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Nuit Blanche photos

Nuit Blanche was four weeks ago, but I’m reliving the days of having photos developed and printed by waiting so long to show the pictures.

Nuit Begins

I managed to check out most of the (sometimes inadvertently) science-themed exhibits, and liked some more than others.

Do Not Disturb was an anthropology project. Artist Skeena Reece sat in a semi-transparent teepee all night, and you could interact with her through various means of technology, but she was selective about which input to respond to. This is the tail end of her conversation with Toronto’s mayor David Miller. It’s hard to hear, but you can see how he is at a microphone outside of the tent, and she is projected on the screen. On the photo you can see how hard it was to look into the tent.

Do Not Disturb

12 Hours of Power was as disappointing as I feared it might be. The lights that were powered by the bikes were very faint. You could see people biking like crazy to produce a tiny bit of light. It was also very far out of the way from everything else.

12 hours of power
That little lamp in the middle of the picture is powered by the dark shadow cycling like mad.

Beautiful Light: 4 Letter Word Machine mentioned “DNA sequences” in the description, but all I saw were other random combinations of four letters. The words lit up for a very long time before changing. I waited a long time to see if it got any better, but that was it. (Last year the display at City Hall was much better, so I had some expectations!)

Beautiful Light?

The Vodka Pool drew enormous crowds. Inside the lobby of one of the downtown bank buildings was a huge puddle of vodka, to symbolize the volatile nature of money (volatile like evaporating alcohol). People left and right of me were commenting on how they wondered how it hadn’t yet all evaporated, or whether it would make it until morning. It was kind of pretty, and so big that the crowds added to it rather than formed an obstacle.

vodka pool

How to Win the Lottery was an all-night performance art piece. When I got there (between 11 PM and midnight) the performance was a lecture about numbers. I didn’t stay for the whole hour, because I was on a tight Nuit Blanche schedule, but there were some statistical facts, and interesting tidbits: certain number sequences have never been the winning numbers in any lottery anywhere. Lots of people play the sequence 123456 but it has never won. A few other sequences that are often picked have occurred far less often than statistically expected, which makes you wonder how “random” the lottery really is!

lottery

Through a Glass Darkly was also an all-night performance. To celebrate the International Year of Astronomy, the project focused on Galileo, macroscopic and microscopic science, and other geeky things. It was the only Nuit Blanche project that I’m aware of that was in part organized by scientists. I went to see the Super Flammable Babylonians’ performance at 3 AM. They sang vocal quartet pieces about planets and stars.

babylonians
(After staying up all night and moving about the city in the dark, you tend to not notice anymore when your photos are underexposed…)

Right before I went home I dropped by the Ice Queen: Glacial Retreat Dress. It was, oddly, inside the Eaton Centre, right in front of Sears. The location at the late hour (5:30 AM at that point) made for a very weird performance. I think I would have liked this better if it was outside, in less of a mall-setting.

ice queen dress

My favourite performance ended up being a music-themed one. Massey Hall, a downtown concert venue and theatre, was itself turned into a musical instrument. Groups of about 70 people at a time were let inside to sit on the stage, and watch performers pluck giant piano strings that were strung between the balconies of the space. The acoustics of the performance space now became the internal acoustics of the body of the instrument. And because it was 5 AM and I was exhausted, it was all very surreal.

signage

masseyhall
Sitting on the stage, listening to the performance

stage
Obligatory “look, I was on stage at Massey Hall!” photo-op before the next group was herded in.

Nuit Blanche – science picks

Nuit Blanche, the yearly all-night art festival, is coming up again this weekend. I had a look at the schedule to see if there was anything science-related in there. It’s slim pickings, but here’s what I found:

Through a Glass Darkly
All night, various projects.
This one is probably the most related to science of any of the exhibits. Plus, I know people who are participating in the music projects, and they read the blog, so clearly this had to go at the top of the list =)
Science: astronomy, biology, general science

Beautiful Light: 4 LETTER WORD MACHINE
City Hall
Light performance every 2 hours starting at 7PM (every odd hour, but the last one is at 6:30 AM, not at 7)
According to the description, four-letter words are projected on city hall. Some of the letter combinations include “DNA sequences”. Four letters, DNA? My guess is that is will just say ACGT in various combinations, and not actually be the sequence of something. But anything projected on city hall is always cool.
Science: Biology

12 hours of power
Interactive! Participants are invited to ride stationery bikes, which will power lights on a fountain all night long. This sounds like it’s going to be one of those Nuit Blanche projects that’s either hugely popular or one that breaks at 9 PM and just makes people grumpy when they travel all the way over there for nothing. I’m hoping it’s the first.
Science: Physics, alternative energy

How To Win The Lottery
“an all-night lecture performance that will demonstrate a variety of scientific and intuitive techniques geared to winning the lottery.”
Science: Not sure. Probably math/statistics and/or psychology.

Ice Queen Glacial Retreat Dress
It’s a dress tent, and the project has something to do with fashion, dance, and global warming.
Science: Environmental science, geology

Vodka Pool
It’s a giant pool of vodka, if it doesn’t evaporate before the night is over. “As viewers gather around a reflecting pool of alcohol situated on the pristine floor of the atrium [of a bank building], they can ponder the volatile and symbolic qualities of 80-proof vodka. Liquor and liquidity bear more than passing associations to banks and money.”
Science: chemistry

And now I’m going to stretch towards the social sciences, just because I really like the description of this exhibit, and because it’s one of the most experimental of the night.
Please Do Not Disturb
Interactive! “By choice Skeena will try to live a normal life in the space ‘behind glass’. The project is inspired in part by Minik, an Inuit (Eskimo) boy who lived with five others on display at the American Museum of Natural History in 1897. During the performance the artist will invite the public to engage her through various media while she remains enclosed”
(Social) Science: anthropology

I plan on attending a few of these during the course of the night, as well as several even less scientific exhibits. Here’s my itinerary. If you’d like to meet up or find out where I am that night, send me an e-mail at eva.amsen [at] gmail.com and I’ll give you my cell phone number.

Speaking of phones: For those of you with iPhones, Nuit Blanche has released an app that allows you to plan your night and interact with the festival during the night. It only works on the iPhone, and not on iPod Touch, which I found somewhat upsetting.

LabLit podcast

I interviewed Jim and Star about Subtle Technologies for the latest LabLit podcast. Give it a listen! (Pardon the cicadas – there was construction going on indoors, so this was the quieter option.)

Art Meets Science at York University

High up North, on the edge of what is still considered Toronto, lies York University. I’ve never had any reason to trek all the way up there (and neither has the subway system…) but this upcoming event looks very appealing:

Ambi-valent Objects Exhibition
The Art Gallery Meets The Science Fair
October 5-16, 2009

Locations: Gales Gallery, 105 Accolade West and the Special Projects Gallery, Joan & Martin Goldfarb Centre for Fine Arts, main floor
Opening Reception (both locations): Thursday October 8, 2009, 4-6pm

Don’t miss this unique exhibition! Over 20 participants have come together from Anthropology, Mathematics, Film, Physics & Astronomy, Dance, Environmental Studies, Visual Arts, Ecology, English, Engineering, and Social and Political Thought to create catalytic collaborations — mind-bending artworks, hybrid performances, interactive videos, holographic projections, cosmic ray visualizations and much much more.

I’ll be there! I hope John and Nadia want to come along, if only because I need help finding York…

Play – Ever

It’s Fringe Festival in Toronto, and I managed to catch one play. Actually, to be honest, I forgot about Fringe until I saw the vouchers for free tickets in my laundry room. The play, “Ever“, is also somewhat science related, so all the more reason to go and blog about it.

Ever is set in Sioux Lookout, a very small town very very far north. The main character, Emily, has just graduated high school and has to tell her friend Dave that she is going to Toronto in the fall to study astronomy. He doesn’t want her to leave, and neither does her mom, who turned alcoholic after Emily’s and Dave’s fathers both died in a canoe accident five years earlier. Emily, being interested in science and academia, is an outcast in the small town, and even her mother calls her a “weirdo”.

The playwright, Jonathan Hoss, has a background in science: he studied engineering and physics at UofT, and he weaves the science into the story very naturally. The astronomy is light, but the science connections are significant enough. For example, a scientific calculator played a life-changing role in Emily’s social life, as little things like that sometimes do. And Dave makes exactly the kind of jokes non-science people tease their geeky friends with – it was all very familiar.

Whoever of the cast/crew lives in my building, thanks for the ticket! I’m going to do laundry again on Sunday, so say hi if you see the girl who – like Emily – avoids making eye contact with strangers.

NN Pub Night – Toronto

nature-networkThere’s another Nature Network pub night coming up in Toronto!
It’s this coming Monday, January 26th, at Fionn MacCool’s (181 University Avenue, at Adelaide) starting from 6PM.

The theme of the evening is blogging.
Guest speaker Joey DeVilla will talk about the effect blogging has had on his life and career. We’ll also get a summary of the ScienceOnline09 conference that was held in North Carolina this past weekend (and attended by several people from Toronto), and we’ll have a look at the upcoming issue of Open Laboratory – an anthology of science blog posts from 2008.

Drop by Monday night if you’re in Toronto. (And feel free to pass this on, even if you’re not.)

Mailing list for Nature Network events in Toronto

Since my stats tell me that many of my readers are in Toronto, I thought I’d ask this here: We’re building a mailing list to announce upcoming Nature Network events (for example: there is a pub night coming up on October 22nd!) The list will only be used to announce these events, and you’ll maybe get one or two e-mails a month. Anyone is welcome at Nature Network pub nights (not just scientists), and depending on the topic it might sometimes be very interesting for non-scientists as well. For example, the upcoming pub night is about the Nobel Prizes, and we’re considering one about outreach as well.

Let me know if you want to be included on the list! (Comment with your e-mail address in the e-mail field (it’s hidden but I get to see it), or e-mail eva [at] easternblot.net )