COPRODUCTIONS
All year long, Studio XX accepts co-production proposals from artists as well as from collectives and artist-organizations. Emerging and experienced artists working with new technologies and curators are invited to submit project ideas including technical specifications.
Submit a proposal - Online registration :
http://www.studioxx.org/calls/coprods_form.php
The Studio provides a Linux lab and Macs, video an digital audio resources. Projects are selected based on quality, the availability of the lab and technical requirements. Co-productions carried out at Studio XX demand full autonomy from the artists on both a conceptual and technical level. These residencies require autonomy on the conceptual and technical level but if necessary, the Studio can provide personalized technical support at the hourly rate of $25. The projects can stretch over a three-month period.
During the residency, the artists will have access to Studio XX's computer, video and digital audio equipment. They will also have access to available space on one of the large bandwidth servers - ideal for network experiments and webcasting - and to a dispatcher for wireless Internet connections. It will be necessary to provide a fixed schedule and to book time in the lab.
It is possible for the Studio to cover certain expenses for co-productions, such as training fees. The productions and co-productions are not housed on our web site but we do direct the artists towards servers that can accommodate their work. Studio XX actively seeks to program artworks produced within the co-productions at events as the Femmes br@nchées Salon series.
Coproductions 2005 :
le corps
social ::
http://www.cliquezgenereusement.com/
August to October 2005
Stéphanie Lagueux, helped by Jean-Sébastien
Sénécal
LE CORPS SOCIAL is an interactive installation that integrates
the views of web visitors to transform – or not- a body
shaped out of fat. Le CORPS SOCIAL seeks to gather people’s
feedback to reflect on the idealised image of the body. Using
a website that is both a tool for survey and for action, web
visitors give their judgments about the ideal body, directly
shaping the real-size installation of a body made of fat in
a bath.
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