Nicolas Nova
NICOLAS NOVA
(1977-2024)
Nicolas Nova

Contributed By: Julian Bleecker

Post Reference Date: Jan 6, 2025, 07:27:24 PST

Published On: Jan 6, 2025, 07:27:24 PST

Updated On: Jan 6, 2025, 10:42:06 PST

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Nicolas Nova
Nicolas Nova
Nicolas Nova
Nicolas Nova
Nicolas Nova
Nicolas Nova
Nicolas Nova
Nicolas Nova
Nicolas Nova
Nicolas Nova

Nicolas Nova was a gentle man in an era in which human interaction became less than gentle. He was one of my first and most consistent internet-era collaborators.

I remember quite clearly where I was standing when I first received an email message from him — it was at the first house I lived in in Venice Beach. I had an office room in the front of the house and a stand-up desk. It was early in the morning, probably winter as I remember there being a kind of twilight outside. In reflection, at that time, email was still a bit special and to get an email of substance from a stranger was like getting a letter in the mail from an IRL human.

Nicolas inquired to me, asking for permission(!) to ‘reblog’ a blog post I had put up on my site — I don’t recall if it was on Techkwondo or Near Future Laboratory’s little research blog which was on Drupal back in those days. (Near Future Laboratory was just a name for my website and not a multistory facility with hallway and technicians adjusting and configuring humming tesseracts). I don’t even recall specifically what the project was he wanted to ‘reblog’ — maybe something about an automator for the Playstation Controller I was building at the time as he was (persistently) curious about game controllers, had a massive collection of them in milk crates and such, and ended up creating this beautiful set of cards of silhouettes of game controllers, I think with Laurent Bolli in Lausanne. And, of course he systematically categorized them into a thoughtful taxonomy. That’s just what he did.

Regardless, I do remember feeling excited that something I had put on the network had reached the attention of someone sitting in Switzerland. As a strategem to delay the conclusion to our email conversation, I asked him simply what was it to ‘reblog’? With that, a brotherly, collegial, collaborative relationship began.

He came to visit in Los Angeles on at least two occasions that I can recall. The most memorable was when he took an apartment literally across the street from my house — or it may’ve been across the street from a previous house when we had moved two blocks over. In any case, it gave us ample opportunity to commune and punt around Venice and Los Angeles more generally. He was far more intrepid in his modes of transportation. He took the N°33 bus all the way from Venice Beach to Downtown Los Angeles and from there transfered to a tram to finish his crosstown adventure in Pasadena where he was in residence at Art Center College of Design, teaching a course of some description. (It was the course that led to the Curious Rituals project.)

Some might say this mass transit preference was the European in him, but I saw it more as the curious observer looking for patterns in the evolving behaviors and personalities that would board and disembark as he went across town. That would’ve been a multi-hour passage in the best of cases, as it would take an hour or more by the potentially more direct crossing by car.

Despite Nicolas’ bewilderingly untimely passing, I know Nicolas’ influence will continue in full-force amongst all of those he touched, and all of those who will continue to work and cite his influence. As a collaborator once told me ages ago — ‘credit is cheap’. Let’s continue to remember the way Nicolas’ work shaped our perspectives, ways of thinking, ways of knowing and dedicate our work to create more habitable, curious, and creative worlds as he was always doing.

Rest easy, my friend. Say hello to Sascha and Beatriz for me.

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