TV Party!
TV Party! is an experiment in sensory overload. Using the outdated technology of nine cathode ray tube televisions, we have built the ultimate television experience. Can one person watch all nine TVs at once?
Fork, Gun, Cake
Fork,Gun,Cake was built and designed to blow up the narrow and conventional meaning between signs and their associated definitions. By doing so we hope to encourage the audience to see beyond the drone of daily life and experience the possibilities that are available to those who would take time to play and disregard the ordinary.
Instant Paintings
Dropping a 500lb iron ball on spray paint cans. It's a test.
Bio
The Corrugated Collective is the combination of three curious minds, Byung-Jun Choe, M.C. Evans and Peter Roach. Meeting while studying at the University of Colorado, Denver, they began collaborating in 2016 with the intent of creating sculptures and installations that were unfeasible for the individual. Interactive art and sculpture brought them together, and now fried chicken and traditional Korean soup keeps them together at monthly collaboration meals. From concept to installation, and all the trials in between, the Corrugated Collective is gaining momentum.
Peter's Work
Projection Mapping
Projection mapping over a tesselated cardboard surface. The surface was assembled by numerous laser cut sections of cardboard. Modular in nature, it can adapt to any setting.
Syncopated Headset
The Syncopated Headset was built from an idea of natural audio mixing. The viewer stands between two speakers; one plays an audio track of flowing water from the Boulder Creek, and the other a track of traffic on Rt 36 near Boulder, Co. By using a custom built controller, the viewer has the ability to control the playback speed of each audio track with the use of potentiometers. As you speed or slow the tracks independantly, they start to merge, sync up, and mimic each other. Hopefully this helps the person think about how our man-made environment interacts and within the natural world.
All Natural Handbirder
Molded from Peter's hand, this cast iron piece has a speaker mounted in the palm. As the viewer approaches, a proximity sensor (black circle on the wooden portion)triggers bird sounds that are emitted through the speaker. The electronics are controlled by Arduino. This piece is speaks to how humans attempt to control and contain nature, and the staunch and closeminded approach to that. We are not different from nature. We are nature, and so is technology.
Byung Jun's Work
Face
Don't Steal These
Devout
M.C. Evan's Work