This original version used ultrasonic
frequency (i.e. sonar) to triangulate and detect user position
in a small 3D area, a method comparable to the way ships use
sonar to send a ping to the ocean floor and, thereby, calculate
the ocean's depth by using the speed of sound divided by the
time it takes for the ping to return to the ship. Experimentation
with GASP by the Montréal-based performance ensemble PoMoCoMo
resulted in the first major performance using this technology,
Theory in Your Ear (1989), a work co-written by Bauer,
,
Andreas Kitzmann, Kim Sawchuck, Steve Gibson, Mark Bell and others,
for Articule Gallery in Montréal. Worn by dancer Beth
Kotecki, the tracker was a large, cumbersome plate mic that in
its beta version only worked sporadically. A slightly more refined
version of the system was produced and used for PoMoCoMo's Eastern
Canadian/US tour in 1991-92 of ImMediaCy, a piece that
premiered at the Music Gallery in Toronto and went on to Ars
Electronica in Austria in 1992.
The shift from GASP to GAMS resulted
in Objects of Ritual (Fig. 2), a work created by Bauer
and Gibson for the Art and Virtual Environments program
at the Banff Centre for the Arts (1993-94), and a slightly more
reliable GAMS version premiered at
Figure 2. Will Bauer and Steve
Gibson's Objects of Ritual
4Cyberconf at the Banff Centre.
It was this version that in 1995 Bauer licensed to Martin Lighting
of Denmark. Renamed the Martin Lighting Director (MLD), it offered
a graphical software interface developed by Conroy Badger and
Lozano-Hemmer. The software allowed for a graphical mapping of
3D space and presented space similar to the way Photoshop does,
with different layers of media available to be assigned to lighting
or MIDI data. The MLD was considerably more reliable than previous
GAMS version and, while still difficult to setup, it was generally
completely functional. Though while this version still functioned
as a ultrasonic, non-networked system and collaboration between
one user and the devices found in one space, it did offer 3D
mapping, which allowed for full recognition of bodily movement
by sensors in that space. (Fig. 3)
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Figure 3. Graphical Mapping of
3D Space
Two of the first uses of this
version of the tracking system were by Lozano-Hemmer and Gibson and by Lozano-Hemmer and Bauer. The latter went on
to international recognition. Following their successful collaboration
with the new system, Lozano-Hemmer went on to produce (1997) and (1997),
both part of the Relational Architecture series by
Lozano-Hemmer (with Bauer). The latter piece received an Honorable
Mention at Ars Electronica in 1998. Gibson went on to use the
system in his solo piece, ,
a co-production of The Banff Centre and karlstad University, Sweden,
performed also at several venues in North America and Europe,
including the Banff Centre, Open Space in Victoria, Canada, and
Artnode in Stockholm. (Fig. 4)
Figure 4. Gibson's telebody
Early in the new millennium,
Bauer broke with Martin and reverted the system back to its former
nameThe Gesture and Media System (GAMS). At this time
Acoustic Positioning Research (APR), the company Bauer founded,
began working on an infrared version of the tracking system.
The infrared system differed
from the ultrasonic version in that it used trackers with infrared
emitters and four Firewire cameras with infrared filters. This
design allowed the cameras to "see" the trackers since
the filters removed all light sources from the camera views except
for infrared sources, meaning that the system could work
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