MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Friday November 08, 2024
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, 12:29, 18 July 2010
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<td><img src="http://akahele.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/180px-wikipedia_art-copy-150x150.jpg" alt="Wikipedia Art logo" /></td>
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<td class="photocaption" style="text-align: left;">Official logo of the Wikipedia Art project</td>
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Those of you who have been following this blog will certainly remember the two articles which have been posted <a href="http://akahele.org/2009/03/in-the-eye-of-the-beholder/">here</a> and <a href="http://akahele.org/2009/04/the-trade-of-free-culture/">here</a> about Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern's <a href="http://www.wikipediaart.org ">Wikipedia Art project</a>. Kildall and Stern have opened up their project to all artists in a series of <a href="http://wikipediaart.org/remixes/">Wikipedia Art Remixes</a>, which will be presented as part of <a href="http://padiglioneinternet.com/">Padiglione Internet</a> (the Internet Pavilion) for the Venice Biennale as the <em>Wikipedia Art Embassy</em>.
<em>Akahele</em> is proud to be part of this exciting initiative with two works inspired by the Wikipedia Art project.
Paul Wehage's <em>Cypher Variations : Wikipedia Art Remixed</em> for chamber orchestra is a short two-minute conceptional work. The piece is based around two cells, one of which spells "Wikipedia", presented in the winds/brass/harp/celesta/percussion which has a block-like, rather mandarin quality. The other cell spells out "Art" in the strings, and has a more active character. The two motives almost fit together, but the juxtaposition of B natural/B flat creates an inherent tension which causes them to repel, in the same way that Wikipedia Art was repelled from Wikipedia. The tympani part beginning around 1:00 is the musical illustration of a prominent Wikipedia editor who stated that <a href="http://davidgerard.co.uk/notes/2008/12/10/what-a-pip/">he danced on the skulls of his opponents</a>.
The work may be heard <a href="http://independentartistscompany.com/songs.aspx?SongID=74586&ArtistID=12612">here</a>.
Wehage's orchestral prelude was then used by Gregory Kohs as the basis of his "Wikipedia Art : a Musical Manifesto".
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<em>Akahele</em> encourages other artists to participate in this initiative by creating their own <em>Wikipedia Art </em>remixes, uploading the remixed <em>Wikipedia Art</em> work somewhere on the Internet (YouTube, Vimeo, Flickr, Facebook, your own site), and then sending a link to: <strong>remix</strong> [at] <strong>wikipediaart</strong> [dot] <strong>org</strong>.
The Wikipedia Art logo is reproduced here under a Creative Commons license with the permission of Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern.