List of Monumental sculpture projects 2015

  • 1 http://swannbb.blogspot.fr/2015/02/sunday-robot-play.html
  • 2 http://shuengitswannjie.blogspot.fr/2015/02/interactive-reading-room-tea-house-2015.html
  • 3 http://swannbb.blogspot.fr/2014/06/neo-ming-bed-luxembourg.html
  • 4 http://swannbb.blogspot.fr/2013/02/yuzi-paradise-tell-moon.html
  • 5 http://swannbb.blogspot.com/2011/09/12th-changchun-international-sculpture.html
  • 6 http://www.saatchionline.com/Shuen-git

Monday, 30 November 2020

Fmttm 26aug2005. By Shuengit Chow 2005 a walk in sculpture with guqin music installation.

 https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WxxQ3Wskd7_vUR5F3GlGn4jWkcRhbZZ5/view?usp=sharing

Fmttm 26aug2005.  By Shuengit Chow 2005 a walk in sculpture with guqin music installation.

Poznan, Poland. Zamek Chateau.

Fly me to the Moon”, a 24/7 guqin music installation.  This is what was played on 26aug2005 Pale Ink is an instrument with new tunes, musical logic by TEO Keng Chong, and Zebrafish is a guqin composition of songs the style of traditional pieces, musical structures by Wang Duo. Software engineer Etienne Durand. 

Recording by both players respectively.  Interactive structure and interface, conception, producer of the project by Shuengit Chow.

FMTTM is a walk in sculpture for a guqin listening experience.  It is a small enclosure, a MobileMusic house, with a jukebox created for introduction of guqin  music to visitors.  One cycle is approx 15mn.  The public enters a white soft space – the MobileMusic soft house – could listen for as long as they like, music is non repeating. 

The house is best enjoyed by small number of people:  1, 2, 3, max 4 people.

This work has been performed/ exhibited/ presented in various conferences and exhibitions.

I have presented the digital guqin work to new media people, and also to classic guqin people.
The most interesting presentation was at a Comic Conference in San Diego, they have such a good sound system, our music sounds so magnificent there.  Amongst the audience were cosplay players, they dressed up as monsters, and animals, ninja men... wish I had foresight to take pictures of the audience.

Many qin people, Chinese music specialists, general pop culture, visitors of all ages have seen these two works, in Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam, Hong Kong, Beijing, Shanghai, San Francisco, San Diego, New York.


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Samples of time for Pale Ink and Zebrafish – using original recorded guqin database for random generated never repeated guqin pieces. 

GuanPingHu

Pale Ink  26:23

Zebrafish  31:57

Weirdo music selection : 35:30  Xinjiang music

GuanPingHu  39:10

Pale Ink  46:39

Zebrafish  52:06

Weirdo music selection : 53:33 drums

GuanPingHu   1:00:41

Pale Ink  1:07:58

Zebrafish  1:13:13

Weirdo music selection :  1:18:27 Downtown Petula Clark

GuanPingHu  1:22:15

Pale Ink 1:28:49

Zebrafish  (did not write down, should be around 3 min+/:- after Pale Ink)

Weirdo music selection : 1:34:21  cheeka cheeka

GuanPingHu

Pale Ink  1:44:25

Zebrafish 

Weirdo music selection : 1:49:22 La vie est chouette Jodie Foster

cycles of never repeating selections for 24hrs.

 




 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 














 

 

 

 


Thursday, 26 November 2020

Floppotron – Orchestrating Bohemian Rhapsody- Pawel Zadrozniak

 https://audionewsroom.net/2018/12/interview-with-floppotron.html

Talking Floppotron – Orchestrating Bohemian Rhapsody For Floppy Drives and More With Pawel Zadrozniak

December 7, 2018 

How would floppy drives, old school hard disks, and scanners sound together if you get them to play some famous pop and rock hits of the past? Pawel Zadrozniak, a (surprisingly) young Polish engineer, had probably this exact same question in mind, when he started his Floppotron project in 2011.

Building from just one or two to an ensemble of 64 floppy drives, 8 hard disks, and 2 scanners (not to mention one cover after another) over the years  Pawel became a ‘YouTube sensation’. Nerd-nostalgia meets quirky? Maybe, but the Floppotron’s mix of impeccable retro noises and timeless melodies has proven to be simply irresistible for many of us.





We couldn’t help but ask Mr. Floppotron some questions about his captivating retro-orchestra and the making of his masterpieces. You can read more about Pawel on his Silent blog and support him on Patreon.

– Hi Pawel, please tell us something about your background, your first computers and the fascination behind all that. What’s beyond the definition of a nerd engineer?

I am a 28-year old software engineer from Poland. I am a big computer/electronics geek and enthusiast. I spend a lot of my free time on my hobby and on building things – whether they are useful or not. My interests in technology started to develop around the age of 5 when I saw my first game console (NES clone) and a computer – it was an 8-bit Atari 65XE. I was always curious and wanted to find out “what’s inside”, “how does it work” and it hasn’t change since then. I could do my hobby – related stuff all day long.

Talking Floppotron – Orchestrating Bohemian Rhapsody For Floppy Drives and More With Pawel Zadrozniak

!This post hasn't been updated in over 2 years.


How would floppy drives, old school hard disks, and scanners sound together if you get them to play some famous pop and rock hits of the past? Pawel Zadrozniak, a (surprisingly) young Polish engineer, had probably this exact same question in mind, when he started his Floppotron project in 2011.

Building from just one or two to an ensemble of 64 floppy drives, 8 hard disks, and 2 scanners (not to mention one cover after another) over the years  Pawel became a ‘YouTube sensation’. Nerd-nostalgia meets quirky? Maybe, but the Floppotron’s mix of impeccable retro noises and timeless melodies has proven to be simply irresistible for many of us.

After quite a long hiatus, Pawel and his Floppotron orchestra came back a few weeks ago with an extraordinary (and timely) rendition of Queen’s Bohemian Rhapsody.

Splice Rent-to-Own

Check out Floppotron’s take on Bohemian Rhapsody here below…

We couldn’t help but ask Mr. Floppotron some questions about his captivating retro-orchestra and the making of his masterpieces. You can read more about Pawel on his Silent blog and support him on Patreon.

– Hi Pawel, please tell us something about your background, your first computers and the fascination behind all that. What’s beyond the definition of a nerd engineer?

I am a 28-year old software engineer from Poland. I am a big computer/electronics geek and enthusiast. I spend a lot of my free time on my hobby and on building things – whether they are useful or not. My interests in technology started to develop around the age of 5 when I saw my first game console (NES clone) and a computer – it was an 8-bit Atari 65XE. I was always curious and wanted to find out “what’s inside”, “how does it work” and it hasn’t change since then. I could do my hobby – related stuff all day long.


The Atari 65XE in all its 8-bit glory!

– How did the idea for the Floppotron project come to you?

The idea was born back in 2011, during my university studies. I was procrastinating and tinkering with electronics instead of studying for math exams. Let’s make something random, fun and useless from the items laying around, because… why not? I made a setup with two floppy disk drives playing Imperial March in one evening and posted the video on Youtube. The video suddenly became popular with 5 milion views, which inspired me to make something bigger with more engineering involved. The work went very slowly with constant postponing and big gaps between small steps, but I finally managed to finish the initial version after almost five years.

– I need to ask the question everybody would ask – how do you actually make these tunes? 

It takes me 2-3 evenings (sometimes longer) to prepare a song, depending on the song complexity. I usually start with a karaoke or MIDI file which is a digital representation of musical note sequences. Such sequences can be edited in any software for composers or even recorded live from an electronic instrument (which I also do when I cannot find a file to start with on the Internet). Those sequences are never 100% accurate, so I have to spend some time on editing every melody line to get a nice match with the real song. It’s the most time-consuming part.

The next step is the arrangement – every track in a song is assigned to a specific instrument in the mechanical orchestra. Those sections must be adjusted to fit within the pitch range of an instrument. Bass and guitar lines are usually played by floppy drives, the large scanner gets the vocals and so on. When the MIDI sequence is ready and it sounds good on a computer, I use my custom software to translate it into a format Floppotron understands and give it a try. After some improvements and adding finishing details, like vibratos and pitch bends, the mechanical band is ready to rock.

– How long did it take to create such an elaborate track as Bohemian Rhapsody? And what’s your favorite song among all the ones you re-created?

It took me almost four afternoons to prepare an arrangement plus one Saturday to include an old modem in the band. I don’t have one favorite song, but Final Countdown, Sweet Dreams, Africa and of course Bohemian Rhapsody are probably my top picks.

– I’ve read you’re planning to enlarge your computer orchestra, to the point you would need a bigger space outside your house. I bet it will also be a relief for your wife and/or family, it must not be that easy having to live with such a peculiar orchestra! 😉

It’s not that bad as long as the whole set can still fit on the desk and doesn’t make noise 24/7. I have yet to become evicted from my flat of two years, so it looks like my neighbors really enjoy listening to good music.

– Have you already decided on your next cover?

No. When I have a free evening, I usually pick something spontaneously. Some of the songs are chosen from viewers’ suggestions and some of them are from the list I like or think that it may sound good on this “instrument”.

– Considering today’s computers and devices, if you try looking into the future… what could a nerd like you be doing in the year 2060 for his/her retro-sounding project?

Mechanical parts are almost gone from today’s computers. The only noisy component in my computer is a cooling fan, so I don’t think it will be the case in future. Maybe the “chiptune” concept will survive? Who knows…

About The Author







Sunday, 22 November 2020

Easy Thread x1 review very thorough, cura for Easy Thread

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5M5cwkA_GPg

v gd evaluation, the reviewer is a super geek, he opened the box, noticed that it prints in "mirror" that other reviewers did not notice

9/10  for this price range

external fan/or additional fan is gd to add due to maybe over heating filament

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFmufOm64kY

CONFIGURER ULTIMAKER CURA POUR EASYTHREED X1

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gd demo
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVYLvw4ZSbw&t=19s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVYLvw4ZSbw&t=19s
in french v gd
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How to get the right slicer settings Easythreed X1

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vgd

Naomi Wu's unlimited Z printer and 3d Printing Nerd

Naomi Wu's unlimited Z printer 3d Printing Nerd 

Here is a printer that I am very interested in.
What do I need it for?
For this, 3d printed guqin embryo - that I have made a virtual model of and printed in sections out with an Ultimaker which was shown at 
MakerFaire 2017 Paris.

Now, I am at assemblage stage... here comes Naomi Wu's unlimited Z printer!
If i could print out the guqin in one piece, horizontally, it would be fantastic!

Printing Nerd asked what we want to print?

Here, this is what I want to print in ONE piece.
3d printed guqin embryo  for  Carbon Fiber Guqin 2nd generation the WHO


















Swannjie's studio = Shuengit Chow Studio

Friday, 20 November 2020

AI art, machine learning

Machine Learning Zero to Hero (Google I/O'19)

principles of filters pooling rocks paper scissors game


Introduction to Machine Learning




Thursday, 19 November 2020

terra cotta army (ceramic army) qin qi huang di 兵马俑

兵马俑是用真人烧制的吗?秘密终于真相大白,出土才75秒就消失,考古专家大哭【档案】

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IGqS5d6PgIw&t=942s


lacquer undercoat 
epoxy "water glass" coat (gd for approx 20yrs, then, it damages the stone underneath) harms the stone work more than the natural non treated stone
1000 degrees blue, = Chinese blue
if not hot enough, the color is purple = Chinese purple
sectional mould, repetitive modular parts units for body, w unique faces

Wednesday, 18 November 2020

"La guitare et la Mer" 2mn36sec 18nov2020


https://youtu.be/gwis3taP_ZQ photos below: 3d printed guqin embryo, pre assemblage. teacup with hand, pre annealment all models made in virtual world of Secondlife. For things to look "handmade", it must not be too mechanically precise. Even if its made by digital means. Each time you print, depending on the conditions around you, the outcome will be slightly different due to the settings. I care for the "handmade" aspect of 3d printed outputs. The building of a virtual model by hand - not by numbers - makes the creation process much more enjoyable. Its almost like making things by hand in the physical world.



Tuesday, 17 November 2020

"The Who" carbon fiber guqin, part 2

 "The Who" carbon fiber guqin, 3d printed version.

2nd generation carbon fiber guqin using 3d printed embryo (research creation begun in 2011)



























































Annealment with salt

Results: 
45mn overcooked, burnt (smells burnt) 30mn still overcooked, burnt 20mn max!  because the walls of the qin is v v thin .8mm or less.  (Less than 1mm)

Sections have been hollowed and filled w lacquer and deer horn powder.

Prebaked pla bronze, hollowed thin walls 


















typical wall, section, face, pre baked