currently teaching a workshop for the UCSD Department of Literature on ‘irrealistic’ fiction.

As Writer in Residence at CRCA, Ryman is also taking part in a collaborative multimedia/online opera project with UCSD music professor Shlomo Dubnov, “Kamza Bar Kamza,” which had its premiere at Calit2 last March. [For more information, go to http://kamzabarkamza.com or http://kamzaandbarkamza.wikidot.com.

 
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