Tap, dancing on a Palm.

. Art

27.02.02 Tap, dancing on a Palm.
Tap is the spectacular James Buckhouse project that allows users to download and control two tap dancers on the web or through Palm via either the 'beaming stations' (stations happy servers that interact via the wireless network with the same Palm) scattered New York. Among the various styles of dance, the author has opted for the tap due to the relative mobility of the dancer and his good adaptability to the vertical screen of the Palm. Commissioned by the Dia Center for the Arts, the project has been developed with the help of Holly Brubach, a former style editor of The New York Times who now teaches tap dancing in Milan. Are sixteen different movements combinable and animations are made with great care, despite the pixels inevitably 'jagged', showing a fluidity which makes them plausible enough to make them look familiar. The 'choreography' so created may be exchanged by users, and Buckhouse says he wanted to put an emphasis on learning difficulties, as the first combinations are scheduled to appear uneven and difficult, but with the passing of time, movements become more fluid and dynamic. These 'carillion post-modern', also induce another dimension, that of the human simulacrum, the virtual creature to which you can give 'life', in this case pretty and complex as the movements of a dancer. The project will be inaugurated tomorrow and will remain active until July 27.