ZINE 01
ZINE 02
ZINE 03
ZINE 04
ZINE 05
ZINE 06
ZINE 07
ZINE 08
ZINE 09
ZINE 10
ZINE 11
ZINE 12
ZINE 13
ZINE 01
ZINE 02
ZINE 03
ZINE 04
ZINE 05
ZINE 06
ZINE 07
ZINE 08
ZINE 09
ZINE 10
ZINE 11
ZINE 12
ZINE 13
ZINE 2
ZINE 03
ZINE 04
ZINE 05
ZINE 06
ZINE 07
ZINE 08

BY JULIA JASMIN ROMMEL

This project is based on an artistic exploration of the acoustic measurement of space. Zwischenraum is an audiovisual installation based on several cartographic documents. Some of them are long-term documentations of the relations of different places to each other, others are concrete snapshots of linear distances.

Interspace describes a temporal-spatial interval—a mental state we enter in our routine of crossing distances. It addresses aspects like transitions, restlessness and continuity, sense of orientation or change of direction, which are documented by experimental but context–related criteria and methods. Space-structuring elements such as tunnel and bridge crossings, counter-trains, flight booking data, or curve angles, form the parameters of these movement protocols.

As it is my aim to go beyond factual cognitive analysis and to express the poetic qualities of these specific spatial configurations, the cartography is translated into sound. The Graphical Sequencer IanniX triggers live acoustic events as a time-based medium following a visual system of curve and cursor.

As a resident at the Hertz Lab at ZKM Karlsruhe the focus of my work on graphic notation was not only on creating the sound material, but mainly on the spatial arrangement of information using the ZKM’s Sound Dome sound spatialisation system. The direction of the sound source becomes an important means of describing the properties of the respective parameters of a map. In a corresponding arrangement of the channels, the changes of direction repeatedly addressed in the maps are translated as sounds moving towards or away from one another, circling around the audience, transporting speed and density and velocity of the map.

My interest lies in the interface between reading signs and interpreting images, and how this is related to the potential of acoustic information as a tool for spatial orientation. The design of a “cartophony” wants to enable a multilayered perception of information through the interaction between the two different levels of visual and auditive perception.

Image: Zwischenraum: Interspace Acoustic Catrography by Julia Jasmin Rommel

This project is based on an artistic exploration of the acoustic measurement of space. Zwischenraum is an audiovisual installation based on several cartographic documents. Some of them are long-term documentations of the relations of different places to each other, others are concrete snapshots of linear distances.

Interspace describes a temporal-spatial interval—a mental state we enter in our routine of crossing distances. It addresses aspects like transitions, restlessness and continuity, sense of orientation or change of direction, which are documented by experimental but context–related criteria and methods. Space-structuring elements such as tunnel and bridge crossings, counter-trains, flight booking data, or curve angles, form the parameters of these movement protocols.

As it is my aim to go beyond factual cognitive analysis and to express the poetic qualities of these specific spatial configurations, the cartography is translated into sound. The Graphical Sequencer IanniX triggers live acoustic events as a time-based medium following a visual system of curve and cursor.

As a resident at the Hertz Lab at ZKM Karlsruhe the focus of my work on graphic notation was not only on creating the sound material, but mainly on the spatial arrangement of information using the ZKM’s Sound Dome sound spatialisation system. The direction of the sound source becomes an important means of describing the properties of the respective parameters of a map. In a corresponding arrangement of the channels, the changes of direction repeatedly addressed in the maps are translated as sounds moving towards or away from one another, circling around the audience, transporting speed and density and velocity of the map.

My interest lies in the interface between reading signs and interpreting images, and how this is related to the potential of acoustic information as a tool for spatial orientation. The design of a “cartophony” wants to enable a multilayered perception of information through the interaction between the two different levels of visual and auditive perception.

Image: Zwischenraum: Interspace Acoustic Catrography by Julia Jasmin Rommel

Julia Jasmin Rommel is an artist working with information and spacial concepts.

download filedownload filedownload filedownload filedownload file
No items found.

BY JULIA JASMIN ROMMEL

This project is based on an artistic exploration of the acoustic measurement of space. Zwischenraum is an audiovisual installation based on several cartographic documents. Some of them are long-term documentations of the relations of different places to each other, others are concrete snapshots of linear distances.

Interspace describes a temporal-spatial interval—a mental state we enter in our routine of crossing distances. It addresses aspects like transitions, restlessness and continuity, sense of orientation or change of direction, which are documented by experimental but context–related criteria and methods. Space-structuring elements such as tunnel and bridge crossings, counter-trains, flight booking data, or curve angles, form the parameters of these movement protocols.

As it is my aim to go beyond factual cognitive analysis and to express the poetic qualities of these specific spatial configurations, the cartography is translated into sound. The Graphical Sequencer IanniX triggers live acoustic events as a time-based medium following a visual system of curve and cursor.

As a resident at the Hertz Lab at ZKM Karlsruhe the focus of my work on graphic notation was not only on creating the sound material, but mainly on the spatial arrangement of information using the ZKM’s Sound Dome sound spatialisation system. The direction of the sound source becomes an important means of describing the properties of the respective parameters of a map. In a corresponding arrangement of the channels, the changes of direction repeatedly addressed in the maps are translated as sounds moving towards or away from one another, circling around the audience, transporting speed and density and velocity of the map.

My interest lies in the interface between reading signs and interpreting images, and how this is related to the potential of acoustic information as a tool for spatial orientation. The design of a “cartophony” wants to enable a multilayered perception of information through the interaction between the two different levels of visual and auditive perception.

Image: Zwischenraum: Interspace Acoustic Catrography by Julia Jasmin Rommel

This project is based on an artistic exploration of the acoustic measurement of space. Zwischenraum is an audiovisual installation based on several cartographic documents. Some of them are long-term documentations of the relations of different places to each other, others are concrete snapshots of linear distances.

Interspace describes a temporal-spatial interval—a mental state we enter in our routine of crossing distances. It addresses aspects like transitions, restlessness and continuity, sense of orientation or change of direction, which are documented by experimental but context–related criteria and methods. Space-structuring elements such as tunnel and bridge crossings, counter-trains, flight booking data, or curve angles, form the parameters of these movement protocols.

As it is my aim to go beyond factual cognitive analysis and to express the poetic qualities of these specific spatial configurations, the cartography is translated into sound. The Graphical Sequencer IanniX triggers live acoustic events as a time-based medium following a visual system of curve and cursor.

As a resident at the Hertz Lab at ZKM Karlsruhe the focus of my work on graphic notation was not only on creating the sound material, but mainly on the spatial arrangement of information using the ZKM’s Sound Dome sound spatialisation system. The direction of the sound source becomes an important means of describing the properties of the respective parameters of a map. In a corresponding arrangement of the channels, the changes of direction repeatedly addressed in the maps are translated as sounds moving towards or away from one another, circling around the audience, transporting speed and density and velocity of the map.

My interest lies in the interface between reading signs and interpreting images, and how this is related to the potential of acoustic information as a tool for spatial orientation. The design of a “cartophony” wants to enable a multilayered perception of information through the interaction between the two different levels of visual and auditive perception.

Image: Zwischenraum: Interspace Acoustic Catrography by Julia Jasmin Rommel

No items found.

Julia Jasmin Rommel is an artist working with information and spacial concepts.

download filedownload filedownload filedownload filedownload file

BY JULIA JASMIN ROMMEL

This project is based on an artistic exploration of the acoustic measurement of space. Zwischenraum is an audiovisual installation based on several cartographic documents. Some of them are long-term documentations of the relations of different places to each other, others are concrete snapshots of linear distances.

Interspace describes a temporal-spatial interval—a mental state we enter in our routine of crossing distances. It addresses aspects like transitions, restlessness and continuity, sense of orientation or change of direction, which are documented by experimental but context–related criteria and methods. Space-structuring elements such as tunnel and bridge crossings, counter-trains, flight booking data, or curve angles, form the parameters of these movement protocols.

As it is my aim to go beyond factual cognitive analysis and to express the poetic qualities of these specific spatial configurations, the cartography is translated into sound. The Graphical Sequencer IanniX triggers live acoustic events as a time-based medium following a visual system of curve and cursor.

As a resident at the Hertz Lab at ZKM Karlsruhe the focus of my work on graphic notation was not only on creating the sound material, but mainly on the spatial arrangement of information using the ZKM’s Sound Dome sound spatialisation system. The direction of the sound source becomes an important means of describing the properties of the respective parameters of a map. In a corresponding arrangement of the channels, the changes of direction repeatedly addressed in the maps are translated as sounds moving towards or away from one another, circling around the audience, transporting speed and density and velocity of the map.

My interest lies in the interface between reading signs and interpreting images, and how this is related to the potential of acoustic information as a tool for spatial orientation. The design of a “cartophony” wants to enable a multilayered perception of information through the interaction between the two different levels of visual and auditive perception.

Image: Zwischenraum: Interspace Acoustic Catrography by Julia Jasmin Rommel

This project is based on an artistic exploration of the acoustic measurement of space. Zwischenraum is an audiovisual installation based on several cartographic documents. Some of them are long-term documentations of the relations of different places to each other, others are concrete snapshots of linear distances.

Interspace describes a temporal-spatial interval—a mental state we enter in our routine of crossing distances. It addresses aspects like transitions, restlessness and continuity, sense of orientation or change of direction, which are documented by experimental but context–related criteria and methods. Space-structuring elements such as tunnel and bridge crossings, counter-trains, flight booking data, or curve angles, form the parameters of these movement protocols.

As it is my aim to go beyond factual cognitive analysis and to express the poetic qualities of these specific spatial configurations, the cartography is translated into sound. The Graphical Sequencer IanniX triggers live acoustic events as a time-based medium following a visual system of curve and cursor.

As a resident at the Hertz Lab at ZKM Karlsruhe the focus of my work on graphic notation was not only on creating the sound material, but mainly on the spatial arrangement of information using the ZKM’s Sound Dome sound spatialisation system. The direction of the sound source becomes an important means of describing the properties of the respective parameters of a map. In a corresponding arrangement of the channels, the changes of direction repeatedly addressed in the maps are translated as sounds moving towards or away from one another, circling around the audience, transporting speed and density and velocity of the map.

My interest lies in the interface between reading signs and interpreting images, and how this is related to the potential of acoustic information as a tool for spatial orientation. The design of a “cartophony” wants to enable a multilayered perception of information through the interaction between the two different levels of visual and auditive perception.

Image: Zwischenraum: Interspace Acoustic Catrography by Julia Jasmin Rommel

No items found.

Julia Jasmin Rommel is an artist working with information and spacial concepts.

download filedownload filedownload filedownload filedownload file

BY JULIA JASMIN ROMMEL

This project is based on an artistic exploration of the acoustic measurement of space. Zwischenraum is an audiovisual installation based on several cartographic documents. Some of them are long-term documentations of the relations of different places to each other, others are concrete snapshots of linear distances.

Interspace describes a temporal-spatial interval—a mental state we enter in our routine of crossing distances. It addresses aspects like transitions, restlessness and continuity, sense of orientation or change of direction, which are documented by experimental but context–related criteria and methods. Space-structuring elements such as tunnel and bridge crossings, counter-trains, flight booking data, or curve angles, form the parameters of these movement protocols.

As it is my aim to go beyond factual cognitive analysis and to express the poetic qualities of these specific spatial configurations, the cartography is translated into sound. The Graphical Sequencer IanniX triggers live acoustic events as a time-based medium following a visual system of curve and cursor.

As a resident at the Hertz Lab at ZKM Karlsruhe the focus of my work on graphic notation was not only on creating the sound material, but mainly on the spatial arrangement of information using the ZKM’s Sound Dome sound spatialisation system. The direction of the sound source becomes an important means of describing the properties of the respective parameters of a map. In a corresponding arrangement of the channels, the changes of direction repeatedly addressed in the maps are translated as sounds moving towards or away from one another, circling around the audience, transporting speed and density and velocity of the map.

My interest lies in the interface between reading signs and interpreting images, and how this is related to the potential of acoustic information as a tool for spatial orientation. The design of a “cartophony” wants to enable a multilayered perception of information through the interaction between the two different levels of visual and auditive perception.

Image: Zwischenraum: Interspace Acoustic Catrography by Julia Jasmin Rommel

This project is based on an artistic exploration of the acoustic measurement of space. Zwischenraum is an audiovisual installation based on several cartographic documents. Some of them are long-term documentations of the relations of different places to each other, others are concrete snapshots of linear distances.

Interspace describes a temporal-spatial interval—a mental state we enter in our routine of crossing distances. It addresses aspects like transitions, restlessness and continuity, sense of orientation or change of direction, which are documented by experimental but context–related criteria and methods. Space-structuring elements such as tunnel and bridge crossings, counter-trains, flight booking data, or curve angles, form the parameters of these movement protocols.

As it is my aim to go beyond factual cognitive analysis and to express the poetic qualities of these specific spatial configurations, the cartography is translated into sound. The Graphical Sequencer IanniX triggers live acoustic events as a time-based medium following a visual system of curve and cursor.

As a resident at the Hertz Lab at ZKM Karlsruhe the focus of my work on graphic notation was not only on creating the sound material, but mainly on the spatial arrangement of information using the ZKM’s Sound Dome sound spatialisation system. The direction of the sound source becomes an important means of describing the properties of the respective parameters of a map. In a corresponding arrangement of the channels, the changes of direction repeatedly addressed in the maps are translated as sounds moving towards or away from one another, circling around the audience, transporting speed and density and velocity of the map.

My interest lies in the interface between reading signs and interpreting images, and how this is related to the potential of acoustic information as a tool for spatial orientation. The design of a “cartophony” wants to enable a multilayered perception of information through the interaction between the two different levels of visual and auditive perception.

Image: Zwischenraum: Interspace Acoustic Catrography by Julia Jasmin Rommel

No items found.

Julia Jasmin Rommel is an artist working with information and spacial concepts.

download filedownload filedownload filedownload filedownload file