User:Quintessence Schism/Sandbox

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

User:Quintessence Schism   User:Quintessence Schism/Sandbox  




 

"

This is a Wikipedia user page.

This is not an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user to whom this page belongs may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia itself. The original page is located at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Quintessence_Schism/Sandbox.

"

This is the user sandbox of Quintessence Schism. A user sandbox is a subpage of the user's user page. It serves as a testing spot for the user and is not an encyclopedia article. For a sandbox of your own, create a user subpage.

Or try other sandboxes: Main Sandbox | Tutorial Sandbox 1 | Tutorial Sandbox 2 | Tutorial Sandbox 3 | Tutorial Sandbox 4 | Tutorial Sandbox 5

Brody Condon
Born 1974
Mexico
Field New Media Art
Movement Virtual art
Awards The Franklin Furnace Fund, 2003[1]

Interpolis N.V. Grant, Netherlands, 2005

Creative Capital Grant,NY, 2006[2]

Brody Condon (born 1974, Mexico, currently residing in New York), a new media artist exploring the use of computer games as an art medium. Condon received his MFA in Visual Arts from the University of California, San Diego in 2002. His education includes residencies at Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, Netherlands in 2004 and Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in 2001.

Artist statement

Condon describes his work as:

I would personally describe my work as visual arts projects that just utilize the materials and strategies of game development in various ways….The goal of my personal work tends to be a process of …trying to understand the links between traumatic events and fabricated memories, spiritual experience, and…constructed realities in contemporary culture.”

Brody Condon[3]

Selected overview of his work

Condon’s work explores the use and hacking of the video game engine as an artistic medium. Through image motion or active participation using standard video game hardware, he forces the viewer out of the position of a passive audience member and into the game as a living participant. In pieces like Adam Killer[4] he uses the pure repetition of game space violence to confront us with the reality of death and killing. While in other pieces like Velvet Strike[5] and Worship[6], the art tends to look askance at the game space, asking the viewer and the participants to reflect on what they are doing.

Adam Killer[7] (1999-2001) – “Adam Killer is a series of eight conversions of the popular first person shooter game Half-Life ….The player/performer navigated through the game “level” filled with multiple copies of the same Adam character standing “idle” on a white plane…As the characters were shot and bludgeoned with various weapons, an exploited glitch in the in the game’s level editing software created a harsh trailing effect. This turned the environment into a chaotic mess of bloody, fractured textures.”—Brody Condon[8]

Worship[9] (2001) - In Worship Condon creates on online character within the massively multiplayer online game Anarchy Online. In the game the player faces away from the game environment towards the screen and continually prostrates himself as other gamers continue play in the background.

Velvet Strike[10] (2002) - in collaboration with Anne-Marie Schleiner and Joan Leandre, the team created “a collection of spray paints to use as graffiti on the walls, ceiling, and floor of the popular network shooter terrorism game "Counter-Strike".”[11] Here the goal was not to promote an anti-violence movement, but instead “the work prompts us to wonder what exactly is at stake in the fictive virtual worlds in which both soldiers and civilians immerse themselves, at a time when real-life warfare increasingly resembles games and games increasingly resemble real life.”[12]

At this point Condon’s work begins to integrate more closely with contemporary times. His next few pieces approach modern tragedies by using the game space to transport the gamer into the event itself. The events chosen, the September 11, 2001 attacks and the Waco Siege, address head on the question posed in Velvet Strike by Anne Marie Shleiner: “But now, in the wake of Sept 11, are these games too "real"? Or is the real converging with the simulation? Who defines what is real?”[13]

9-11 Survivor[14] (2003) - Condon as an instructor aided three University of California, San Diego students, John Brennon, Mike Caloud, and Jeff Cole placing gamers in a virtual World Trade Center during the September 11, 2001 attacks. The game “provoked an immediate outcry on the Internet. Infuriated e-mail correspondents accused the game's makers of lacking taste and moral decency by exploiting a tragedy.”[15]

Waco Resurrection[16] (2003) – Condon, as part of a six-member team called C-Level[17], recreates the ending of the Waco Siege. “In the game, Koresh can run, jump, shoot and hide. Like traditional video games, players have special weapons and can energize themselves. Koresh's energy comes from massive Bibles that rain from the sky. Those Bibles also rain bullets and turn federal agents into Davidian followers.”[18]

After such direct confrontations with modern history, Condon’s pieces now move away from the need of historical context and he begins viewing the concepts of death and killing in a more abstract, yet more directly human way.

The game environment in Suicide Solution[19] (2004) provides Condon with a location to explore the many methods of self destruction within multiple games. While in Untitled War[20] (2004) Condon takes the online game into the real world in a live performance piece. This time Condon “invited fighters from the Society for Creative Anachronism (SCA), a group that seeks to live and fight according to the technology and values of the Middle Ages, to do battle in the manner of online first-person shooter competition”[21] all in the space of an art gallery.

Moving now more towards the abstract in Condon’s piece KarmaPhysics < Elvis[22] (2004), the game environment virtually disappears as we “see a hovering Elvis Presley, floating through space in slow motion like a congealed Barbie doll, making spasmodic gestures. This work was recently purchased by the Stedelijk Museum.”[23] The convulsions are according to Condon “controlled by the original game’s Karma Ragdoll real-time physics system - generally used to simulate the physical dynamics of game character death.”[24]

In a later piece along the same vein, Condon created the piece KarmaPhysics<RamDass (2005).

Ram Dass, the character Condon draws upon in his game, is the former Richard Alpert, Ph.D. … KarmaPhysics< Ram Dass demonstrates the more aggressive video game casualty. In this work, duplicate Ram Dass figures are piled together taking on an overall spherical shape complete with legs and arms jutting out from the mass. Consecutively and frequently, Ram Dass spews balls of fire and what appears (sic) to be bits and pieces of his silver robe.

—Janna Schoenberger, NY Arts Magazine[25]

Recently Condon’s work has turned more reflective as demonstrated in his later piece 3 Modifications[26] (2007). In 3 Modifications he uses the game environment to “update Northern European masterpieces by Dieric Bouts, Gerard David and Hans Memling. Mr. Condon’s digital tableaux vivants — he calls them “self-playing video games” — draw unexpected connections between the iconography of Flemish masters and the quasi-religious fantasy worlds on our screens.”[27]

Rather then using the harsh, extreme activity of the standard first person shooter game Condon now creates “slowly animated, transfigured works that are like moving paintings. The subversive tactics of hacking … have given way to a critical examination of the politics of representation. … Shown as projected moving-image installations from small custom-made computers, these “self-playing” games run continuously like games waiting for the viewer to pick up the controller.”[28]

Sources

  1. ^ http://www.franklinfurnace.org/grants/grants.html
  2. ^ http://channel.creative-capital.org/sps/swish.cgi
  3. ^ Michael, David, and Chen, Sande (2005). Serious Games: Games That Educate, Train and Inform, Course Technology Ptr; 1 edition (October 19, 2005). ISBN 1-59200-622-1, ISBN 978-1592006229
  4. ^ http://www.tmpspace.com/ak_1.html
  5. ^ http://www.opensorcery.net/velvet-strike
  6. ^ http://www.tmpspace.com/worship.html
  7. ^ http://www.tmpspace.com/ak_1.html/, movie url: http://selectparks.net/movies/vcdpal/BrodyCondon_AdamKiller_VCDPAL.mpg
  8. ^ Condon, Brody, Where do Virtual Corpses go, http://www.cosignconference.org/downloads/papers/condon_cosign_2002.pdf
  9. ^ http://www.tmpspace.com/worship.html
  10. ^ http://www.opensorcery.net/velvet-strike
  11. ^ Schleiner , Anne-Marie. http://www.opensorcery.net/velvet-strike/about.html
  12. ^ Tribe, Mark, and Jana, Reena, New Media Art (Wiki), https://wiki.brown.edu/confluence/display/MarkTribe/Anne-Marie+Schleiner%2C+Joan+Leandre%2C+and+Brody+Condon
  13. ^ Schleiner, Anne-Marie. http://www.opensorcery.net/velvet-strike/about.html
  14. ^ http://www.selectparks.net/911survivor/index.html (site is no longer supported)
  15. ^ Mirapaul, Matthew, Online Games Grab Grim Reality, [The New York Times], September 17, 2003. url: http://www.nytimes.com
  16. ^ http://www.tmpspace.com/waco.html
  17. ^ http://c-level.org/
  18. ^ Douglas, Jeff, Associated Press, Game resurrects Waco tragedy and challenges video game conventions, The Wichita Eagle, Jul. 03, 2004, url: http://wacoresurrection.com/media/ap/9071356.htm
  19. ^ http://www.tmpspace.com/suicides.html
  20. ^ http://www.tmpspace.com/uw.html
  21. ^ Bearman, Joshuah, Frag or Be Fragged, LA Weekly, July 29, 2004 http://www.laweekly.com/columns/a-considerable-town/dump-bush-er-never-mind-/9099/?page=2
  22. ^ http://www.tmpspace.com/elvis.html
  23. ^ Stedelijk Museum. http://www.stedelijk.nl/oc2/page.asp?PageID=1419
  24. ^ http://www.tmpspace.com/elvis.html
  25. ^ Schoenberger, Janna. From Game World to the Real World, NY Arts Magazine, September/October 2006 http://www.nyartsmagazine.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=5023&Itemid=183
  26. ^ http://www.tmpspace.com/resurrection.html, http://www.tmpspace.com/baptism.html
  27. ^ Rosenberg, Karen, Art in Review, New York Times, November 23, 2007, url: http://www.nytimes.com
  28. ^ http://www.artcal.net/event/view/1/5808