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. The Weekender ................................................... . a weekly digest of calls . actions . websites . campaigns . etc . . send your announcements and notes to announcer@simsim.rug.ac.be . . please don't be late ! delivered each weekend . into your inbox . . http://simsim.rug.ac.be/announcer/ for subscription info & help . . archive (separate msgs) http://www.egroups.com/group/announcer/ . ................................................................... 01 . Jordan Crandall . <voti><blast> CULTURAL PRACTICE AND WAR 02 . radar-mail . Announcing Radar-mail 03 . alex galloway . RHIZOME launches new STARRYNIGHT interface 04 . anat@anat.org.au . FUSION: collaborative interactive telepresence events ................................................................... 01 Date: Wed, 02 Jun 1999 13:25:11 +0100 From: Jordan Crandall <crandall@blast.org> Subject: ann! ... (no subject) <voti><blast> CULTURAL PRACTICE AND WAR the summer of 1999 an online public forum presented by the X Art Foundation and VOTI Artists, critics, curators, and other cultural producers are today struggling with the terms of their own practice, in a global context of crisis when much of their work seems insignificant. How to navigate this relation between aesthetic and political intervention is a nagging question, made all the more acute during times of war. What are the terms of our involvement -- do we fight at the frontlines, do we devote ourselves to humanitarian efforts, or do we rather make strong interventions in the realm of symbolic production? Because clearly we are faced with wars of images, of communications networks and propaganda machines. Where are we needed most? Have we developed useful tools with which to decode images, that can have practical consequences in a situation where television continually overwrites reality? Recently an extraordinary thing has happened on the Internet. As Robert Fleck has pointed out, it is the first time we have been able to communicate nearly in realtime with people on the ‘other side’ of a war front. The war in Yugoslavia has exposed the promise and limitations of the net and has revealed anew the tangled intersections of representations, politics, and histories that must be navigated in order to engage in effective cultural practice. It has revealed many things about how such assemblages cross with daily embodied realities, uprooting traditional formats of place, identity, and geography especially during times of national and international crisis. Working in areas of cultural production, we must learn to contend with the new forms of cultural identification that are arising, with the faultlines of ethnic tension that contest national borders, and with the underlying processes of militarization. The <voti><blast> forum will address these issues in the context of a 3-month online public forum, beginning today and ending September 1, 1999. We invite you to join us. FORUM HOSTS: ZDENKA BADOVINAC, Director of the Moderna Galerja, Ljubljana, Slovenia; BART DE BAERE, organiser and writer, Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst, Ghent, Belgium; WAYNE BAERWALDT, independent curator in Winnipeg and Santa Monica; CARLOS BASUALDO, poet and freelance curator, project director of Apex Art Curatorial Projects, New York; DANIEL BIRNBAUM, Director of IASPIS, Stockholm; WALING BOERS, curator and publicist, director of BüroFriedrich, Berlin; FRANCESCO BONAMI, Senior Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Artistic Director Fondazione Sandretto ReRebaudengo per L'Arte, Torino, and Artistic Director of Pitti Discovery, Florence; DAN CAMERON, Senior Curator at the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York; CAROLYN CHRISTOV-BAKARGIEV, art critic and independent curator, Rome; UTE META BAUER, curator and head of the Institute for Contemporary Art at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna; CHRISTOPHE CHERIX, curator Cabinet des Estampes, Geneva; LISA CORRIN, Senior Curator at Serpentine Gallery, London; JORDAN CRANDALL, artist and media theorist, New York; AMADA CRUZ, Director of Exhibitions at the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, New York; OKWUI ENWEZOR, curator, Artistic Director of Documenta XI; CHARLES ESCHE, writer and exhibition organiser, co-director of The Modern Institute, Glasgow; ROBERT FLECK, independent critic, curator, and director of the post-graduate program at the Ecole Regionale des Beaux-Arts in Nantes; DOUGLAS FOGLE, Curator of Contemporary Art, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; JESUS FUENMAYOR, curator and writer, Caracas; BETTINA FUNCKE, associate publications editor, Dia Center for the Arts, New York, and doctoral candidate at ZKM Karlsruhe; REBECCA GORDON NESBITT, curator, founding member of Salon3, London; HOU HANRU, independent critic and curator, Paris; SUSAN HAPGOOD, Curator of Exhibitions, American Federation of Arts, and Senior Fellow, Vera List Center for Art and Politics, The New School, New York; MARIA HLAVAJOVA, Director, Soros Center for Contemporary Arts, Bratislava, Slovakia; JENS HOFFMANN, independent curator, New York; UDO KITTELMANN, Director, Kölnischer Kunstverein, Cologne; VASIF KORTUN, writer, curator, educator, and founder of the Istanbul Contemporary Art Project, Istanbul; MARTA KUZMA; CORNELIA LAUF, art historian and curator, founder and director of Camera Oscura, San Casciano dei Bagni, Tuscany; MARIA LIND, Curator of Contemporary Art, Moderna Museet, Stockholm; ROSA MARTINEZ, historian, art critic and independent curator, Barcelona, and curator of III International Site Santa Fe Biennial; LAURENCE MILLER, Founding Director of ArtPace, San Antonio, Texas; VIKTOR MISIANO, independent curator, Moscow; AKIKO MIYAKE, Program Director for CCA Kitakyushu, Japan; STEPHANIE MOISDON TREMBLAY, art critic and freelance curator, Professor at the Universite Paris I – St. Charles, la Sorbonne; ASA NACKING, associate curator at the Louisiana Museum, Denmark; MICHELLE NICOL, curator, art and film historian, Zurich; HANS-ULRICH OBRIST, independent curator, Paris, Vienna and London, operator of the Migrateurs program at Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris; PEDRO REYES, artist and critic, curator at the Museo de Arte Carillo Gil, Mexico City; KATHRIN RHOMBERG, curator of the Vienna Secession, co-curator of Manifesta III; JOSE ROCA, curator and critic, Visual Arts Department at the Biblioteca Luis Angel Arango, Bogotá; NANCY SPECTOR, Curator of Contemporary Art at the Guggenheim Museum, New York; JON-OVE STEIHAUG, independent curator and critic, Oslo; BARBARA VANDERLINDEN, founder and director of Roomade, Brussels; HORTENSIA VOELCKERS, Director of the Wiener Festwochen, Vienna; OCTAVIO ZAYA, independent curator and writer, New York. TO SUBSCRIBE: send an email message to: listproc@listproc.thing.net with the following single line in the body of the message: subscribe voti firstname lastname Presented by the X Art Foundation and VOTI as part of the Blast 7 program (http://www.blast.org/agencies) The VOTI website is located at http://www.blast.org/voti ................................................................... 02 Date: Wed, 2 Jun 1999 22:05:34 +0200 From: radar-mail <radar@thing.net> Subject: ann! ... Announcing Radar-mail Please note: You must subscribe to radar-mail if you want to continue to receive this free service. You received this sample as a one time supplement to The Thing Newsletter. SUBSCRIBE AT: http://www.thing.net/radar/home.html Welcome to radar-mail, the electronic mailing service of thing.net, designed to serve the needs of the international art community. In conjunction with the radar arts calendar, this new mailing service will keep you informed of upcoming events in selected galleries by delivering timely notices directly to your e-mailbox. Radar-mail is geared to the art professional. The Thing has been an artists' bulletin board, website, independent service provider and project space since 1991. Over the years we have developed and are constantly updating a powerful database of critics, arts editors, collectors, consultants, galleries, museums and publications. The goal of radar-mail is to deliver information quickly, succinctly, and in a highly usable format, to those people who need to know. We welcome your input in this new venture. Visit the radar-mail homepage at http://www.thing.net/radar/home.html to subscribe and to share your suggestions and observations. <SAMPLE> Following are selected exhibitions opening later this week. Deitch Projects is proud to announce "Vanessa Beecroft US NAVY", a performance to be staged in the Farris Gallery of the Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego on Saturday, 5 June, 1630 to 1800 hr. For more information: http://www.thing.net/radar/deitch.html -- Sandra Gering Gallery is pleased to present "Branding", the first New York one person exhibition of Kenny Schachter. In the project room, John Corbin recreates a set from the critically acclaimed independent film "Joey's Practice". The exhibitions open on Thursday 3 June, with receptions from 6 to 8 PM, and close on 2 July. For more information: http://www.thing.net/radar/gering.html -- I-20 Gallery is proud to announce "Random Grace", an exhibition of sculpture by Tatyana Murray, opening with a reception on Saturday 5 June from 6 to 8 PM, and continuing through July 17. For more information: http://www.thing.net/radar/i-20.html -- Photographer David LaChapelle will be having a solo exhibition of new photographs at the Tony Shafrazi Gallery, opening on Friday 4 June and continuing through the summer. For more information: http://www.thing.net/radar/shafrazi.html -- Stefan Stux Gallery is pleased to invite you to an exhibition of new paintings by B.G. Muhn and sculpture by Clay Ervin. The shows open on Saturday 5 June with receptions from 6 to 8 PM, and continue through July 10. For more information: http://www.thing.net/radar/stux.html -- The Jack Tilton Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition presenting new works by Eduardo Abaroa. Entitled "Recent Models and Freaks", the exhibition will open with a reception on Wednesday 2 June from 6 to 8PM and continue through 3 July. For more information: http://www.thing.net/radar/tilton.html -- </SAMPLE> SUBSCRIBE AT: http://www.thing.net/radar/home.html ................................................................... 03 Date: Thu, 3 Jun 1999 21:01:38 -0400 From: alex galloway <alex@rhizome.org> Subject: ann! ... RHIZOME launches new STARRYNIGHT interface FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 3, 1999 RHIZOME LAUNCHES "STARRYNIGHT" New interface allows for visual browsing. URL: http://www.rhizome.org/starrynight Contact: Mark Tribe <mailto:mark@rhizome.org> (212) 625-3191 Alex Galloway <mailto:alex@rhizome.org> Each time someone reads an article on the RHIZOME web site <www.rhizome.org>, a dim star appears on a black web page. When an article gets read again, the corresponding star gets a bit brighter. Over time, the web page comes to resemble a starry night sky, with bright stars and dim stars corresponding to more popular and less popular articles. STARRYNIGHT links each star to the article it represents, and connects related stars into visible constellations. "STARRYNIGHT represents a totally new way of visualizing and browsing databased information," said RHIZOME Founder and Creative Director Mark Tribe. STARRYNIGHT currently has over 750 stars, and is growing quickly. Thousands of web surfers have helped calibrate the intensities of these stars simply by reading texts at RHIZOME and clicking on stars on STARRYNIGHT. You can create a new star by sending a text to <list@rhizome.org>. And by using STARRYNIGHT, you increase the brightness of the stars corresponding to the texts you read, leaving a visible trace of your activity (intensities are updated daily, so results are not immediate). STARRYNIGHT depends on two pieces of original software: a set of Perl scripts that sort texts by keyword and record their individual hits, and a Java applet that filters this information to draw stars and constellations. "The STARRYNIGHT browser is the beginning of a new, community-oriented software innitiative at RHIZOME," says RHIZOME Technical Director Alex Galloway. "We sent out a call for Java programmers, and several RHIZOME subscribers agreed to collaborate on the project. This represents a move to remain on the edge of new technology, while staying true to our community focus." STARRYNIGHT is both a mirror and a map. On the one hand, it offers a reflection of the RHIZOME community's reading habits. It is up to you to decide whether to click on a bright, popular star, or a dim one that fewer people have read. On the other hand, it acts as a navigational interface by connecting similar stars/texts into constellations regardless of their brightness. "Finally, a map that can rightfully be mistaken for the territory!" writes David A. Ross, SFMOMA Director, on the new STARRYNIGHT interface. STARRYNIGHT is also an artifact and an agent of global networking. It is produced by the contributions and activities of an online community, and it enables members of the community to see the results in abstract and metaphorical terms: as you surf the site, your click-trail helps illuminate the night sky. As interface art, STARRYNIGHT explores several new possibilities offered by the internet: global artistic collaboration, real-time collection and filtering of information using automated software, the integration of user-generated data such as web site hits, and the dissolution of authorial control. + + + For more about STARRYNIGHT, please visit <www.rhizome.org/starrynight>. RHIZOME COMMUNICATIONS is a non-profit organization dedicated to advancing the public interest in and understanding of new media art. RHIZOME's email lists and web site serve as an online platform where members of this community exchange ideas and information. ................................................................... 04 Date: Fri, 4 Jun 1999 11:10:47 +0930 From: Australian Network for Art and Technology <anat@anat.org.au> Subject: MEDIA RELEASE: FUSION: collaborative interactive telepresence events You are invited to attend: FUSION the first in a series of three collaborative interactive telepresence events The live manifestation of the first FUSION event will take place at: College of Fine Arts, Selwyn Street, Paddington, Sydney, AUSTRALIA June 9 and 10 : from 6-11pm; June 12 from 6-10am Medien Faculty, Bauhaus University, Weimar, GERMANY June 9 & 10 9.00-14.00; June 11, 22.00 - 02.00 and online at http://www.uni-weimar.de/~fusion FUSION'99 is the first in a series collaborative interactive telepresence events which explore the current break down of definitions, dualisms and geographical boundaries on the internet. The theme focuses on the fusions occurring between the artificial, the organic and the virtual through the collapses and interactions of "Cyberspace". Next week, the Medien Facultity of the Bauhaus University Weimar, The Australian Network for Art and Technology and The College of Fine Arts, University of New South Wales, Sydney will host Fusion '99, an experimental event from point to point over the Net. The event which features the work of 12 Artists and Computer Scientists from Germany and Australia, attempts to push the boundaries of cyberspace past simple e-mail and net-surfing. By using the latest real- time technologies and collaborative techniques, the artists in Australia and those of Germany pair up to test new levels of interactivity, conceptual collaboration and virtual space. The work ranges from live audio streaming and installation, to video manipulation, to the use of various available net softwares which have yet to be utilised creativity such as Net Meeting or Hotline Chats, WWW sites and VRML possibilities and finally to the concepts of telepresence performance. It promises to break new ground, furthering collaborative techniques between educational institutions, inventing new programs for net communication as well as expanding current applications for use by creative artist and students. Participating artists will question and re-define old definitions of space, nature, evolution, identity and artistic authorship. Jill Scott, the initiator of this project says "The intention is to hold a series of FUSION events over time, which will form a body of researched results to assist with the development of protocols for telepresence events, defend the sponsorship of more online collaborative techniques between educational institutions, and simultaneously test applications for industry standards by creative artists and students." The projects being initiated from Sydney are: Live Audio Streams: A stream of work by composers who modify and manipulate sounds from Sydney, developed and produced by Damian Castaldi and Scott Horscroft and including works by Sigma editions; Digiplasma, a highly charged gap devoid of content emersed within an infinite electr magnetic spectrum parading as message by Brad Miller, Collectorscope is an interactive animation device for capturing images off the web and animating them., by John Hughes; Web based projects, Carrier, the domain of a www based infectious java agent which navigates the user through immersive visual and aural landscapes of viral symbiosis b y Melinda Rackham and Notes Towards A Place , a space for text and audio that encourages contributions by users into a VRML environment. Emanating from Weimar are: What's Cooking In The Realm? A network surveillance installation, transporting old folklore into the next millennium, by Sue Machert; Transonator a parallel interactive sound installation, by Andreas Krach and Johannes Sienknecht; Schlaglichter a series of media ideas about emergence using Net-meeting and Mac Morph software by Marion Meyer.; |a|s|c|v|i|d|, ASCII video client/servers by Andreas Schiffler and Bernd Diemer; Future Bodies (Stage 1), an interactive script writing research project to determine the future of three virtual characters with genetic modifications and multiple identities, by Jill Scott; Virtual Cuts, a performance and a mixture between the real and the virtual, by Ulla Marguard; as well as soundworks from SeaM-Studio fur elktroakustiche Musik in Weimar: Soundtracks, by Pablo Aura-Langer, Holger Haessermann, Hyo-Sung-Kim, Anne Koenig, Su-Young Park, Jae-Hi Uh; Impromptu a live improvisation by Peter Lan, and soundfillers by Ludger Kisters. For further information & interviews contact: In Australia: Amanda McDonald Crowley, Director, ANAT 0419 829 313; amanda@anat.org.au In Germany: Professor Dr Jill Scott, Bauhaus University jscott@access.ch FUSION is proudly supported in Australia by: the Australian Network for Art and Technology; the New Media Arts Fund of the Australia Council; the College of Fine Arts, University of New South Wales; and Metro Screen Ltd; and in Gemany by: the Media Faculty of the Bauhaus University in Weimar, and Deutsche Telekom AG. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FROM THE DESK OF THE AUSTRALIAN NETWORK FOR ART AND TECHNOLOGY anat@anat.org.au postal address: PO Box 8029 Hindley Street, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia web address: http://www.anat.org.au/ ph: +61 (0)8-8231-9037 fax: +61 (0)8-8211-7323 Director: Amanda McDonald Crowley (tel: 0419 829 313) Administration and Information Officer: Anne Robertson Administration Assistant: Samara Mitchell Web and Technical Officer: Martin Thompson Memberships: $A12 (unwaged), $A25 (waged), $A50 (institutions) ANAT receives support from The Australia Council, http://www.ozco.gov.au the Federal Government's arts funding and advisory body --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl