August 07, 2007

Ignite at CHAC this Wednesday

I forgot to mention this in last week's member email, but wanted to let everyone know about a pretty great event that lifetime McLeod member Brady Forrest has been putting on.

Ignite is a new kind of tech night, and the forth one is happening this Wednesday at the CHAC (Capitol Hill Arts Center on 12th and Pine). It's going to be awesome.  Half-baked Dotcom, a startup improv game hosted by Dave McClure, starts at 6:30 and will end around 8:00. The Ignite talks start at 8:30... they're 5-minutes long, and have an automated slide mover that gives each slide 30 seconds and forces speakers to move along at a good, improve-like, clip.  Here's the full schedule of speakers.  Glancing over the 5-minute talks, I'm excited about the first talk, "Make Art Not Content", former co-worker HB Seigel's "Werewolf Strategy" and the last one, "LIFE: if you’re bored, you’re doing it wrong".

I'll be there for sure.  Hope you can make it. 

July 30, 2007

This Week at McLeod Residence

Wednesday, August 1:

Conversation with the Artists: Maggie Orth and Joel Kollin
6-8pm, Hors d'oeuvres will be served

Please join us for a conversation with Maggie Orth and Joel Kollin to learn more about their work in our current Interactivity exhibition.

Maggie Orth is an artist, technologist, and entrepreneur who creates and invents interactive and electronic textiles. Orth is considered a pioneer in the emerging field of electronic textiles, interactive fashions, wearable computing, and interface design. Her groundbreaking work in electronic textiles has been published and exhibited in a range of venues worldwide.

Joel S. Kollin is a Ph.D. student at the University of Washington’s Center for Digital Arts and Experimental Media. Contextures is his series of work that engages the viewer’s visual system by challenging its ability to form a stable image.

Thursday, August 2: Indie Biz Night, 6pm-12am
Join Seattle's indie business community for an inspired evening of mixing and meeting other Seattle independent business people in a creative atmosphere.

Friday, August 3: Rock Lottery 03 Appreciation Celebration, 6pm-12am
Join the musicians of the Rock Lottery to reminisce and celebrate their achievements!

Saturday, August 4: Westcoast Kickball League (WKL) Play-offs Party, 6pm-12am
The Westcoast Kickball League "encourages deep, dark rivalries, intractable grudges, and an obsessive, unhealthy desire to achieve kickball supremacy." Sounds like fun...

Lounge events Thursday-Saturday are open to our members, their guests, and by invitation.  Please email us for an invitation.  We would love for you to join us.

July 16, 2007

This Week at McLeod Residence

Please join us:

Thursday, July 19, 10 p.m. - FREE

The Adventures of Bubble Girl and Accordion Boy (aka Shayne Eastin and Nate Lashes)

Dedicatedtochaos_2

Saturday, July 21, 8:30 p.m. - $8 suggested donation

Dedicated to Chaos, a multi-media performance piece with live music and painting created by Jessica Lurie and Danijel Zezelj. The performance features Lurie on saxophone, accordion and voice and painting by Zezelj, with Will Dowd on drums and Paul Kemmish on bass.

Dedicated to Chaos
is described as a visual and musical journey unfolding in slow-motion before the audience. The performance is built on a formal duality of music and painting, adding the dimension of space to music and the dimension of time to painting. The painting is done in black, white and red acrylic on boards or canvas, and the music is a combination of composed and improvised pieces rooted in energetic free jazz.

Our current exhibition, Interactivity, will be available for viewing.  Please come for these special events, or feel free to visit during gallery hours Tuesday - Saturday, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.

July 09, 2007

Interactivity: A Success!

Thank you so much for attending the opening of our new exhibition, Interactivity!  If you have photos of the new show, please add them to our growing McLeod Residence Flickr pool

I know that many of you have questions about the new pieces, and I hope that I can help answer them.  We've added quite a bit of information about The Barbarian Group's Biomimetic Butterflies HERE, and we've also added this video:

More information about McLeod Mirror can be found on its own new site: www.mcleodmirror.com, which has a video starring our very own Rockstar McLeod.

If you HAVEN'T seen the new show, well... you MUST.  It is open until September 1st. Chris Weber and I will be around every Tuesday-Saturday 10am-6pm.  We will also be open late tomorrow for Seattle Net2 Tuesday and late Thursday for a special performance in the South Room: The Ghost of Kyle Bradford & Corridor.  Friday is Rock Night / Member Night as usual, but Saturday evening our member lounge will be closed for Chris Weber's Rock Lottery at Neumo's.  It's going to be fun -- join us?

June 28, 2007

Interactivity: Opening July 6!

interactivity

Interactivity
Artists working with Technology
Technologists working with Art

Member Preview: Thursday, July 5, 6pm-12am
Opening Reception: Friday, July 6, 6pm-9pm

Interactivity explores the convergence of art and technology with an entire gallery full of electronic art that patrons are invited to play with. Featuring Magnetic Structure prints and Biomimetic Butterflies by The Barbarian Group, interactive textiles by Maggie Orth, a laser installation by Joel S. Kollin and mixed media work by Felix Livni, Interactivity opens with a reception on Friday, July 6, from 6-9pm. The exhibits will be on display until September 1. The Lounge features McLeod Residence's ongoing installation of neon work by Jeremy Bert and Jen Elek and furniture by Gary Andolina and James Reinhardt.

June 14, 2007

Press Release: Interactivity!

I know I say this every time I issue a release, but I really think this next show will be our best one yet. If you've had a chance to check out the bathroom mirrors by The Barbarian Group you know how awesome they are--that is only the tip of the awesome iceberg that is coming to McLeod Residence in a few weeks. See you there!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact:
Maggie Santolla McLeod, Press Relations
maggie.santolla@gmail.com

Lele McLeod, Gallery
leleblixa@gmail.com
206-441-3314

Art and Technology Interact at McLeod Residence

Interactivity Encourages Patrons to Touch the Art

Member Preview: Thursday, July 5, 6pm-12am
Opening Reception: Friday, July 6, 6pm-9pm

Seattle, WA--June 13, 2007--Interactivity, the latest exhibit at Belltown’s McLeod Residence, explores the convergence of art and technology with an entire gallery full of electronic art that patrons will be invited to play with. Featuring work by The Barbarian Group, Maggie Orth, Joel S. Kollin and Felix Livni, Interactivity opens with a reception on Friday, July 6, from 6-9pm. The exhibits will be on display until September 1.

One of the goals of McLeod Residence founders Lele McLeod and Buster McLeod is to encourage and exhibit artists working with technology and computer programming. Lele and Buster have been involved in the art and technology scenes, respectively, for many years, and it was only natural that they should combine their interests at McLeod Residence. Interactivity is the first exhibit at McLeod Residence to focus almost entirely on artists working with technology and programmers creating art and a bold step in carving out their niche.

The Barbarian Group, an interactive marketing firm based is Boston, is currently showing McLeod Mirror Series 1: See Yourself in Others in the McLeod Residence bathrooms. The “mirror” is actually an LCD screen housed in a wooden case with a web cam attached to the top. The camera records the viewer and creates a collage of the person’s image along with images of everyone else who has stood before the mirror. During Interactivity the Barbarians will expand into the South Room and the Conservatory as well. The South Room will feature computer-generated limited edition prints mounted on the room’s lightboxes. The prints are based on generative computations that are converted into 3-D landscapes and given texture and depth in Maya, a modeling and animation program. The result is a series of prints reminiscent of images from an electron microscope used on various alien textures.

In the Conservatory, the Barbarians will explore the physical world through a series of mechanical butterflies, made with Arduino (an open-source computing platform), stepper motors, paper, fabric, rare earth magnets, electromagnets, laser-cut wings and sensors that allow for interaction with the physical realm. These little mechanical creatures must be seen in person to be believed.

The Barbarian Group describes themselves as a group of art directors, industrial designers, interactive artists, developers, animators, illustrators and more who strive for the perfect marriage of creative and technology with interactivity as their canvas. They found fame with innovative web projects such as The Subservient Chicken for Burger King (http://www.subservientchicken.com), Become an M&M for Masterfoods, The Beer Cannon for Milwaukee’s Best Light and Comcastic for Comcast. While the Barbarians have dabbled in installation work for clients, the McLeod Residence exhibit marks the first pure art installation the Barbarians have undertaken as an organization.

Maggie Orth returns to McLeod Residence with an installation of electronic interactive fabrics in the Parlor. Maggie’s work with her company International Fashion Machines juxtaposes the more masculine world of technology with the traditionally feminine realm of fabric arts. Running Plaid is a large woven circuit that combines electrodes woven with conductive yarn, thermochromic inks, drive electronics and expressive software. When the viewer pushes a button located on the frame, electronics send current through the fabric to individual pixels. Resistive yarns in the fabric heat up and the thermochromic ink responds by changing color, beginning a sequence of color-change events and patterns on the surface of the textile. The expressive software controls the patterns and sequences of the color-change events. By integrating electronics directly into hand woven fabric, Running Plaid explores the perceptual, material and expressive possibilities of animating textiles, a traditionally static media.

Petal Pusher is an interactive fabric and light installation that explores the hidden electrical and transmissive properties of textiles. The installation is made of a grid of 21 unique textiles mounted on lightboxes. The patterns on the textiles all derive from a single motif. Each pattern is embroidered on wool felt and tufted with electronic yarns. When viewers touch the tufted areas, the felt and embroidered yarns are illuminated from behind, revealing the light-transmissive properties of the fabric. Color variation and reflection change as viewers illuminate different panels and create different configurations on the grid. Each pattern is available in limited edition of 12.

Joel S. Kollin is a Ph.D. student at the University of Washington's Center for Digital Arts and Experimental Media. Contextures is his series of work that engages the viewer's visual system by challenging its ability to form a stable image. Contexture1  (Portal) uses scattered coherent light to form superimposed speckled patterns that move with eye and head motion. As the three-dimensional shifting colored light patterns seen in the portal are dependent on both the viewer's position and the individual characteristics of their eyes, there is no objective or stable image; the experience is different for every viewer. Dynamic visual noise also invokes the phenomena of "stochastic resonance," temporarily changing the liminal threshold of contrast detection in the retina and making everything appear to sparkle. This effect may be noticeable for a brief time after viewing the work, but will soon fade and is not harmful.

Felix Livni will show a series of four identical pieces, titled The Four Seasons, in the McLeod Room. The pieces feature a repeating tree motif. A developer who works with traditional art outside the office, Felix is interested in breaking down images into their simplest parts to explore how they work and the point at which they stop working altogether. Felix uses acrylic paints, photographic or serigraphic techniques, beeswax, and synthetic resins to create his simple two-tone images.

The Lounge features McLeod Residence’s ongoing installation of neon work by Jeremy Bert and Jen Elek and furniture by Gary Andolina and James Reinhardt.

* * *
McLeod Residence, located at 2209 Second Avenue in Seattle, Washington, is a home for extraordinary living through art, technology and collaboration. Proprietors Buster McLeod and Lele McLeod founded McLeod Residence in 2006. McLeod Residence is open Tuesday-Saturday from 10 am to 6 pm. For more information, contact McLeod Residence at 206-441-3314 or visit www.mcleodresidence.com.

May 30, 2007

Press release: The Barbarian Group at McLeod!

Hello all,

We have some exciting stuff coming up at McLeod Residence! Join us on First Friday this Friday, June 1, to view work by The Barbarian Group, a visionary interactive firm headquartered in Boston. Want to get a peek even sooner than that? We're having a members-only preview on Thursday, May 31. Join now to be invited to the preview and other awesome members-only events.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Maggie Santolla McLeod, Press Relations
maggie.santolla@gmail.com
Cell: 206-715-5348

Lele McLeod, Gallery
leleblixa@gmail.com
206-441-3314

The Barbarian Group Shows You a Better Version of Yourself at McLeod Residence
Electronic Mirrors Offer a Tease of What's to Come in July

Member Preview: Thursday, May 31, 6pm-12am
Opening Reception: Friday, June 1, 6pm-9pm

SEATTLE  –  May 30, 2007 – Boston interactive creative firm The Barbarian Group, known for their groundbreaking Subservient Chicken campaign for Burger King, presents a limited-edition series of unusual bathroom mirrors at McLeod Residence during the month of June. The mirrors are just a preview of what's to come when The Barbarian Group creates an interactive installation during the July/August exhibition cycle. The mirrors will be installed in time for June's First Friday artwalk on Friday, June 1, from 6pm – 9pm.

McLeod Mirror Series 1: See Yourself in Others are not actually made of mirrored glass, but an LCD screen housed in a wooden case with a web cam attached to the top. The camera records the viewer and creates a collage of the person's image along with images of everyone else who has stood before the mirror.  The image allows the viewer to "see themselves reflected in others" in a new way. The mirrors bring a timeless bathroom product into the digital age, creating a twist on the staple that is more interesting and dynamic than the original, while perhaps pointlessly complex. The images are not recorded or archived, so the digital artwork created on the spot will never be seen again. The mirrors will be available in an edition of 100, and the mirrors will also hang in the Barbarian's Boston offices.

The Barbarian Group describes themselves as a group of art directors, industrial designers, interactive artists, developers, animators, illustrators and more who strive for the perfect marriage of creative and technology with interactivity as their canvas. They found fame with innovative web projects such as The Subservient Chicken for Burger King ( www.subservientchicken.com), Become an M&M for Masterfoods, The Beer Cannon for Milwaukee's Best Light and Comcastic for Comcast. In addition to creating web sites, viral marketing campaigns, television spots and software, the Barbarians have ventured into installation artwork, including work for Nokia with Universal Everything for their Hong Kong showroom. The upcoming McLeod Residence installation marks the first pure art installation the Barbarians have undertaken as an organization.

Collaborating with The Barbarian Group on the fabrication of the mirror casing is Ben Durrell, a Boston-based designer. Durrell's work has shown at venues such as the Tokyo Designers Block, Milan Furniture Fair, and the ICFF, and he has designed project-specific products for such institutions as The Center for Advanced Visual Studies (CAVS) at MIT, George Little Management (ICFF), ReadyMade Magazine, Housespecial.org, The Berwick Research Institute, and MKS Design. Currently he maintains a studio in downtown Boston with designer Matthew Christensen under the name + /-, or "Give or Take.'"

Also continuing at McLeod Residence is Disconnects, an exhibit that brings together artists from Seattle and Brooklyn who each play with the tension between their media and their subject matter in an unusual way. Curated by McLeod Residence's Chris Weber, the exhibit includes work by Mandy Greer, Dylan Neuwirth, Salah Mason and Maceo McNeff, Doug Young, Aaron Linn, and Eric J. Olson and runs through June 30, 2007. Ongoing exhibits include neon art by Jeremy Bert and Jen Elek and furniture by James Reinhardt and Gary Andolina.

* * *

McLeod Residence, located at 2209 Second Avenue in Seattle, Washington, is a home for extraordinary living through art, technology and collaboration. Proprietors Buster McLeod and Lele McLeod founded McLeod Residence in 2006. McLeod Residence is open Tuesday-Saturday from 10 am to 6 pm. For more information, contact McLeod Residence at 206-441-3314 or visit www.mcleodresidence.com.

May 14, 2007

Donate Online for Eric Lashes

If you can't make it to the benefit this Thursday, or just prefer to donate to the fund sooner, you can now donate money to Eric Lashes with this form (which uses Paypal):

Donate!

Can we raise $1,000 dollars for Eric?  If and when we do, I'll create a new form and we'll go from there.  For now, let's try to raise $1,000 for him.  Give what you can.  Endless thanks!

Update: For anyone that would like to wear their donation, Noel has let us know that the proceeds from purchases of this shirt will also go to Eric:

Buy it from Cafepress here.

Update #2: Blush Photo has just let us know that they'll be offering a free portrait photo session at Blush Studio for anyone who donates $200 or more through the donation link above!

Additional coverage on Seattle Metblogs, and Stranger's Line Out.

Eric Lashes Benefit

Ericlashes We are very sad to report that one of our favorite members (and a true McLeod by blood), Eric Andrew McLeod Howk (aka Eric Lashes) is in the hospital after being injured in a serious accident. In an attempt to help Eric and his family with hospital bills, we will be holding a special benefit happy hour at McLeod Residence this Thursday. Please join us in drinking whiskey for a good cause. All donations for whiskey drinks will go to Eric Howk.

Eric Andrew McLeod Howk Lashes Benefit
Thursday, May 17, 6pm - Midnight

10pm Performance: "The Adventures of Bubble Girl and Accordion Boy" (aka Shayne Eastin and Nate Lashes)

Donation-supported bar; All donations for Eric's drink of choice (well whiskey drinks) will be donated toward Eric's hospital bills; a donation jar will also be available. Our web site will soon have a paypal donation link for Eric, as well.

April 30, 2007

Disconnects Opens Friday

Please join us this week to see our exciting new exhibition!

First Friday at McLeod Residence
May 4, 2007, 5-9pm, FREE

Art Unplugged
Disconnects Unites Artists from Seattle and Brooklyn

Opening Friday, May 4, 2007 at McLeod Residence, Disconnects brings together artists from Seattle and Brooklyn who each play with the tension between their media and their subject matter in an unusual way. Curated by McLeod Residence's Chris Weber, the exhibit includes Mandy Greer's Parlor installation; International by Dylan Neuwirth; Salah Mason and Maceo McNeff's A Brief History of Outlaws: Portraits of the American Badass; Doug Young's tapestry entitled Mission Control; and Aaron Linn's life-sized Stolen Car.  On display in the McLeod Room will be industrial dinosaur paintings by Eric J. Olson.

The exhibition runs through June 30, 2007. Wine and snacks will be served.