The State of VR

Part of the Merging Mindsets panel series

Merging Mindsets – The State of VR
Freya Björg Olafson in MÆ – Motion Aftereffect, photo: Robbie Sweeny

Event: The State of VR

Date & Time:  Saturday December 7, 2019, 2 – 4pm

Location: The Output, Video Pool Media Arts Centre, 2nd Floor – 100 Arthur St.

VR, AR, XR? What’s the difference? How are artists and tech professionals using these technologies to creatively push film, video, animation, dance and performance in new directions?  Join us to learn from four people deeply involved in experimenting with this new canvas. Get to know about resources and techniques. Ask questions and find out how to get started.

Tickets Available at Creativemanitoba.ca

Panelists

Freya Björg Olafson is an intermedia artist who works with video, audio, painting and performance. Her praxis engages with identity and the body, as informed by technology and the Internet. Olafson’s work has been presented and exhibited internationally at venues such as the Bauhaus Archiv (Berlin), SECCA – SouthEastern Center for Contemporary Art (North Carolina), Ochoymedio (Quito, Guayaquil and Manta in Ecuador), The National Arts Center / Canada Dance Festival (Ottawa), and Onassis Cultural Center (Athens, Greece). Her video work has screened in festivals and galleries internationally, and is distributed by Video Pool Media Arts Centre. Olafson has benefitted from residencies, most notably through EMPAC – Experimental Media & Performing Arts Center (New York), Oboro (Montreal), and Counterpulse (San Francisco). Olafson joined the Department of Dance at York University as an Assistant Professor with a specialty in screendance in July 2017.

Lesley Klassen is the CEO and co-founder of Flipside XR, a real-time animation and XR broadcast company that is shaping the future of immersive live broadcast. We build the tools artists need today to make the content of tomorrow. While at Flipside, Lesley has directed over a dozen VR applications and experiences, presented at Oculus Connect about the best practices in VR design, and helped build out the vision behind the future of immersive broadcast. Today, he works with customers like SuperRTL, co-owned by Disney Television and Caffeine Studios,  a joint venture with 21st Century Fox. In a prior life, Lesley was an improviser, video director, interactive designer and a synth player.

Corey King is an award-winning storyteller and producer, who has successfully worked across a range of mediums including Film, Publishing, Journalism, Gallery Art and Gaming. Together with his wife, Danielle King, he built ZenFri Inc., a startup that merges art, technology and business in a whole new way.

Clandestine: Anomaly, ZenFri’s largest Augmented Reality game was hailed at conferences around the world (such as Gamelab, StoryDrive and InsideAR) as “the most ambitious augmented reality game ever attempted”. His current Virtual Reality project focuses on topical issues surrounding automation, climate change, trans-humanism and class division. The Last Taxi is set in Progress Point, a politically and economically divided sprawling metropolis that has fully embraced automation and human modification, creating a satirical and somberly surreal vision of the future.

Based in Winnipeg, Corey was the 2016 recipient of the Future Leaders of Manitoba Award and named one of CBC Manitoba’s Future 40.

Willy Le Maitre’s artwork has been featured in public galleries across Canada and in New York at The New Museum, The Kitchen, Canada Gallery, CCS Bard College Galleries, Bitforms and the Baryshnikov Art Centre. It has garnered international acclaim including awards from Vida, Spain and the Telefilm prize at Images Festival in Toronto, Canada. His work with Eric Rosenzveig co-produced pioneering generative and networked artworks such as The Appearance Machine and the Fleabotic Hypermedia Nonet. During the past fifteen years he has developed a body of immersive image work that includes Stereo 3D videos and installations, live VRML performances, VR and 3D lenticular prints.

About Merging Mindsets

Fusing our creative and interactive digital media communities

In cities around the world, the creative arts and interactive digital media sectors are bringing their respective skills together to imagine and create exciting new events, art and products – merging digital technologies with artistic practice. In Manitoba, we’re ready to showcase what our vibrant arts community and interactive digital media sector can do together.

Merging Mindsets will expand opportunities for artists to create using digital technologies while broadening connections with interactive digital media (IDM) related companies that want to innovate using creative talent. Join us as we embark on an exciting series of community-building events exploring the digital tech in art and the art in digital tech while connecting the people in between.

Over the upcoming months, we will be presenting a number of engaging arts and IDM panels, an “Instructables” demo day in the Exchange District and a two-day arts and IDM conference.

Merging Mindsets is an initiative of Creative Manitoba with partners, New Media Manitoba and Video Pool Media Arts Centre; and is funded with the support of the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Strategy Fund.

Together we will expand the relationships between our creative arts and digital tech communities to foster new opportunities for collaboration and innovation.

We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts.

Canada Council for the Arts Logo