INTERVALS is a series of interactive video artworks that explore the stretching of live video in time to visualize the monstrous time creatures we have become. Using surveillance systems and custom software, the project culminated in an electronic public artwork for Torontos first Nuit Blanche.

The artworks were a collaboration between artists David Warne, Kevin Krivel and software developer Greg Hermanovic of Derivative, who provided the operating and 3D software Touch.

This project was generously supported by the Canada Council of the Arts, New Media Residency Grant program, which pairs artists and industry for mutual benefit.

David Warne (artist/architect) and Kevin Krivel (artist/designer) have been building interactive public art since 1997. They collaborated in the interdisciplinary art collective, Crevice, and have exhibited at the AGO and SF-MOMA.

Greg Hermanovic launched Derivative and Touch software after pioneering interactive art with El Kabong and the Interactive Dance Club using Houdini software created by his first company Side Effects.

Canada Council for the Arts