Art and Technology Together

Saturday, August 11, 2007

The Utatan


So I belong to this photographer's group and contributed to their annual publication. I'm actually quite proud of the work here, though as usually there are so many people better than me. In the interest of marketing it, I might post again when people get back from Pennsic, but I didn't want to wait so here it is:

The Main page:http://www.utata.org/project/utatan/

The Personal Project page is my favorite contribution because it incorporates writing with the images, some of which you may have seen before. The writing was rewritten a few times so if you caught it on Flickr, where it was developed, it may have changed since then:

http://www.utata.org/project/uppp/item/570872812/

The portfolio page, with six of what I consider my most artistic images:

http://www.utata.org/project/upportfolio/item/510433450/

The portrait page which I contributed to because I feel weakest shooting people and wanted to make an effort to improve:

http://www.utata.org/project/upportrait/item/578820405/

My contributor page which has nine more images of mine, if you get this far.

http://www.utata.org/project/utatan/pantharos/

Sunbeams


Sunbeams, originally uploaded by Mike Palumbo.

Every once in a great while, the natural elements come together. For this to show up down the street from where I live, the humidity has to be high, the temperature has to be high, the rain has to have just stopped, and the sun has to have just come back out (at the proper time of day of course). AND it's only visible as you travel in one direction.

I traveled through it on my way home from work, ran into the house and got my camera and began to walk back to where I saw it. After I past where I knew it was, but didn't see it, I feared it was already gone. I turned around to go home and behold!

I started taking pictures. A couple of teenagers walking their dog came down this road toward me and asked what was I taking a picture of. I said turn around. They turned to look back up the road they just came down and their jaws dropped.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

One Nation Under Clown


I haven't been to a circus since I was a child. When I did, it was in Madison Square Garden, so my memory of it was that it was small, not because it wasn't grand, but simply because we were so far up in the seats. Regardless, that did not take away from the wonder and grandeur of it all. The eyes of a child make the whole world seem bigger, the circus, seen though those eyes seems even bigger by comparison.

When I took my son, we got front row seats. Despite being closer, I realized that the circus is in fact small, but not in a bad way. Movies and TV have us believing that everything intense happens up close, with flashing cuts, and moving camera perspective. The circus in comparison, happens within your scope of view, in one static shot, no cuts, and completely analog. They are regular people just like you and me making a big effort to entertain us within the confines of a quaint and time honored tradition.


Balloons for Sale
Balloons for Sale

No Hands
No Hands

Nothing But Hands
Nothing But Hands

Juggling
Juggling

Gottcha
Gottcha

Over Under
Over Under

Strap Artist
Strap Artist

Cookout
Cookout

Take That
Take That

Elephant
Elephant

Dive
Dive

Human Cannonball
Human Cannonball

Ta Da!
Ta Da!

See the whole set on Flickr!

Labels: , ,

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Shopping Baggage

Shopping Baggage is the short film I produced for the first season of On the Lot.

Labels: , , , , ,

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

See Lion


See Lion
Originally uploaded by Mike Palumbo.

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Breaking New Ground

Today we installed our first Mac server, complete with a 10 terabyte RAID array. Our intention is to use it as a podcasting and blogging service for our University's community. We decided on the mac (despite being a complete Windows shop) because it had the software for podcasting and blogging built in to the OS. The hardware arrived weeks ago, and we were waiting for Leopard's release before moving forward, but the realse date got pushed back and we couldn't wait any longer.

We have a pilot project in the works, and a number of high profile ideas to garner attention and promote the service. I may have to start a regualr podcast myself to kick it off. It should be interesting as we discover the capabilities. We bought a bunch of iMacs and iPods too, which will serve as production stations. The idea is that using a microphone attachment to the iPod, you can record your audio anywhere, return to the machine, edit it, and upload the podcast. Whether it's that dumb easy remains to be seen.

If you had told me only a year ago that I'd want a Mac server, I would have said you were nuts. Times change.

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, April 30, 2007

Media Consumption: The New Debt

I remember when we use to watch broadcast TV and go to the movies when films came out. Back then, if you missed a TV show, radio show, or movie release, you're only hope was to catch a rerun or Video Rental.

Today it's different. With the proliferation of DVRs, Tivos, podcasts, streaming video, and services like Netflix, I never have to watch anything when it comes out. If I don't have time, I can, in some way shape or form, save it for later. With all these tools at my disposal, I can aggregate all my media content to my computer or ipod. How convenient.

At first it sounds like a real benefit. If I don't have time, I can save it for later. But new episodes come out at least once a week, sometimes more. And the whole reason I couldn't see them when they came out was because I didn't have time. As they accumulate, the time I need to invest increases exponentially. It's like having a bad debt to a a loan shark, every week new episodes get stacked on like high interest, and the amount of time I need to payback gets so astronomical, I just want to pretend it isn't there.

"Hey! You owe Vito Video a helluva lot, where've you been hidin'?"

"I've just been busy, I was gonna call you, honest I was."

"You better start payin' or we'll force ya to watch horrible reality shows on broadcast TV. You won't have any choice, your only prime time choices are gonna be Dancing with the Stars, When Hobos Attack, and World's Scariest Purse Snatching Caught on Tape."

"Oh god! No! please! I'll pay! I'll pay!"

If you think I'm kidding, turn on broadcast TV these days and see what they're pitching for show ideas. It's no wonder everyone has turned to podcasts and internet delivery for their shows. But, the simple fact that I have it stored and can watch it at any time, causes me to place less priority on getting to it. It's like when I lived in NY for 17 years and never saw the Statue of Liberty. Oh I can see it whenever, there's no rush. I feel the same way about all this content I've stored up. But quite frankly, the Statue of Liberty didn't get taller or any farther away all that time I was ignoring it. The media, however, keeps piling up.

What does this mean for people of my generation and those that come after? When we retire, we won't be taking off on cruises or lavish vacations. We won't be RVing across the country to see the grand canyon or experience the variety and vastness of this country (unless we can download it). We won't be writing the great American novel, or working our way though a long list of things we always wanted to do before we die. No, instead we will be firmly plugged in with a long list of things we always wanted to watch before we die. And like a bad debt we'll work hard to catch up on our media consumption payments so we don't leave our children a debt of unwatched content.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Friday, March 16, 2007

New Site

I've had this site for years, but much like a roofer neglects his own roof in favor of the roofs of paying customers, I have not had time to do much with it.

Until now.

It's not that I don't have customers, it's that my customers are not asking for nearly as much of my time.

So enter the new website. One place to house my creative resume, and other items of interest. In addition to the static content, I've integrated a blog as the home page. Let's see where it goes...