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Table of Contents: [pivf.org] 2002 Palestine International Video Festival "Palestine Video Festival" <info@pivf.org> Paul D. Miller remixes Marcel Duchamp at L.A. MOCA "Paul D. Miller" <anansi1@earthlink.net> PLUG AND PLAY / SUNDAY / 17/11/2002 / 6PM "pnp" <pnp@gabba.net> *streaming interfiction* Audio-Livestream schwarze@student.uni-kassel.de TV or NOT TV / LA Freewaves=?ISO-8859-1?B?uQ==?= 8th Celebration of Experiment Jose-Carlos Mariategui <jcm@ata.org.pe> Version>03 call for ideas edmar <ed@lumpen.com> PLEASE POST Pamela Grant-Ryan <pgr@sfsu.edu> "VIRTUAL ART" by Oliver Grau: Lecture Series "Patrick Hutsch" <h0444fxz@student.hu-berlin.de> Soft season at inIVA: Film programme "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Break 2.2 Festival - Call for applications - Invisible Threat jaka zeleznikar <jaka@jaka.org> ray johnson talk, London matthew fuller <fuller@xs4all.nl> ULTRASOUND 2002 UPDATE // medialounge // #13 // "medialounge_list" <medialounge_list@druh.co.uk> (by way of richard barbrook) ICT Conference in St. Petersburg, Russia, April 22-24, 2003 "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> =?iso-8859-1?Q?Ausstellungser=F6ffnung_'Total_=DCberzogen'?= "Frau von Sydow" <info@edith-russ-haus.de> ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 20 Nov 2002 14:44:25 -0500 From: "Palestine Video Festival" <info@pivf.org> Subject: [pivf.org] 2002 Palestine International Video Festival Hello, The "2002 Palestine International Video Festival" is a new video festival to take place in the West Bank during the winter of 2002. The festival will showcase an international collection of contemporary video art, installations, and documentaries. During the festival, the works will be installed in various independent galleries, screened on local television stations, and made permanently available in a public archive at Birzeit University. The festival is an attempt to breach the cultural and intellectual isolation of the Palestinian people brought about by the ongoing Israeli occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Issues ranging from immigration and exile, the practice of everyday life, and the aftermath of September 11th will be explored by the festival's diverse participants. The festival was conceived by Emily Jacir (UNDP/TOKTEN), and is co-organized by John Menick. It will hopefully mark the beginning of an ongoing dialog between the international cultural community and the residents of Palestine. For more information please visit our website: http://www.pivf.org/ All our best, Emily Jacir and John Menick - ---------------------------------------------------- 2002 Palestine International Video Festival November - December 2002 http://www.pivf.org info@pivf.org - ---------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 23 Nov 2002 14:11:04 -0500 From: "Paul D. Miller" <anansi1@earthlink.net> Subject: Paul D. Miller remixes Marcel Duchamp at L.A. MOCA Hey you all - I'm going to be in L.A. on Saturday 'cause I have a show opening at L.A. MOCA. It's a remix I did of Marcel Duchamp's infamous "Errata Musical" and "Sculpture Musical" works - check it out! Think of it as downloadable mix sculpture based on sampling and sound. There'll be downloadable posters etc etc and screensavers starting next week. M.C. Duchamp as mixologist... as Dj... as starting point for some kind of new aesthetics of the found object as software/shareware. There'll be "dub" and "hip-hop" versions of Duchamp's various spoken texts, each one mixable by the viewer. Errata Erratum is viewable and hearable at: http://www.moca.org/museum/digital_gallery/pmiller/opener.html Or http://www.aenoch.com/duchamp/opener.html My discussion of the remix is on Sunday at the museum with Artforum critic Ralph Rugoff about the project. Essentially, it's based on Duchamp's music works from the period 1912-1915. I'll present "versions" and remixes of the project and, of course, it'll be downloadable... The project was curated by Lisa Mark of the L.A. Museum of Contemporary Art Digital Gallery. also - don't forget we're in the middle of re-starting 21C Magazine: http://www.21cmagazine.com okay, peace, Paul for those of you who are into text - here's the liner notes for the project: On The Record: Notes for the "Errata Erratum" Duchamp Remix Project at LA MOCA By Paul D. Miller a.k.a. Dj Spooky that Subliminal Kid NYC 2002 "In the chain of reactions accompanying the creative act, a link is missing. This gap, representing the inability of the artist to express fully his intention, this difference between what he intended to realize and did realize, is the personal "art coefficient' contained in the work. In other words, the personal 'art coefficient' is like an arithmetical relation between the unexpressed but intended and the unintentinally expressed..." Marcel Duchamp, "The Creative Act" 1957 When I first started dj'ing it was meant to be a hobby. It was an experiment with rhythm and clues, rhythm and cues: drop the needle on the record and see what happens when this sound is applied to this context, or when that sound crashes into that recording... you get the idea. The first impulses I had about dj culture were taken from that basic idea - play and irreverence towards the found objects that we use as consumers and a sense that something new was right in front of our oh so jaded eyes as we watched the computer screens at the cusp of the 21st century's beginnings. I wanted to breathe a little life into the passive relationship we have with the objects around us and to bring a sense of permanent uncertainty about the role of art in our lives. For me, as an artist, writer, and musician, it seemed that turntables were somehow imbued with the art of being memory permutation machines - they changed how I remembered sounds, and always made me think of a different experience with each listening. The "phonograph" in my artwrok embodied what theorist Francis Yates would call "memory palaces" in contemporary context - trace the etymology of the word to "sound writing" a.k.a. "phono-graph" and think of the scenario as Walter Benjamin's "aura" become a sound wave of syncopated fragments dancing at memories edge, and you'll get the basic impression I want to convey here. Basically when I first started out I wanted to show complex stuff - how the "phonograph" was a mnemonic device translated into a kind of philosophical game of intentionality mixed with what John Cage would call "chance operations," or what Amiri Baraka would call "the changing same" - how the "turntable" had become a way of transforming culture into machinic improvisation... stuff like that. During the time that I spent researching for "Errata Erratum," I found so many examples of how dj culture intersected with some of the core tenets of the 20th century avant-garde, that it seems to have unconsciously absorbed them all. Composed in 1913, Duchamp's "Erratum Musical" is based on a whole schemata of mistakes, errors, and mis-steps in a family situation. And what therse days we'd simply call "glitches" in commmunication between programs, would be for him at that time a whole metaphysical critique of, as he put it so often, "how one can make a work of art that is not a work of art" - but back then at this point in his career it was simply a random card game between siblings. The basic scenario for "Erratum Musical" was this: Duchamp wrote out a series of "instructions" about the interaction of 3 sets of 25 cards for his sisters, and when they took a card from a hat passed around the room at the conception of the piece, they would each sing random phrases based on a loosely defined interpretation of the patterns on the cards. Three voices in a trialog would be the basis of the piece, and essentially the cards were nothing more than cues for the unconscious impulses of a quick glance at something held briefly and then put down. That was it! To get a better idea of what this must have been like, basically, you have to imagine a fun dinner party where people sing a Rorshach ink blotter tune, and you'd have a reasonable "picture" of what sounds the sisters came up with. It's not too Freudian of a leap to think of the abstract voices of familial roles played out in sound... but hey, that's kind of the point. When I think of dj'ing essentially you're dealing with extended kinship systems of rhythm - one beat matches or doesn't match a sound-flow, and it's the interpretation of the gestures that make up the mix that creates the atmosphere in a room. Think of my "Errata Erratum" remix as a 21st century update on the idea - but now, we move through dispersed networks of culture, and the cards we play are icons on a screen. A single note was assigned to each card - for the remix - you get sequences of sounds based on a different kind of card - a visual display of a roto-relief - an engraved card that Duchamp made throughout his career and gave away randomly to people. The song, as you can see, got alot more dispersed as Duchamp became a more well known artist, and by the end of his life, the card game became a signature that was profoundly paradoxcial. Like all of Duchamps work it was personal and impersonal - - industrial culture's absorbtion of almost all "indviduality" into seamless expression of individual choice amongst the varied options left in a world of pre-fabricated identities and emotions. My "Errata Erratum" echoes documentation of four realizations of Duchamp's 1913 compositions that included "The Bride Stripped Bare By Her Bachelors,even, 1.3 voices: Erratum Musical" and the 'instruction' piece "Musical Sculpture". The resulting musical interpretations of compostions intended for voice, player piano, alto flute, celeste, trombone and glockenspiel are of a strikingly spare, slow and soft character that brings to mind the sound compositions of Erik Satie or Morton Feldman - but for my remix they were based on the interaction of viewers relationships to the rotorelief pieces that Duchamp so famously handed out over the years. In short, it's art you can download. Think of it as "downloadable anti-sublime" or something like that. I wanted to think of "Errata Erratum" as dj'ing "found objects" just like I would mix the records that normally comprise my sonic pallette. Essentially, "Errata..." is an experiment with sculpture and the interplay of memory as it is shaped by the technologies of communication that have come to form the core conditions of daily life in the industrialized world. In short, it was meant to be a fun thing, and in short order it became something alot more serious. Back the in the distant mid 90's dj'ing was still an underground phenomenon, and in a sense, today now that guitars are regularly outsold by turntables, the tables have literally turned - dj'ing is a mainstream phenomenon, and mixing beats and sounds is a commonplace thing on the internet for kids... "Errata Erratum" is a migration of those values into a playful critique of one of the first artists to engage that logic of irreverence towards the art object and to apply that logic to some of the works that he came up with to "flesh out" his ideas on the topic in "net culture." So when you see those circles moving, think of loops and repetition, cycles and flows, and think of how to translate one person's thoughts into anothers... and that's just the beginning. When the mix comes calling, you can't help but think of how many people are in it. This project is an attempt to bring together one of my favorite people in mix culture together with some variations on a certain theme - one that is as wide as the internet, and as wide as the people's thoughts moving through the fiber optic routing systems that hold our new version of the "digital sublime" together. Duchamp's piece "La Mariée mise à nu par ses célibataires même Erratum Musical (The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors Even. Erratum Musical)" follows the same logic and it leads us to the series of notes and projects that Duchamp started to collect in 1912 and which culminated in his infamoust "Large Glass" piece. It wasn't published or exhibited during Duchamp's life, but the implications are clear - he wanted to invoke a sense of convergence between art and the random processes, the "generative syntaxes," of the imagination as it speaks to a world made of industrial processes. "The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors Even. Erratum Musical" manuscript was unfinished and leaves many questions unanswered - and it leads us to a precipice of our own making because, like my "Errata Erratum" remix, it works within a framework of chance operations, and that is it's unique signature in an arts context. It's a milieu where each "musical scultpure" is unique yet completely dependent on the system that created the context. It's that old Duchamp paradox come back to haunt us, uncannily, on the internet. Duchamp said in his famous "Creative Act" lecture of 1957 (the recording of which comprises the "dub version" hip-hop track for my "Errata Erratum" remix) "all in all, the creative act is not performed by the artist alone; the spectator brings the work in contact with the external world by decipering and interpreting its inner qualifications and thus adds his contribution to the creative act." Think of that as you hear Duchamp rhyming over a hip-hip dub rhythm I made specially for this project - I guess you could call him "M.C. Duchamp" because, by hip-hop standards, he has good "flow" - and at this point in the track, his voice is seperated from the recording to become part of the musical sculpture, and like the original "Erratum Musical" we're seeing someone's voice placed in a system of chance operations - rhythm becomes the context for the performance, and the artist becomes part of the sonic palette he describes. There are two parts to the manuscript notes that Duchamp wrote to describe the "Erratum Musical" compositions. One part contains the piece for a "mechanical instrument." The piece is unfinished and is written using numbers instead of notes, but Duchamp explains the meaning of those numbers, which made it easy to transcribe them into music notes - I tried to balance that sense of uncertainty by assigning sounds to discs that can change speed and pitch - because turntables allow for that kind of variation. For "Errata Erratum" I wanted to streamline that process and give people a sense of improvisation - like Duchamp, the pieces also indicate the instruments on which it should be performed - but they are icons made of digital code. Where he would write "player piano, mechanical organs or other new instruments for which the virtuoso intermediary is suppressed" we can click on a screen. Anyway, you get the idea. The second part of his notes contained a description of the compositional system - the title for the "system" is: "An apparatus automatically recording fragmented musical periods." Here, again, we're left with the ability to make our own interpretation of a given framework, and are invited to run with it as a kind of game "system." The "apparatus" that let''s you make the composition in his original notes is comprised of three parts: a funnel, several open-end cars, and a set of numbered balls. Think of all of them as being flattened out on your screen, and that's what the Errata Erratum remix is about. In the original piece each number on a ball represented a note (pitch) -- Duchamp suggested 85 notes according to the standard range of a piano of that time; today, almost all pianos have 88 notes, and most computers have about 77 keys if they're based on the classic "QWERTY" system. In short, you have some kind of device to interpret your finger movements, so I thought it'd be cool to have that aspect made into a function based on how you play with the rotation of the "roto-reliefs." In the original piece, the balls fall through the funnel into the cars passing underneath at various speeds. When the funnel was empty, a musical period was completed. When things get digital, we can assign all of those aspects to gestures made with a mouse or touch pad, and basically that's what makes this fun. Think of the screen as a blank canvas and that's just the beginning. It's generally noted that Duchamp went through a "musical phase" between 1912 and 1915 - "Errata Erratum" incorporates aspects of almost all of the pieces he wrote during that time, and makes them become digital vectors of the same intentions, but updated, 21st century style. One of the last pieces he wrote, "Sculpture Musicale (Musical Sculpture)," is notated on a small piece of paper, which Duchamp also included in his infamous "Green Box" piece. The "Musical Sculpture" piece is similar to the Fluxus pieces of the early 1960s, and even more so to the abstract software driven music of contemporary digital culture where fragments of sounds are constantly combined to make "tracks" in dj culture. Duchamps works combine objects with performance, audio with visual, known and unknown factors, and elements explained and unexplained. Of his three works of music, only two can be performed using manuscripts or some kind of system of "rules": the Erratum Musical for three voices and the Musical Sculpture. "The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors Even. Erratum Musical" was incomplete. So to give context here is important: there were no "finished" pieces and everything in "Errata Erratum" is about that gap between execution and intent in a world of uncertainty. Whatever mix you make of it, it can only be a guess - you have to make your own version, and that's kind of the point. With that in mind, I ask that you think of this as a mix lab - an "open system" where any voice can be you. The only limits are the game you play and how you play it. The Artist would like to thank the staff of Lisa Marks and the L.A. MOCA staff, Andrew Aenoch for his timeless patience with getting the website set up, Rachel Bowditch for being there, and his mother, Rosemary E. Reed Miller, for her patience as well. ============================================================================ "None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free...." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Port:status>OPEN wildstyle access: www.djspooky.com Paul D. Miller a.k.a. Dj Spooky that Subliminal Kid Office Mailing Address: Subliminal Kid Inc. 101 W. 23rd St. #2463 New York, NY 10011 ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 15 Nov 2002 14:28:05 -0000 From: "pnp" <pnp@gabba.net> Subject: PLUG AND PLAY / SUNDAY / 17/11/2002 / 6PM This is a multi-part message in MIME format. // PLUG AND PLAY - SUNDAY 17/11/2002 - // // http://www.gabba.net/pnp bring your laptop and plug in.. // // ---------------------------------------------------------- // // so far confirmed to play this month... // // CEDRIC PIN : minimal electronics ( ) http://www.coriolislab.org/ // DORON SADJA : sonic innovator from 12k ( ) http://www.12k.com // LUKA PRINCIC http://letusplay.net // SIMON KEEP : araucaria araucana ( ) http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=3Den&ie=3DUTF-8&oe=3DUTF-8&safe=3Doff&q= =3Daraucaria+ araucana&btnG=3DGoogle+Search&meta=3D // EVIL TWIN : pop subversion ( ) http://www.google.com/search?q=3D%22cut+cut+cut+cut+cut%22 // GO SUENAGA : collaborative jam ( ) http://www.gosuenaga.com/ // RGB invaded / The Ponks / Miu and Somadril / ( ) http://www.newbleep.com entry is free anyone can come along and PLUG in their laptops, or any other a/v technology and PLAY music or visuals they have made, whatever..... // ---------------------------------------------------------- // http://www.gabba.net/pnp - event info // ---------------------------------------------------------- // http://www.gabba.net/bluescreen - message boards // ---------------------------------------------------------- // http://www.gabba.net/amp - MP3s for the download // ---------------------------------------------------------- // ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 15 Nov 2002 16:04:31 +0100 (MEZ) From: schwarze@student.uni-kassel.de Subject: *streaming interfiction* Audio-Livestream interfiction IX (2002) arteFaction! Kunstfehler in/als Medien Kassel, 15. - 17. November 2002 Germany Workshop-Tagung im Rahmen des 19. Kasseler Dokumentarfilm- und Videofests *streaming interfiction* Sendetermine: Freitag, 15.11.2002, 19:00h - ca. 23:30h Samstag, 16.11.2002, 11:00h - 19:00h Sonntag, 17.11.2002, 12:00h - 17:00h Verbindung: Der Audiostream der Vorträge und der Workshop-Tagung im Rahmen von interfiction IX (2002) arteFaction! - Kunstfehler in/als Medien ist im real-media Format unter rtsp://195.127.148.89:554/stream/if2002.rm zu empfangen. http://www.interfiction.net/2002/stream.html _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ *streaming interfiction* Transmission dates: Friday, 15.11.2002, 19:00h - ca. 23:30h Saturday, 16.11.2002, 11:00h - 19:00h Sunday, 17.11.2002, 12:00h - 17:00h Connection: The audiostream of the lectures and the workshop-conference in the context of interfiction IX (2002) "arteFaction! - Malpractice in/as Media is available in real-media format here: rtsp://195.127.148.89:554/stream/if2002.rm http://www.interfiction.net/2002/stream.html ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 15 Nov 2002 23:37:22 +0100 From: Jose-Carlos Mariategui <jcm@ata.org.pe> Subject: TV or NOT TV / LA Freewaves=?ISO-8859-1?B?uQ==?= 8th Celebration of Experimental Media Arts TV or NOT TV LA Freewaves¹ 8th Celebration of Experimental Media Arts Latin American FREEWAVES brings us the newest in video art from Latin America. Permeates All of Los Angeles Los Angeles, CA - LA Freewaves, the most extensive media arts advocate in the country, launches TV or NOT TV, its 8th Celebration of Experimental Media Arts, throughout Los Angeles during the entire month of November 2002. Over the past 13 years LA Freewaves has become an unparalleled Southern California phenomenon, presenting artists who are inventing the future of art, culture and media. This year¹s festival presents over 300 films, videos and new media works in panel discussions, performance events, exhibitions, outdoor community screenings and television broadcasts. Most events and exhibits are free of charge, with approximately three percent requiring nominal fees for entrance or parking. Daily, from November 1st 30th, the festival will infuse 65 venues, television, the web and 3 video billboards with the newest, most innovative media art from around the world. 350 artists will warp, twist and redefine the distances between daily life experience and televised reality, presenting puzzling questions and dynamic alternatives to corporate-filtered entertainment and alarmist, biased news reporting. On Friday, November 1st TV or NOT TV officially kicks off with a film and video screening at Cal Arts, a month-long South American exhibit at Iturralde Gallery on La Brea and a full evening of events in Chinatown featuring multiple gallery openings in and around Chung King Road, multi-media art at internet cafes, public address system infiltrations, and large scale street projections. Once you¹ve filled your mind, head over to The Grand Star to shake your booty at the infamous club Firecracker. And to think, there¹s another 29 days in the month of November filled with diverse TV or NOT TV festival programming. Latin American FREEWAVES brings us the newest in video art from Latin America. One of the most substantial Latin American video surveys ever assembled, the nine programs, commissioned especially for the 2002 LA Freewaves Festival, represent the syncretism and dynamic exchanges of artists and activists hailing from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Perú and Venezuela. >From experimental exercises in physiognomy to pop culture clashes, from perceptual studies to historiographic reflections, these nine programs develop the manifold fascinations and interests of Latin American media artists. The individual programs were curated by Ernesto Calvo Alvarez, Tamara Díaz Bringas, José Roca, Michèlle Faguet, Jorge La Ferla, Priamo Lozada, Arlindo Machado, Christine Mello, Yucef Merhi, José-Carlos Mariategui, Claudia Prado, and Cristian Silva. Produced by Juan Devis, Chair of LA Freewaves Board; Coordinated by Rita Gonzalez. Panel will discuss the state of video art in Latin America as it redefines itself, adjusting to a changing political and economic backdrop. Moderated by Jesse Lerner. Potential speakers include José Roca, Michèlle Faguet, Daniel J. Martinez and Cristian Silva. PANEL @ MOCA at California Plaza Nov. 10, 1 -3pm SCREENINGS @ MOCA at California Plaza Programs 1-5: Nov. 9, 11am -5pm, Programs 6-9: Nov. 10, 11am -5pm, @ Iturralde Gallery Nov. 1-30, 2002 By request and daily schedule TV or not TV? In addition to visiting the 65 museums, art galleries, night clubs, colleges and universities, film theatres, art centers, karaoke bars and Internet cafes all over Los Angeles you can also turn on your television and tune in to KCET 28 at 11:00pm every Sunday night throughout November or LA Channel 36 every Monday night at 10:00pm. Also, Pasadena Channel 56 will run 2-hour blocks in rotation of TV or NOT TV programming. And of course, a great portion of the festival happens online as well. Remember, this IS a media arts festival. Watch www.freewaves.org for comprehensive video streaming, calendar of events, artists¹ bios and links, archives of past LA Freewaves¹ festivals, their extensive media resource tools and complete festival details. LA Freewaves is Southern California's preeminent advocate for independent, experimental, noncommercial and under-represented media. Its ground-breaking biennial festivals, low-cost workshops, curriculum materials and comprehensive web site serve as an energetic, multicultural, multimedia arts network and an optimistic model for art in the electronic age. LA Freewaves is funded by The Rockefeller Foundation, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, The City of Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department, National Endowment for the Arts, Los Angeles County Arts Commission, California Arts Council, California Community Foundation and Pasadena Art Alliance. For more information or to interview festival founder and executive director Anne Bray please contact Lynn Hasty at Green Galactic at 323-466-5141 or lynn@greengalactic.com <mailto:lynn@greengalactic.com> . Also, please visit www.freewaves.org. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 19 Nov 2002 03:36:55 -0600 From: edmar <ed@lumpen.com> Subject: Version>03 call for ideas Hi could you please approve this for posting??? //// Hi all. I am Ed Marszewski, guiding and curating and what not, a convergence in chicago that will be a contribution to the N5M4. Details are below. Version>02 was our first experiment in bringing the house down and making some conversations to connect our local scenes with those on the coasts and in between and beyond. Last years program can be downloaded at: http://www.versionfest.org/ The site died but will be rejuvenated in a month or so. The possibilities of this next event will surely be worth the efforts of your visiting, monitoring and/or participating. I humbly submit an overview of some ideas we are proceding to dismantle and reform to present in March 27-30. call for ideas:: Version>03 a.digital.arts.convergence technotopia vs technopacalypse exploring the multitudes of technology, society, arts, activism and culture Co-presented by Select Media and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago March 27-30 2003 Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and other sites There is no question that technological growth trends in science and industry are increasing exponentially. There is, however, a growing debate about what this runaway acceleration of ingenuity may bring. A number of respected scientists and futurists now are predicting that technological progress is driving the world toward a "Singularity" - a point at which technology and nature will have become one. At this juncture, the world as we have known it will have gone extinct and new definitions of "life," "nature" and "human" will take hold. There is no clear definition, but to many the Singularity is meant as a future time when societal, scientific and economic change is so fast we cannot even imagine what will happen from our present perspective, and when humanity will become posthumanity. Another definition is used in the Extropians FAQ, where it denotes the singular time when technological development will be at its fastest. To others the singularities have serious class conotations. Of course, there are some who think the whole idea is just technocalyptic dreaming. "We are on the edge of change comparable to the rise of human life on Earth," San Diego University Professor of Computer Science Vernor Vinge first warned the scientific community in 1993. "Within 30 years, we will have the technological means to create superhuman intelligence. Shortly after, the human era will end." Some scientists and philosophers have theorized that the very purpose of life is to bring about the Singularity. While leading technology industries have been aware of the Singularity concept for some time, there are concerns that, if the public understood the full ramifications of the Singularity, they would be reluctant to accept many of the new and untested technologies such as genetically engineered foods, nano-technology and robotics. Many believe the earth as a living system may collapse within the next few decades unless we take global actions at every level to bring in sustainable development. Others believe benevolent applications of technology and science will save us from ourselves. And still others think the techno fetishization is a waste of time. version>03 will explore the technotopian and technoapocalyptic visions of the future, past and present through discussion, symposia, workshops, performance, installations, video and film screenings, and exhibitions. By examining practices, tools and ideas that direct us into the future, we hope to encourage dialogue and direction in this brave new world. We hope to have conversations/dialogues on topics including identifying the technologies and cultures and economies affecting the creation of singularities and multitudes, building networks, contestational robotics, alt spaces,developing theories on globalisation, tactical media projects, freenet open source cultures, security culture, border politics, robot armies, direct action, new tools, strategies for communication and many other subjects. Current and possible projects we will feature at version>03 include: artist interface devices, tactical vending, freenetproliferation, gameboy music workshop, skillshare workshops direct action workshops, robot block, experimental lectures, telepresence, virtual reality devices, video gaming, streaming media workshops, version>03 Video library, alt.space networking, war driving Current programs and themes are evolving in several simulataneous threads. Including but in no way limited to: Tactical media practices Green/movement actions strategies Scientific/poltical discourse of the emerging technologies Sci-Fi or real life technotopic dreams and dystopian nitemare scenarios Techno topic demonstrations and installations Multitudes of the SIngularity The MCA will be the location of the majority of programs and presentations. Other locations will feature additional workshops, installations and post MCA program parties/gatherings. Specifically we are seeking: Workshop proposals, Performance proposals, Panel proposals (with speakers and participants flushed out) New media Installations (multi channel works / kiosk based- other), Papers/articles ,Visual arts work that relates to the themes to be printed and/or exhibited, Film.video new screen projections, Public intervention projects, Writers to interview artists thinkers/participants inquries regarding : editorial submissions, web based works, performance, panels and workshop ideas, installations, film and video submissions will take priority. Some ideas to think about or comment upon: what is the singularity? how do we conceive the singularity/multitudes? , What are the limits to technology? How can/are artists and other "non-experts" creating interventions to open up public response and discourse about the new social realities and creating new social relations?" Positons in exploring the future., genetics/ robotics / nanotechnology / global justice movement, Strategies for confronting the singularity. How do we navigate and find a public in a corporate controlled digital world. What are the projects opening up the space for communications? version>03 is also a contribution to the N5M4 international tactical media festival taking place year round all over the world to culminate in May 2003. send proposals and ideas to ed marszewski ed@lumpen.com january 15 is a deadline to check. materials to: version>03 960 w 31st street chicago ill 60608 usa ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 27 Nov 2002 12:41:36 -0800 From: Pamela Grant-Ryan <pgr@sfsu.edu> Subject: PLEASE POST PLEASE POST. Thank you. ***************************************************** LEONARDO announces Oliver Grau book tour. From within the virtual metaphor, Oliver Grau in his book Virtual Art (MIT Press, 2002) sheds light on how technology-based art functions as an extension of the archetypal human quest to distill image from imagination. For tour dates and more info: <mitpress2.mit.edu/e-journals/Leonardo>. A Leonardo Book. Pamela Grant-Ryan Managing Editor, LEONARDO LEONARDO/ISAST is pleased to announce the appointment of Nisar Keshvani as the new Editor in Chief of Leonardo Electronic Almanac (LEA), the leading monthly on-line, peer-reviewed journal and web archive covering the realm of art, science and technology. Subscribe now for $35 US/year and receive additional benefits as a member of Leonardo/ISAST. See http://mitpress2.mit.edu/LEA for info on LEA and Nisar Keshvani. See http://mitpress2.mit.edu/Leonardo/members.html for info on Leonardo/ISAST and membership benefits. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 26 Nov 2002 20:29:54 +0100 From: "Patrick Hutsch" <h0444fxz@student.hu-berlin.de> Subject: "VIRTUAL ART" by Oliver Grau: Lecture Series This is a multi-part message in MIME format. - ------=_NextPart_000_045A_01C2958A.94889640 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable VIRTUAL ART: From Illusion to Immersion' =20 by Oliver Grau=20 (forthcoming from MIT Press) See TOUR DATES below Although many people view virtual and mixed realities as a totally new = phenomenon, it has its foundations in an unrecognized history of = immersive images. The search for illusionary visual space can be traced = back to antiquity. Oliver Grau shows how virtual art fits into the art = history of illusion and immersion and shows how each epoch used the = technical means available to produce maximum illusion from Pompeiis = Villa dei Misteri via baroque frescoes, panoramas, immersive cinema to = the CAVE. He describes the metamorphosis of the concepts of art and the = image and relates those concepts to interactive art, interface design, = agents, telepresence, and image evolution. Grau retells art history as = media history, helping us to understand the phenomenon of immersion = beyond the hype. Doing that, Grau draws on the work of contemporary artists like Maurice = Benayoun, Charlotte Davies, Monika Fleischmann, Eduardo Kac, Christa = Sommerer, Michael Naimark, Simon Penny, Daniela Plewe, Jeffrey Shaw et = al. Oliver Grau is lecturer in Art History at Humboldt University, Berlin, = and head of the German Science Foundation's project on "Immersive Art". = He is creating the International Database of Virtual Art with the aid of = the Federal Ministry of Education and Science. Grau is visiting = professor in Linz. LECTURE TOUR (sponsored by Goethe Institute and various hosts). San Francisco, UC Berkeley, Monday Dec. 2 The Art, Technology, and Culture Colloquium 160 Kroeber Hall Curated by Ken Goldberg with ATC Advisory Board 7:30-9:00pm Stanford University, Tuesday Dec. 3 4:15 pm=20 Stanford University, Lane History Building 200, Room 307 =20 Los Angeles, UCLA (Department of Design and Media Arts), Wednesday Dec. = 4 6 pm - 7 pm Kinross North Bldg. Room 104 - EDA Chicago, School of the Art Institute, Friday Dec. 6 Noon talk from 12-1p.m. SAIC Auditorium 280 S. Columbus Dr. (Corner of Jackson and Columbus Dr.) =20 Toronto, Goethe-Institut, Sunday Dec. 8 Goethe-Institut Toronto 11:00 am, New Media ,Fr=FChst=FCck' 163 King St. W. Ann Arbor, UMICH/School of Art and Design, Monday Dec. 9 Art & Architecture Building, 5:15 p.m. North Campus, Bonisteel Boulevard =20 New York, Parsons School of Design, Tuesday Dec. 10 Parsons School of Design, Tishman Auditorium 66 West 12th Street, 7 p.m. Moderated by Christiane Paul, the Whitney's adjunct curator of new media = arts. (For more information: = http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?sid=3D26570CB6-AB47-414B= - -A780-1ECA08AAB2D3&ttype=3D2&tid=3D9214) ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 27 Nov 2002 21:53:11 +1100 From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: Soft season at inIVA: Film programme From: "Natasha Anderson" <nanderson@iniva.org> Institute of International Visual Arts Friday, 29 November, 2.00pm at TheSpace@inIVA, 6-8 Standard Place, Rivington Street, London, EC2A 3BE Work and Non-Work: A video screening curated and introduced by Anthony Iles Thanks to all of you who made it down to the discussion last Friday at TheSpace@inIVA. As part of inIVA's Soft season of exhibitions and debates, Anthony lles presents an afternoon of films, which looks at the current conditions and aesthetics of work. By screening a series of films that cast an eye at the minutae of labour, we hope to present you with an opportunity to reflect upon your own positions within the work non-work nexus. Whether it be 'occasional labour in the cultural industry', the less salacious daily grind in the city, the unpaid labour which accounts for half this country's wealth, or the indispensable provision of an overqualified labour surplus. Featuring artist's films, activist documentary, gems from the history of sociology, the screening seeks to get under the skin of the habitual, the commonplace, of what goes by the name of 'the general interest'. The event assumes its place within 'Outsourcing' as not just another chain in a producing machine, another opportunity to consider the shifting roles of culture - makers, but a situation which begs the question: 'for whom do we work?'. Artists include: Mierle Laderman Ukeles, Year Zero, Ursula Biemann, Humphrey Jennings and Black Audio Film Collective (John Akomfrah) Please see below for more information. Refreshments provided. The Films Mierle Laderman Ukeles - Sanman's Place 28mins 1980/ World of Art; works in Progress 28mins. 1986 In 1969, "frazzled and dazzled" by the requirements of surviving as an artist while being a new mother, Mierle Ukeles wrote The Manifesto for Maintenance Art: "Care." Starting with personal maintenance, the work broadened to the maintenance of cultural institutions, urban and societal maintenance, and sustaining the earth itself. From 1977-80, the artist interacted with the entire New York City Department of Sanitation in the ground-breaking Touch Sanitation Performance. Year Zero - The Occupation. 26mins. 2001 Regeneration and gentrification in the East End Plot your place in the social cleansing of a city; join in the consultations; include yourself out. Benedict Seymour and David Panos' film looks at the rapid and disorientating transformations occurring not only to the physical fabric of the east end but through the social imaginary - work, housing, leisure and time itself. Ursula Biemann - Performing the Border, video-essay, 45 min. 1999. A video essay set in the Mexican-US border town Ciudad Juarez, where the U.S. industries assemble their electronic and digital equipment, located right across from El Paso, Texas. <performing the border> looks at the border as both a discursive and a material space constituted through the performance and management of gender relations. The video discusses the sexualization of the border region through labour division, prostitution, the expression of female desires in the entertainment industry, and sexual violence in the public sphere. Interviews, scripted voice over, quoted text on the screen, scenes and sounds recorded on site, as well as found footage are combined to give an insight into the gendered conditions inscribed in the border region Humphrey Jennings - Spare Time 35/16mm, bw, 18 mins, 1939. Although made for the GPO, Spare Time was in fact a Mass Observation film about the ways in which people in the industrial areas of Britain spend their free time. Its very title suggests how removed Jennings was from the dominant philosophy of Griersonian documentary because this film does not glorify the dignity of labour but shows instead the working classes producing their own culture. There is an expressive use of sounds and music and a surreal quality about the landscape which prefigures much Black Audio Film Collective (John Akomfrah) -.Handsworth Songs, 16mm film, video, color, sound, 58 min 1986 Black Audio Film Collective was one of the film and video workshop collectives set up in the 1980s in the aftermath of inner city protests against British Institutional racism. As part of a movement for greater cultural and political representation for and by black people in Britain, it can be seen as part of the ongoing process of Britain's post-colonial history. Handsworth Songs, (1986, directed by John Akomfrah), was their most controversial work. We look forward to seeing you on Friday. inIVA Team ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 28 Nov 2002 17:28:45 +0100 From: jaka zeleznikar <jaka@jaka.org> Subject: Break 2.2 Festival - Call for applications - Invisible Threat Break 2.2 Festival (previously called Break 21 Festival) is an international art festival in Ljubljana, Slovenia, that presents young emerging artists with orientation towards urban, technologically supported arts and intermedia artistic practices that are perceived as current avantgarde. The date of the next, 7th festival, is June 17-28, 2003. It will also present some special guests (world-acclaimed artists) with the aim of establishing an innovative dialogue with the young emerging artists. It's important component will also be a symposium on the chosen festival theme ('Invisible Threat') with lectures by invited artists and scientists from different fields. Break 2.2 Festival is organised by Zavod K6/4, non-profit cultural institution from Ljubljana, that produces, organises and promotes contemporary creativity. Call for applications is open till January 15, 2003; for futher information, see web page: http://www.break-festival.org ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 25 Nov 2002 10:58:14 +0100 From: matthew fuller <fuller@xs4all.nl> Subject: ray johnson talk, London Crossing Arts talk series Portland Hall, University of Westminster Little Titchfield St. LONDON W1. Wednesday 11th December 2002, 6.30pm to 8.30pm "New York's most famous unknown artist," Ray Johnson, the Man behind the Bunny Clive Phillpot, Research Officer, British Council Ray Johnson, known as "the father of Mail Art", was born in Detroit in 1927, and died in Long Island, New York in 1995. He was principally a maker of relief collages but also a graphic artist. He was active from the beginnings of Pop Art and Fluxus, and was the prime mover in Mail Art, creating a paper-based world-wide web. Johnson created the New York Correspondence School. His contributions to post-war art have been under-appreciated principally because he would not conform to the norms of the art world. Clive Phillpot knew Ray Johnson for the last fifteen years of his life. Clive Phillpot was Director of the Library of the Museum of Modern Art, New York from 1977 to 1994. His writing has appeared in many art magazines, exhibition catalogues and books. His most recent publication and exhibition was Live in Your Head, Whitechapel Art Gallery, 2000. He appears in the new documentary film on Ray Johnson: How to Draw a Bunny. Crossing Arts is a series of talks organised by CARTE, the Centre for Arts Research, Technology and Education, University of Westminster. It addresses the breadth of visual culture and inter-disciplinary approaches to arts practice. Admittance is free. Centre for Arts Research, Technology and Education C A R T E For more information and to let us know you are coming: contact Sue Barker, CARTE, Tel: 020 7911 5000 Ext. 2675 or Email: S.Barker02@westminster.ac.uk ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 25 Nov 2002 18:43:00 +0000 From: "medialounge_list" <medialounge_list@druh.co.uk> (by way of richard barbrook) Subject: ULTRASOUND 2002 UPDATE // medialounge // #13 // ================================================= medialounge // #13 // 22.11.02 // ================================================= ULTRASOUND FESTIVAL / 2002 / 28 / 29 / 30 / NOV / ================================================= Ultrasound is a new three day international festival exploring the territory of experimental sound and electronic music. Ultrasound 2002 presents an eclectic mix of experimentalists and artists from the UK and overseas. ================================================= ULTRASOUND / WEBSITE / FULLY UPDATED TODAY / ================================================= http://www.ultrasound.ws ================================================= ULTRASOUND / LIVE / ================================================= The Ultrasound Live sessions oscillate between the extreme and the sublime in musical terms, embracing the full range of contemporary digital music practise from experimental generative programming techniques to rich synthesised electro-pop. http://www.ultrasound.ws/live/index.html ================================================= ULTRASOUND / CONFERENCE / ================================================= Space, Soundscape and the Urban Landscape ================================================= The conference presents a series of papers and projects that explore the ambient sonic environment and the relationship between lived space, soundscape and the urban landscape. http://www.ultrasound.ws/conference/index.html ================================================= ULTRASOUND / SHOWCASE / ================================================= An informal afternoon discussion showcasing developments in the creative use of software in the areas of electronic music and sound art. http://www.ultrasound.ws/showcase/index.html ================================================= BLACKTRONICA / WORKSHOP / CLUBNIGHT / ================================================= Because there's more to Black music than Hip-Hop, Garage and R&B. Conceived by DJ, producer, writer and Attica Blues frontman Charlie Dark. http://www.ultrasound.ws/blacktronica/index.html ================================================= ULTRASOUND / CONTACT / ================================================= The Media Centre 07 Northumberland Street Huddersfield HD1 1RL UK Info / 0870 990 5003 / info@ultrasound.ws / http://www.ultrasound.ws ================================================= subscribe/unsubscribe: http://www.the-media-centre.co.uk/medialounge ================================================= // shutdown // : // ================================================= ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 27 Nov 2002 15:08:09 +1100 From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: ICT Conference in St. Petersburg, Russia, April 22-24, 2003 From: "Sergei Stafeev" <gard@gard.spb.org> CALL FOR PAPERS International Conference Building the Information Commonwealth: Information Technologies and Building Prospects for the Development of Civil Society Institutions in the CIS Countries St. Petersburg, Russia, April 22-24, 2003 http://www.communities.org.ru/conference The disintegration of the USSR is still resonating within the world community. The formation of an effective civil society sector will hopefully work to overcome the economical, social and cultural effects of a totalitarian government which are the common heritage of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries. This remains one of the most immediate and significant tasks for all the ex-USSR states. The decade since 1991 has shown that the path to stable democratic societies in the CIS region is a very difficult one. The negative factors common to all the CIS countries, unstable economic growth, traditions of state paternalism, low living standards, a hazardous investment climate, the "soviet mentality" are still even now determining the everyday lives of the majority of the population of our countries. It is thus crucial to make effective use of available "global resources" such as information and communication technologies (ICTs) to support a radical improvement in the quality of life of ordinary people, of women, youth, the elderly, the disabled and indigenous peoples. Currently, , information technologies in the countries of the CIS region it would be generally agreed are primarily used as tools for private gain and are accessible only to the relatively small numbers who can afford individual access. Developing strategies for enabling information technologies to serve the broader needs of society, to support the development of democratic institutions, and to strengthen the struggle against poverty is a challenge that presents itself to civil society and public authorities? These questions are becoming more and more critical for the peoples in our countries where rapid technological development presents possibilities (and risks) of radical change in economic and social circumstances and for responding to growing social injustice. Critical analysis of the the Information Society in the CIS region as it is evolving, the influence of new technical (and following these social and cultural) factors within our societies and their impacts on the development of the civil society in stitutions, the analysis of the applicability of modern inter-disciplinary approaches (e.g. Community Networking/Community Informatics) to support the realization of community-based IT projects will be the main goals of the conference. We'll focus on several key problems of the civil society development in CIS countries looked at through the prism of the use of ICTs. Participants in the Conference: Leaders of the non-profit and civil society organizations performing projects in the area of ICTs in the CIS countries; deputies of national Parliaments; representatives of the executive structures of the countries of the region; specialists from governmental agencies and programs; representatives of international charitable organizations, NGO's and foundations; experts from International Organizations, academicians and practitioners from the different countries who are interested in discussing the Co nference issues. Organizers of the Conference: The Inter-Parliamentary Assembly of Member Nations of the Commonwealth of Independent States (IPA) Institute of Research on Problems of Nonprofits in the Newly Independent States (IRPN) Centre of Community Networking and Informational Policy Studies (CCNS) The Conference Venue: St. Petersburg, which is Russia's Northern capital, preparing for its 300 anniversary is a very appropriate and natural place for this event. (http://www.spb300.com) The Conference will take place of the main building of the IPA - Tavrichesky Palace, one of the most magnificent palaces in St. Petersburg (XVIII century). More information about the Palace and the Conference facilities at http://www.iacis.ru/kongr_en.htm Languages of the Conference The working languages of the Conference will be Russian and English Themes of the Conference: The Conference will be organized with an alternation of plenary sessions and panels following 12 main directions: + civil society and information society in the CIS countries:identifying the problem area + e-governance and participation of local citizens in the decision-making at the local, regional and national levels + local communities in the CIS countries: typology, myths and realities + new information infrastructure at local level: creation and ownership of Community Information + participation of the countries of the region in international projects and programs directed towards ICT usage for the development of the civil sector + using ICTs for not-for-profit and civil society purposes in the CIS countries + connectivity and software + civil society/communities and digital economies + Social, Psychological and Cultural Barriers to access. + model legislation concerning information policy for the CIS countries and national programs. + formation of the information society in the CIS and problems of Global Security + how do ICTs influence local, national, and regional development? Submission of papers Proposals for papers should be submitted as abstracts of no more than 500 words, and should include details of the proposer's name, position, affiliation, and contact details. The abstracts will be reviewed by the Program Committee which consist of CIS and international members. Ñriteria for selection for Proposals: - - relevance to the Themes of the Conference - - relevance to the development of Civil Society in the CIS - - papers can address either the theoretical or the practical aspects of the issues Proposals should be submitted electronically: - - in English to Michael Gurstein, Conference Co-Chair <BICsubmissions@mail.ru> - - in Russian to Organizing Committee to <irpnnis@mail.ru> in RTF, Word or PDF format. Deadline for abstracts: 31st December 2002 Authors of accepted papers notified by: 20th February 2003 For further information and submission details, please, contact Organizing Committee: 27, Mayakovskogo str., St. Petersburg, Russia 191123 Fax: +7 812 2726547 e-mail: irpnnis@mail.ru ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 26 Nov 2002 09:39:37 +0100 From: "Frau von Sydow" <info@edith-russ-haus.de> Subject: =?iso-8859-1?Q?Ausstellungser=F6ffnung_'Total_=DCberzogen'?= [scroll down for english] Total Überzogen 30. November 2002 - 9. Februar 2003 Eröffnung: Freitag, 29. November 2002, 20 Uhr Grußworte: Dr. Hans-Jörg Siewert, Niedersächsisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kultur Einführung: Rosanne Altstatt, Leiterin Adbusters (CAN), Banner Art Collective (USA), Urs Breitenstein (CH), Candice Breitz (ZA), Deportation Class (D), Johan Grimonprez (B), Lise Harlev (DK), Swetlana Heger (CZ), Jenny Holzer (USA), Inventory (GB), Adria Julia (E), Dagmar Keller/Martin Wittwer (D/CH), Michael Mandiberg (USA), Julian Opie (GB), Peter Roehr (D), Daniel Pflumm (D), Johannes Wohnseifer (D) und Florian Zeyfang (D) Das Edith-Ruß-Haus für Medienkunst ist von außen mit Werbebannern und Fenstertransparenten "Total Überzogen", auf denen Entwürfe von Künstlern neben Logos von Geldgebern zu sehen sind. Im Inneren des Ausstellungshauses werden Internetbanner und Websites, Video, Zeitschriften, Poster und Flyer sowie Jingles präsentiert. weitere Informationen siehe unter www.edith-russ-haus.de Edith-Ruß-Haus für Medienkunst Edith Russ Site for Media Art Katharinenstraße 23 26121 Oldenburg Germany +49 (0)441 235 32 08 +49 (0)441 235 21 61 info@edith-russ-haus.de ********* Total Überzogen (Completely Covered/Totally Overdone) 30. November 2002 - 9. February 2003 Opening Reception: Friday, 29. November 2002, 8 pm Speakers: Dr. Hans-Jörg Siewert, Ministry for Science and Culture of Lower Saxony Rosanne Altstatt, Director Adbusters (CAN), Banner Art Collective (USA), Urs Breitenstein (CH), Candice Breitz (ZA), Deporatation Class (D), Johan Grimonprez (B), Lise Harlev (DK), Swetlana Heger (CZ), Jenny Holzer (USA), Inventory (GB), Adria Julia (E), Dagmar Keller/Martin Wittwer (D/CH), Michael Mandiberg (USA), Julian Opie (GB), Peter Roehr (D), Daniel Pflumm (D), Johannes Wohnseifer (D), Florian Zeyfang (D) For this exhibition, the outside of the Edith Russ Site for Media Art's building is covered with designs by artists as well as the funders' logos: in the form of banners and window transparencies. Inside, the exhibition hall also features works that employ a variety of the forms of advertising as it is used by the media such as Internet banners, video, magazines, posters and flyers, and audio jingles: The media art space will be completely covered inside and out: "Total Überzogen". For more information have a look at www.edith-russ-haus.de Edith-Ruß-Haus für Medienkunst Edith Russ Site for Media Art Katharinenstraße 23 26121 Oldenburg Germany +49 (0)441 235 32 08 +49 (0)441 235 21 61 info@edith-russ-haus.de ------------------------------ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net