Date: Feb 23, 2012
Media Facades Summit 2012

Mimosa

Commissioned for Milan 2010, Jason Bruges Studio’s latest creation is a captivating artwork featuring Lumiblade OLEDs.
Mimosa is an interactive artwork displaying behavior that mimics responsive plant systems.The piece was inspired by the Mimosa family of plants, which change kinetically to suit their environmental conditions.
The studio has used the slim form of individual OLEDs to create delicate light petals, forming flowers, which open and close in response to visitors.


by: Jason Bruges Studio

Filed under: Products
Posted: March 28, 2011 at 11:21 am by Wolfgang Leeb

Fresh Videos! – MAB 2010, Vienna



MAB 2010 is a production of the MAI – Media Architecture Institute, Vienna

Filed under: Event
Posted: March 21, 2011 at 3:20 pm by Wolfgang Leeb

Pixel Sonne – Taming Sunlight

Sunlight and new media are fascinating! Let’s redirect and pixelate natural light! Pixel Sonne integrates the unchangeable dynamic and ephemeral beauty of sunlight to form a media façade.

It is a responsive yet subtle medium that uses the universal language of natural light to spark communication amongst people. Pixel Sonne is based on high-tech devices but evokes a feeling of only slightly touching digital aspects.


The concept Pixel Sonne is about combining natural conditions of public spaces and today’s technologies. This is a way of taming natural light up to a certain extent. The ingredients are: The Sun / People / Mirrors / Microcontrollers / DC Motors / Sensors / Photovoltaics / Internet / Smart Phones

By/via: Johann Gielen (Lighting Designer / Urban Planner)

Filed under: Products
Posted: March 17, 2011 at 10:59 am by Wolfgang Leeb

Travesias by Daniel Canogar, Brussles

BLIP’s new installation for the artist Daniel Canogar marks the opening of the Spanish Presidency of the EU. Between 28th and 30th December 2009 BLIP completed this major art installation in the Council of the European Union, Brussels. Collaborating with Daniel Canogar, BLIP has used its P37 display and PixelBus technology to realise a 37m LED sculpture suspended 10m above the ground in the atrium of the Justus Lipsius building. Conceived as a looping strip of display visible in daylight, the installation allows Canogar’s work to reflect in the glass and marble surfaces of the atrium, creating a very large field of moving imagery depicting migration and the transforming population of the EU.

Daniel Canogar said of the project: “The sculptural screen, [...] has an undulating shape and includes a full loop [...] long and thin, it resembles a pathway suspended in mid-air. The screen displays videos of people walking or crawling, taken with an overhead camera. The images mirror the constant flow of people that cross the atrium. The workers, politicians, advisers and visitors of the European Council animate the building and, consequently, the European project. The sinuous forms of the installation create multiple perspectives as the figures climb over the loop in the display – appearing and disappearing through the length of the screen. The imagery is also reflected on the building facades and the glass ceiling of the atrium, amplifying the visual effect.”

via/by: blipcreative.com
by: danielcanogar.com

Filed under: Products
Posted: March 3, 2011 at 1:43 pm by Wolfgang Leeb