[Art_beyond_sight_theory_and_research] Wireless Signage, photography, color blindness - artist and director, Sense & Sensuality exhibition
Lisa Yayla
fnugg at online.no
Thu Sep 14 05:18:25 CDT 2006
Hi,
Articles with links about Remote Infrared Audible Signage, Senxe and
Sensuality exhibition,
colorblind artists.
Anyone familiar with the book *The Journey: Color Photography for the
Blind and Visually Impaired (Hardcover) *
by Michael J. Minardi
</exec/obidos/search-handle-url/702-8324506-2024861?%5Fencoding=UTF8&search-type=ss&index=books-ca&field-author=Michael%20J.%20Minardi>
Links
http://www.govtech.net/localgovt/story.php?id=100952
http://www.news-journalonline.com/NewsJournalOnline/News/Local/newEAST01090406.htm
http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/couriernews/city/3_1_EL08_A3MURAL_S10908.htm
http://society.guardian.co.uk/offdiary/story/0,,1870570,00.html
http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/business/articles/0903biz-informatics0903.html#
talking signs
http://seattle.bizjournals.com/seattle/stories/2006/09/11/daily7.html
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/060911/dam022.html?.v=64
http://lfpress.ca/newsstand/Today/Entertainment/2006/09/12/1829459-sun.html
Wireless Signage Project for Visually Impaired Seattle Travelers
Sep 12, 2006 By Gina M. Scott
Sound Transit, Seattle, has been selected for a pilot wireless program
to provide orientation for people with visual, cognitive and learning
disabilities. The first of its kind $1.98 million grant from the Federal
Transit authority and approved by Congress will make Seattle a host city
for the Remote Infrared Audible Signage (RIAS) Model Accessibility
Project (MAP).
RIAS is an infrared wireless communications system that provides remote
directional human voice messages making travel possible for people with
disabilities. Permanently installed transmitters send out signals which
are picked up by hand held receivers when the area is scanned. When
signals are received, users hear specific messages such as "women's
restroom" or "stairway." In addition, RIAS/Talking Signs, Inc. crosswalk
audible "walk" and "wait" systems will also be installed. This will
allow visually impaired travelers to identify landmarks, signs and other
places of interest, as well as increase confidence and independence.
One visually disabled traveler in Colorado Springs, where Talking Signs
has a similar project on the public transit buses, said: "It was really
remarkable. It cuts us loose of all the strings of co-dependence. Just
knowing which bus is where, and you can zero in on the door, walk on and
find a seat."
Although RIAS have been installed before, this grant will make Seattle
the first to have RIAS technology on a regional scale. "This is an
important and exciting project for Sound Transit and our customers who
will benefit from the Talking Signs technology," said Marty Minkoff,
Sound Transit's director of transportation services. The project will
provide a seamless signage path for travel between buses, trams, trains
and transit stations for the Puget Sound area.
As part of the 2005 Federal Public Transportation Act, a three-year
evaluation of the effects of RIAS on work life, education, community
integration and improvement of independence and quality of life for
people who have visual, cognitive and learning disabilities was
mandated. The Secretary of Transportation will make a report of the
results to Congress in October 2009. Congressman Richard Baker, who was
a sponsor of the legislation, said of the RIAS MAP this week: "If the
Federal Transit Administration brands the project as successful and
meaningful in three years, doors could be opened for much broader
funding in the next transportation bill."
excerpt
Warren Davis of Clearwater knows from experience.
At age 16 he was injured in a train accident. For about three years, he
was a "basket case," rarely leaving his Bronx home. Bowling and other
activities, such as karate and photography, helped him resume his life.
On Sunday, blind in his
excerpt
As artist in residence, he talks to schoolchildren about what art is and
what it can be, how he got into art, and everything he had to overcome
to become successful at it.
Etters shouldn't be an artist — at least, that's what one art school
professor told him. Etters is partially color blind — he can't
distinguish shades of red or green.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hands-on art links blind and sighted
Gallery: highlights from the BlindArt exhibition
Annie Kelly
Wednesday September 13, 2006
The Guardian
The organisers of most exhibitions go out of their way to ensure that
punters keep their grubby fingers off the artwork. The BlindArt charity
is now hoping to turn this concept on its head and break down taboos
about blindness with a new exhibition that asks visitors to interact
with a series of artworks themed around the sense of touch.
The Sense & Sensuality exhibition, launched in London tomorrow, displays
work by visually impaired and sighted artists without letting visitors
distinguish between the two.
Sheri Khayami, the founder of BlindArt, says that not telling people
whether a piece of art has been created by a sighted or non-sighted
person will force people to challenge their preconceptions about visual
impairment.
"The only stipulation we gave submitting artists is that they must allow
their work to be touched," she says. "We wanted to break through
traditional hierarchies and barriers in the art world and destroy the
notion that sight is intrinsic to the experience and enjoyment of art."
All the works on display are meant to be touched and handled and the
materials and textures help people explore their sense of touch. Each
piece has a description in audio, large-font type and braille.
"Visually impaired people are cut out of many public art events because
of the perception that art shouldn't be touched and you shouldn't get
too close," Khayami says. "Most artists want to create a barrier between
their art and the people who view it, and that excludes those without
good sight. What we're saying is that art should be a personal
experience, be inclusive to all."
Jenny Cordy, a sighted artist featured in the exhibition, says her work
has always revolved around her childhood fear of the dark, which led her
to explore the experience of blindness in her artwork: "My piece
featured in the exhibition is a light-box in the shape of a huge braille
dot that people can immerse their whole head in. The intensity of the
light inside means that even if you don't have much vision, you'll be
able to experience a sensation of light."
All artists in the exhibition are taking part in a competition run by
BlindArt, with a judging panel that includes the artists Marc Quinn and
Gary Sargeant.
· The exhibition will run from September 14 to October 8 at the Bankside
Gallery, London SE1.
excerpt ASU on informatics cutting edge
Another device is a television camera, mounted on a pair of glasses,
that interprets what it sees and conveys information to blind people in
the form of an audible message or an image that can be touched.
excerpt
Beal secondary school, where Haggis studied photography in 1970.
"I found out I was colour-blind but everything I learned here I've used
in my work," said Haggis who co-produced and wrote the Oscar-nominated
script for Million Dollar Baby, last year's best picture Academy Award
winner.
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