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Lumen interview: Antonio Rosciano about Kaleidosoup 2015

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Dear Readers,

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all you. We wish you a lot of light and hope that all your dreams will come true! As a gift we are sharing our interview with Antonio Rosciano with you. He’s a VJ festival Kaleidosoup 2015 organizer.

Hello, Antonio!

Tell us about yourself, please. When did you start to be interested in VJing? Which your projects were first? What about projects you’re working on now?

Hello Eva and cheers to all the Lumeners, I wish a joy and visionary 2016 to everybody!

Well, I am from the South of Italy; I belong to those people who have theatre in their blood and who are used to gesticulate seamlessly to enrich their words of further meanings. I suppose to be a transcultural animator. In fact I am only an art and event producer. I like to work with artists to create new experiences or build communities and I find my full satisfaction when I succeed in foreseeing compatibility between two or more artists which actually work in some new collaboration.

I started VJing in 2001 as VJ paki and it was absolutely just for fun. I was accompanying my friends Valeria aka Nikky and Mitja aka Meta2 who were performing in a squat in Rome called Blue Cheese. Sharing the video console with them I learned how to mix videos and soon I became part of “FLxER abUsers”, a staff of VJs was born around the development of FLxER, which is a freeware video-mixer coded by Gianluca del Gobbo.

Right after that I began to collaborate with Nikky for the visual performances of Coq Madame and Phag Off, two successful parties of the Queer scene in Rome.

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Currently I am based in Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam). A couple of years ago some my friends and me founded a collective of digital art performers called LAV and now I am developing, among others, a project called KaleidoSoup, which is an international meeting for visual-art performers. I have just opened my own company as well; its name is Pandora Studio.

How was an idea about KaleidoSoup 2015 born? Why did you find it interesting for you?

Since 2005 I have been collaborating with a group of friends in the development of Live Performers Meeting in Rome. That experience has been more than amazing and nowadays LPM is a big and successful meeting/festival for new media artists from all over the world. I think LPM contributed in an important way to give awareness of the impact and the depth of VJing as new art language and also to the growth of the VJing scene in Europe, fostering a larger interconnection among communities and networks of (digital) artists. I am trying to export and adapt the LPM formula here in South-Eastern Asia. In this part of the world there are a lot of VJs, but they stay apart by the rest of the VJ’s networks, they remain mostly unknown, they usually have a poor level of interconnection. I think the situation is full of potential now, it is willing and ready to leap forward and I would like to give my contribution to “unblock” it and make it grow up. KaleidoSoup is an attempt in this direction. Indeed there is a group of Vjs here in Saigon who are more than willing to host and meet other VJs and visual art performers. KaleidoSoup is the result of the collaboration of this bunch of Vjs. It is an exciting adventure!

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Moreover I am still one of the directors of LPM and then a sort of LPM ambassadors in South-Eastern Asia, so I am verifying if there is any chance to have an LPM edition hither.

What was the most impressive during those two days of festival? Were there some surprises for visitors?

This has been the first edition of KaleidoSoup, the average quality of the performances was surprisingly high. A lot of talent has been expressed and several projects deserve to be mentioned. Here I can not describe everything; we are preparing a video-report where we show the most interesting performances. Personally I enjoyed particular two AV performances, especially for their poetic approach: “Treatment for Film” performed by Joee & I and Tengal from Manila and “You Are Not Your Eyes” performed by Fairuz Sulaiman and Euseng Seto from Kuala Lumpur. Both of these performances were a wise blend of analogue and digital aesthetic 🙂 Treatment for Film proposed something like an intimate trip debating the artists’ identity over a cultural belonging, I guess. You Are Not Your Eyes was more abstract, an elegant exercise in style playing with colours, shapes and electronic textures, a building of a minimal alternative dimension.

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Visitors remained to be surprised by the variety of performances and especially their impact. The set-up of the main area was arranged in order to wrap completely their sight, with a projection surface six meters tall and more than 30 meters wide, surrounding the audience space. An idea of Daniel Day Long, co-founder of LAV collective and co-director of this first edition of KaleidoSoup.

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How is VJing going in Vietnam? Did you achieve all of your goals and objectives?

The request of live performed visual contents for events is quick increasing a couple of years now. Vietnam is becoming a rich country, and it is very young. The request of entertainment is booming. The consequence is that lately new Vietnamese VJs are coming out like mushrooms. It is a normal reaction to the new opportunities and it is exciting. But for what I can observe the average quality of VJing is still low in Vietnam. Mostly there is a lack of style, a weak awareness of the medium and its language, very few attempts of authorial paths, and almost no stable collaborations between VJs and musicians or DJs. I guess this situation will evolve soon and quickly, like everything in this country. I think that an international meeting like KaleidoSoup will help this process, through the setting up of examples and inspiring the local scene of VJing.

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Remaining on KaleidoSoup project, we are just at the beginning of the path. We have in mind ambitious goals, because we feel the availability of good chances for a project like this our. And I believe this is the very right moment to begin. KaleidoSoup can surely become a reference appointment for artists and professionals of live video sector, not only for South-East Asia, but also for Australia and Far East. Becoming a hub of direct connection with Middle East Asia and Europe. But before achieving all our goals, a lot of work needs to be done; a lot of details need to be cared. I surely need the collaboration of talented and motivated young people around me who share the same passion for Art and a fair amount of luck as well!

What are your plans for 2016? Have you already had ideas about some new festivals?

Well my plans include the strategic enlargement of my network of collaborations here in Ho Chi Minh City, as necessary base for the preparation of next edition of KaleidoSoup on mid December 2016. There are a lot of new and interesting art projects in this metropolis. Moreover I am talking with my friend Gianluca del Gobbo in these days. It seems I will work once again for the LPM edition in Rome this year, and this is fantastic!

At the moment I am also dealing with other curators who organize Festivals and Events in Manila and Bangkok in order to start building a circuit of events related to digital live performance field.

By the end of the year I will have also probably begun to work on the production of a new interactive and contemporary dance project, with 3 great Vietnamese dancers.

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New Festival? mmmm … I do not think I’ll be ready for that before two or three more years. Meanwhile I am open to work with some already established festivals, if someone else should require.

Thanks a lot for the interview, Antonio! 

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El Chuco Inspirations: Become a part of the art at Paradox Immersive Art gallery

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A new interactive art gallery located at the historic Socorro Mission Trail (EL PASO, Texas) is officially open to the public and offers an experience unlike others.

Paradox Immersive Art is a vibrant, interactive gallery where you become a part of the art through digital projections and art installations.

“The space in general kind of looks like this mystic desert space where people think ‘Wow, where am I?’ It’s kind of like traveling but within your own city limits,” said Laura Turón, local artist and founder of Paradox Immersive Art gallery.

The outdoor gallery showcases art by Laura Turón and features artist David Delgado.

“Little by little, it started growing and that’s when I invited David Delgado to create his projection art installation and exhibit it out here,” Turón shared. “The cool thing is that the space is outdoors so it’s kind of compliant with COVID and good for social distancing, we have a lot of space. That’s how this all came about. Just little by little, setting up my studio and the nature of my art, we became this immersive art gallery.”

Paradox Immersive Art made its grand opening debut in the beginning of August, however the installations found at the gallery have been works in progress since 2017.

“The concept of all the pieces is that they’re ephemeral and that they can be installed anywhere,” said Turón.

Turón shared how she started building the Paradox traveling art bus in 2017 and from then on began creating different art installations that are immersive – inviting an opportunity for people to participate in community art.

“The bus itself, to just convert it from what it used to be, an old school bus, that one took an entire year and that’s when I was barely starting so it was mainly just on my own and with volunteers,” Turón said.

One of the installations that immediately catches your eye once you enter the gallery is the Paradox Pyramid. Turón describes the project as a huge puzzle and the pieces built connect together to create the pyramid. It was first featured at Chalk the Block in 2018, “This pyramid took about two to three and a half months to complete, but working 16 hours a day because we wanted to set it up at Chalk the Block.”

“When she moved to this space, I was helping her build the pyramid and I could see the potential right away. When people came in, they liked the installations and I told her about setting up my projections here so we decided to go for it,” said David Delgado, local artist featured at Paradox Immersive Art.

The newest project art installation featured at the gallery is interactive as well and users can control images they see with a dashboard. Turon explains that the piece combines concepts of art and science, “That’s my newest piece, and I collaborated with David Delgado, the featured artists, and students from the EM lab at UTEP.”

Delgado’s installation at the gallery is a digital projection called “Sinestésico” (Synesthesiac) which is based on synesthesia, a rare neurological disorder that affects different senses that get tied to each other. In the case of Delgado’s installation, he configured audio and visual senses.

“I never knew how to draw growing up, but this was the way that I could create art, with technology and with our own movement,” Delgado shared, “A lot of the things I touch are a little bit existential. Things that remind me of real life, so purposely my installation is ephemeral. It only lasts as long as the interaction, and it requires the interaction to exist.”

Both artists said they’ve seen many people come and experience the gallery since its grand opening.

“I think it’s my favorite thing to watch people come in and see them be mesmerized by all the installations and interact with all of them,” Delgado said.

The gallery can be found inside of Hacienda Apodaca (10180 Socorro Rd.) It’s right across the street from Casa Ortiz and Three Missions brewery, creating a trifecta of activities people can experience all together.

Turón said one of her concepts as an artist it to make art accessible for everyone, and to install or take art in areas that have limited to no access to art.

“When people decide to come over here and support us, we’re able to stay open, continue growing and do more things,” Turón shared.

“Community art has always been a huge aspect of Laura’s work and something that I related to right away. It’s something that I’ve always been into,” Delgado added. “So it’s really nice to be able to bring it out here outside where you’d normally see a gallery like this and bring it to other communities.”

Both artists agree that success can come from surrounding yourself with those who make you feel inspired, be creative, and encourage others to do the same, “Sometimes all it takes is reaching out, believing in yourself and not being afraid,” Turón.

“As a community, we can’t get very far by ourselves, but together we can really create change,” Delgado added.

Paradox Immersive Art is now open from 8:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. on Thursdays through Saturdays. You can follow the gallery on Instagram @paradoximmersiveart. To follow Laura Turón, you can find her on Instagram @turonlaura and David Delgado @mister_self_destruct.

To get tickets, click here.

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