Book: aminima 17
|
The new issue is as good as ever and contains some very compelling short essays: Scott Hessels and Gabriel Dunne talk about Celestial Mechanics; Koray Tahiroglu and Joni Lyytikainen explain how they make music with light waves; Davide Grassi presents DemoKino, the Virtual Political Agora; Mathias Fuchs talks games; there's an interview of William J. Mitchell, the Academic Head of the Program in Media Arts and Science (MIT), and many many more. Aminima is fairly well distributed in Spain. Those living outside the country can order the bi-monthly magazine by contacting aminima at aminima dot net. Don't be fooled by the very spanish website, the mag is also in english.
Now for the project i discovered through the book... It's called Fish and was developed by John Klima who wrote a very informative essay in aminima about his work, in particular on of his latest installations, Train. Fish is an older project, it dates back to 2001 and as it's rather cruel, it was my favourite. Implementing the classic paradigm of the "first person 3D shooter", the installation, made of a virtual gaming environment and its analog physical installation places the life of a real goldfish at stake.
The game is played from a coin-operated arcade cabinet. The player has to guide their goldfish avatar to the safety of its tank by traveling through predator infested waters. If the game-goldfish makes it to safety, a live goldfish is automatically released from a holding area into a large bowl with other "saved" goldfish. If it doesn't, the live goldfish is released into a tank with a live oscar fish, and is subsequently devoured. |
Leave a comment |
|
I received yesterday a copy of the new 


hey! thanks for the kind words. though it is not *so* cruel, the oscars need to eat too!
Oscars don't eat goldfish in the wild and they don't have to in captivity.
Maybe this highlights animal cruelty but it's interesting that fish are considered acceptable.
What would the reaction be to feeding live rabbits to a starving dog?