|
|
When I was just starting out in 1992 to create interactive,
or reactive as I dubbed them, graphics, there was a great
deal of CD-ROM-based content emerging that seemed to miss the point
of computational media. With the digital media publisher Digitalogue,
I created 4 books (the 5th never made it to print) that focused upon
different aspects of the computer as related to the visual medium.
The first was entitled The Reactive Square released in
1994.
The Reactive Square was
10 squares that respond to input from the microphone. After that came
Flying Letters in 1995 which used the mouse as input to
manipulate typographic marionettes. I then created the series of
12 digital
clocks in 1996 entitled,
12 o'clocks that played upon simple graphical time-based
behaviors. In 1998, I released Tap, Type, Write as an homage
to the typewriter rendered in only black and white. To be released in
1999 was a piece called Mirror Mirror that used video input as the primary
interaction means, but Digitalogue closed its doors in 2000 due to the
founding publisher's illness.
These books are no longer published, and the software exists only
in Macintosh format (pre-OS X). A 10-minute video was created in 2002
that documents these pieces that you can now view on Vimeo.
A multi-lingual promotional piece for the first 3 books is visible
here. |