Dale Hudson on Fri, 25 Jan 2019 17:56:37 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime-ann> Call for submission for online exhibition at FLEFF 2019 |
.
The 21st
edition Finger Lakes Environmental Film Festival (FLEFF) investigates the theme
of disruptions and invites submissions for its online exhibition, Networked Disruptions. Prizes of US$500,
US$300, and US$200 will be awarded for outstanding projects. disruption
(n.): “a rending asunder, a bursting apart, forcible separation
into parts,” early 15c., originally medical, “laceration of tissue,” general
sense from 1640s, from Medieval Latin disruptionem (nominative disruptio)
“a breaking asunder,” noun of action from past-participle stem of Latin disrumpere
“break apart, split, shatter, break to pieces," from dis- “apart”
(see dis-) + rumpere “to break,” from PIE root *runp- “to break”
(see corrupt (adj.)). Disruptions stop the flow
of events, ideas, processes, and structures. They produce stoppages, breaks,
and fissures where old flows are halted and new ones can emerge. In some cases,
disruptions are productive, as in technological and political revolutions. In
other cases, disruptions are destabilizing and counterproductive, as in severe
weather patterns and market volatilities.
Global climate disruptions
consist in unwanted and unnatural environmental changes. They give rise to
rising air and water temperatures, to rising water and toxicity levels, to
rising fears and anxieties. Disrupting consumerist habits, such as use of cheap
fossil fuels to power single-person or single-family (“private”) automobiles
and produce single-use (“disposable”) plastics, is an urgent response that can
be distributed across the world. Networked disruptions
consist in outages, censorship, violations of privacy, and thefts of identities.
Hackers have often worked to unlock content and interrupt the algorithms that
narrow the aggregated information in our search engine results or our social
media feeds. This exhibition seeks
projects that explore disruptions in relation to our natural and virtual
environments. Ones that contribute to broadening dialogues and debates. Submissions
must be accessible for online exhibition without passwords but can
include documentation of other iterations/components like live performances or gallery
installations. Please
submit a 150-word synopsis, a 75-word artist bio, and a link to: FLEFF Digital
Curator The exhibition will launch
in conjunction with the onsite festival in Ithaca (New York), United States
from 01–07 April 2019. For additional information,
visit: http://www.ithaca.edu/fleff/
and see last year’s exhibition, Invisible
Geographies: https://www.ithaca.edu/fleff/invisible_geographies/.
Projects from past editions appear in Thinking
through Digital Media: Transnational Environments and Locative Places.
FLEFF: A DIFFERENT ENVIRONMENT |
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