Montreal 12.15.2004 – TAC 4 @ Oboro

A rare collaboration with  David Kristian on December 15th, 2004. (see Below)

Transistors and Other Circuits


TAC 4 – Friday November 26th, 7:00 pm

Diane Labrosse
David Sanson + Mathias Delplanque
Daniel Olson
Szkieve

2111 bld. St-Laurent, Montréal – Museum Just for Laughs, 3rd floor, 10 $
note : TAC 4 will be followed at 10:00 PM by MUTEK Micro 10, with Julien Roy, Lena (fr), Mossa, Cabanne + Arc =Copacabannark (fr)

TAC 5 Studies of Multi-channel Diffusion by Electronic Composers (1)

Nancy Tobin
John Sellekaers
David Kristian + I8U
Mathias Delplanque

Wednesday December 15th, 9:00 pm @
Oboro, 4001 Berri – Laboratoire Nouveaux
Médias 2nd Floor, Tix: 10 $ Doors open
at 8:30pm, show starts at 9:00pm sharp.

TAC 6 – Friday December 17th, 9:00 pm

Ælab
Magali Babin
Joda Clement
Tim Hecker

Oboro, 4001 rue Berri – New Media Lab, 2nd floor
9 PM, doors open at 8:30 PM

Montreal – Toronto 04.15.2004 – Pause



Gate, is a Web art project being created for the exhibit <PAUSE> curated by MobileGaze.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25

<PAUSE>addresses the notion of time as experienced in art and through technology. The exhibition aims at intercepting this stream of information in order to provide a disruption within this endless expanse of data—by providing the viewer with a vantage point, a moment of reflection and a slowing down in his/her interactive viewing habits. <PAUSE> will feature commissioned Web art projects by Canadian and international artists accompanied by descriptive essays to be presented via MobileGaze’s website.

Montréal Launch : Thursday April 15, 2004
Artist Talk: 3 pm
Web Launch: 5 pm
Performances: 7 pm
Presented in collaboration with:
Oboro
4001, rue Berri, local 200
Montreal Quebec
514.844.3250
www.oboro.net

Toronto Launch : Wednesday April 21, 2004
Artist Talk and Web Launch : 7 pm
Presented in collaboration with:
Images Off Screen 2004 / NEW MEDIA
www.imagesfestival.com
and (+)
InterAccess Electronic Media Arts Centre
401 Richmond Street West, Suite 448
416.599.7206
interaccess.org

Artists:
Yan Breuleux (Canada) = “Purblue Net.vers.1.2” (2003-4)
Jonah Brucker-Cohen (USA) = “Audiobored” (2003-4)
Grégory Chatonsky (France) = “1=1” (2004)
David Clark (Canada) = “Likewise” (2004)
David Crawford (USA) = “Stop Motion Studies” (2003-4)
Paul Devens (Netherlands) = “Dial(key)” (2004)
Reynald Drouhin + Emilie Pitoiset (France) = “Data-raw” (2003-4)
Peter Horvath (Canada) = “Album” (2004)
I8U (Canada) = “Gate” (2004)
MTAA (USA) = “Five Small Videos About Interruption and Disappearing” (2003)

MobileGaze is an artist collective dedicated to promoting, presenting and discussing new media works. Founded in Montréal in 1999 by Brad Todd and Valérie Lamontagne, MobileGaze showcases net.art and digitally based works; interviews with media artists and cultural producers; critical writing on the impact of technology in the arts; and live Web cast events. MobileGaze serves as a platform for artists and critics interested in exchanging ideas around new media and produces thematically centred exhibitions challenging the uses of audio, video, networks and telematics by artists. MobileGaze’s previous projects include the online exhibition Matter + Memory and a series of online magazine-format dossiers and interviews

Montreal 03.04.2004 – Studio XX


THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 2004, 5:30 pm @ Studioxx

Salon Femmes br@nchées #54 – FUGUES INTERACTIVES

Studio XX, Montreal¹s premier digital resource centre for women, proposes a rendezvous with five sound artists just coming out from months of new technical explorations. As always, tantalising snacks will be provided during this Happy Hour get-together.

Freed from intensive sessions in front of their monitors, the artists who participated in the MAX professional development workshop are happy to present their works-in-progress. They will demystify for you this programming environment that they loved discovering. Why MAX? To learn a versatile new tool that allows for a plethora of possibilities ­ electric, interactive, musical. During the first part of the evening, Chantal Dumas, Kathy Kennedy, I8U and Vera Ronkos will expose the interactive applications that they developed using sound and automation. The instructor of the workshop, Patrice Coulombe will join with them to convince you that MAX is a necessary tool for all interdisciplinary and technological artists!

Montreal 02.05.2003 – Free Radical

FREE RADICAL CONCERT SERIES
February 5th – 8th, 2003
at the Fondation Jean-Pierre Perreault,
2022, Sherbrooke St. East,
Montreal, Quebec

A premiere performance by duo
Magali Babin and I8U at the
Maid in Cyberspace Festival 06

With an eye on emerging artists, the
Free Radical Concert Series features
a range of new music, from actuelle
and experimental to orchestral, electro,
and technopunk.
CONCERT SCHEDULE

Wednesday, February 5th : Electrotext Acoustica
(an evening in Quadrophonic Sound)
Kathy Kennedy
Alexis O`Hara

Thursday, February 6th : IMPROV
Magali Babin and i8u
Haeyoung Kim (NYC Game Boy Composer)

Friday, February 7th : New Electronic Music
Anna Friz + Annabelle Chvostek (Theremin )
[sic] (a.k.a Squirrelgirl)
Myléna Bergeron

Saturday, February 8th: The Great Bitbang
Lesbians on Ecstacy
Nanobot Auxillary Ballet
Haeyoung Kim (NYC GameBoy composer)
Alice and the Serial Numbers

More Info:

http://www.studioxx.org/

Review – Obstacle (Oral) 2002 – by TJ Norris, Soundvision

Limited to only 100 copies, I8U has contributed a fifty minute long track to our dense, temporal sound space. Characterized by quaking tonal forms and unpredictable minor peaks and shallow harmonics, this disc could be called post drone. This is macrosound redux. Parts distance and parts concrete/physical. The canvas is covered, every inch, making for sound in the fourth dimension. Canada’s i8u first presented her work live with video and animation. There are subtle hints of Ryoji Ikeda’s work with Dumb Type herein, but not at the sonic decibel level. This is a visual, sombient, refined take on the contemporary landscape. This is one of two releases from i8u this year (also Grasshopper Morphine on Piehead Records). As a live studio recording this disc has so many secrets. The sensory experience responds to an open field of urban sounds, railways, and mechanics. A gestural highway riveting in its endlessness.

More Info: www.oral.qc.ca

Review – Obstacle (Oral) 2002 – by François Couture, All Music

The first phase of the Obstacle project consisted of a web art collaboration between experimental electronica artist I8U and video artist Gigimatique. Obstacle Phase 2 is a longer concert version and this CD (a limited edition of 100 released by Oral the day the piece was premiered on-stage at the FIMAV festival in Victoriaville, Québec) presents a studio recording of the music. I8U derives all the sounds from field recordings made on bridges. The piece begins with an imperceptible sub-bass drone. Very slowly, other drones come forward. The characteristic buzzing of car traffic remains on the border of consciousness. It’s there, but just not quite tangible or defined enough to make it obvious. The piece continues to evolve through phases of expansion and contraction — a car trip through the streets of a suburb, where you slow down every 200 meters for a stop sign. In its last ten minutes, the piece builds up, first unveiling its source, then gaining decibels to end in a shrieking noise assault abruptly cut 27 seconds after the 50th minute. The form is not new, but I8U does it with grace, constantly holding the listener’s attention in her hands, even though the pace remains excruciatingly slow throughout. The quality of immersion during the first 45 minutes lulls one into an altered state. The finale, made of loops just a bit too obvious, sounds a bit gratuitous. Thoughts of Francisco López, Marc Behrens, and Stephen Vitiello come to mind. This album is not as strong as Grasshopper Morphine released a week earlier, but this is mostly because the extended piece format makes it less varied.

Review -Obstacle (Oral) 2002 – by Roël Meelkop, Vital Weekly

i8u- Obstacle phase 2 (CD by Oral)

Obstacle Phase 2 is actually a work of sound, video and animation,
but this CD only presents the sound part. One long track of flowing,
mostly dark sounds, with an occasional rhythm. The piece evolves
quite slowly and has an ambient feel, but on close listening, one can
hear subtle things that are not very ambient at all. Despite the dark
sounds, the piece doesn’t have a gloomy atmosphere, it has a pretty
concrete character. That’s what sets it apart from regular ambient.
The rhythmic elements are very minimal, so there is no danger
whatsoever of the track becoming flat or cheesy. The slow development
of the work does not cause loss of attention, on the contrary: the
tension is kept so well, that the whole piece is very captivating.
I’m very sorry I missed the performance with the visuals, because if
that was anywhere as good as this, it must have been a great show.
– Roel Meelkop, Vital Weekly

More Info: www.oral.qc.ca