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- - - - - - - | 9 9 . 4 6 | - - - - - - - | <nettime> announcer | a | b - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | c << | - - - - Jason Skeet <jason@artec.org.uk> : make some fucking noise | 1 9 | - - - - Stephanie Tasch <sttasch@yahoo.com> : Zhang Peili 2000 Project | 2 0 | - - - - Diane Dodd <diane.dodd@mx4.redestb.es> : Update New Media | 2 1 | - - - - Dean Kansky <dkansky@hotmail.com> : Web art homepage | 2 2 | - - - - Ivo van Stiphout <ivo@stations.org> : join the 2K Worldwide Handshake | 2 3 | - - - - Jean-Philippe Halgand <jean-philippe.halgand@aecom.org> : SOLIDARIDAD | 2 4 | - - - - NY Arts Magazine <nyartsmaga@aol.com> : #37, November Issue | 2 5 | - - - - Thundergulch <tgulch@artswire.org> : November presentations | 2 6 | - - - - IOTE <iote@cult-lab.de> : Radioplay "Illusion of the End" | 2 7 | - - - - Kirsten Lavers <kirsten@everyday.demon.co.uk> : Millennium Collection | 2 8 | - - - - | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | | delivered each weekend into your inbox | | mailto:nettime-l@bbs.thing.net | | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 1 9 | - - - - <earshot> is free software that creates endless mixes of the web's acoustic spaces. Type in a URL, or a word or phrase, and <earshot> begins to crawl through the web by following links between sites, searching for audio files and streams which the user can play with and manipulate. Found sounds (as well as files on the local hard disc) can be played by loading them into an 'audio field', which fills the screen. Each sound file is represented as a rotating stick - by moving the stick around the screen volume and pitch is changed. A range of keyboard commands apply additional functions including the muting, reversing, pausing and deleting of sounds. <earshot> transforms the web into the world's biggest sample library and a vast sound machine for unique performance and compositional possibilities. <earshot> can be downloaded for free from: <http://www.deepdisc.com/earshot> <earshot> is a standalone Java application, and is now available to run on MacOS 8 and windows 95 or better. <earshot> requires a java runtime environment and quicktime 4 - follow the installation instructions on the <earshot> download page. What follows is a text that forms part of the 'readme' document for the software, and which attempts to explore some of the motivations behind the project. <make some fucking noise> <earshot> is an experimental software application that explores, navigates and composes with sound from the web. Built by a team of just two people (1),we approached the development of <earshot> as users of the web and of music software who wanted to extend and explore ideas about the way the web is used and possible applications for digital audio. The nature of this collaboration, and the development of the software, is an on-going process - and one which also responds to feedback from users.(2) A tool, a toy and a musical instrument, <earshot> engages the user on many different levels at once. <earshot> plugs into the vast amount of sound that exists on the web - samples for download, embedded sounds, roll-over noises and audio streams. <earshot> trawls through web sites by following hypertext links, searching for audio which can then be played and manipulated. <earshot> does not push the user into a pre-determined experience; it does not differentiate between sound sources, but generates opportunities for randomness, chance and play (experiences that connect with the processes involved in making music, as well as the complex subjectivities of listeners). <earshot> is built using two distinct pieces of software that were produced during the project's research and development phase. The first, _soundProbe_, is a software agent that can use three search strategies supplied to it. Firstly, the user can type in web page addresses, sending it to specific locations to search outwards for sound files, by following links between web pages. Secondly, if the user types a word or phrase into this URL window, this will be sent to conventional search engines, the results of which are used to take <earshot> to new sites to scan for audio files. A third search strategy can be set in motion as soon as <earshot> is started, by connecting it to the <earshot> home site, where it can interact dynamically with the <earshot> server which provides it with a changing set of samples and lists of web sites for it to trawl. So <earshot> starts to make a noise almost as soon as it is fired up, and there are different levels of feedback between the user and the application. The user immediately starts to generate results, even if everything that <earshot> is doing is not immediately understood.(3) A second component to <earshot> is called Noise/machine. This is the interface and audio engine that opens up and plays sound files and streams. Noise/machine utilises Quicktime 4 technology, and is able to play nearly all common sound files, quicktime streams and static movie files.(4) This interface completely disregards any conventions of music software (there is no tempo or time signature setting, no musical grid within which to place sounds, and no musical notation of any kind). Sound files are loaded into an audio spike on the left side of the screen, from where they can be dropped into an audio field that comprises the rest of the screen, where they can be dragged around to change their pitch and volume (moving to the left slows the sound and its pitch down, to the right speeds the sound and the pitch up, moving to the top of the screen increases volume, and moving to the bottom decreases volume).(5) If left on its own, <earshot> will generate its own mix. <earshot> is ready to go into this mode as soon as it is fired up, and then will do so if the user does not touch the keyboard for two minutes. This mix is determined by filtering chaotic patterns into events that occur within the audio field. This generator can also be started by hitting the 'S' key, and stopped by pressing any key. Using <earshot>, the web is transformed into a vast sound machine. This develops the practise of sampling, processing and mixing sound which has become central to various strands of contemporary musical production. <earshot> is a software that DJs and musicians can create multiple uses for. As a performance tool <earshot> can be used both for 'live' improvisations and as a studio instrument. As a composition tool <earshot> enables real time arrangement of sound. <earshot> is a search engine that turns the web into a massive sample library. And it is an audio browser that crawls the web by following links, exploring the web as an acoustic space full of unexpected discoveries and chance encounters. Our <earshot> promotion campaigns have identified various potential audiences. We have promoted <earshot> in a range of cultural environments - both as a sound toy and tool. We know that there are various net-based and music software audiences that will be interested. We want to bring together these different audiences; we hope that the collision of responses will stimulate ideas which can then be fed back into the project. But beyond any consideration of possible target audiences, we have other ideas for <earshot>. These are concerned with the social and technical connections made by the project. <earshot> understands how culture is always collectively generated. <earshot> is a tool that releases the creativity of its users. It explores the web as a network of simultaneous and parallel spaces, where every composition and performance produced by <earshot> is also a collective cultural production of the web. <earshot> plugs into these collective energies that form the net. <earshot> reveals how the web is under constant construction; a space which can be endlessly remixed, where every sound path that <earshot> creates is both a unique performance and composition. <earshot> is also an investigation into acoustic space, the spaces we listen to, and the connected experience of superimposition and simultaneity. Acoustic spaces are capable of resonance; in other words, the relationships and connections that are set up in an acoustic space can respond to each other in a non-linear process. <earshot> is a tool for exploring and producing acoustic spaces.(6) <earshot> is inspired by technologies that have transformed the means of musical production. For example, a dynamic and heterogeneous dance culture has developed over the last decade, with different genres of electronic dance music that have all been made possible by the availability of cheap music technologies. The effect of this on the music industry has been far more profound than that of punk a generation before. Any strict categorisation between 'avant-garde' and 'popular' is now impossible. In the context of music production and consumption, <earshot> makes its own contribution to challenging this particular binary code. Turning <earshot> on, the user becomes both producer and consumer, creating endless mixes of the web's acoustic spaces without the need for establishing finished products. <earshot> has evolved because of an optimistic determination to explore how much is up for grabs across what is outlined for our cultural consumption, the web included. <earshot> wishes to contribute to an experimentation that embraces the fact that technologies can enable possibilities not known or controlled by those who originally developed them. Indeed, this was the point at which we began to speculate about the possibilities for creating our own software. Notes: (1.) Other projects that we have worked on have also fed into the design of <earshot>. Andi Freeman worked on a research project developing a web browser capable of sampling text from the web and processing it according to various pre-defined specifications. Jason Skeet is involved with the experimental dance label Ambush. (2.) When downloading <earshot> from the <earshot> web site, the opportunity is given to subscribe to an <earshot> electronic mailing list. (3.) <earshot> can also be configured to explore the local hard disc or network, since the directory structures found there are similar to those on the net. (4.) <earshot> requires Quicktime 4, and is built using the Java for Quicktime development kit. (5.) Keyboard commands are used for the deleting, muting, reversing, pausing, rewinding and looping/unlooping of sound files in the audio field. (6.) In contrast to the non-linearity of acoustic space, the invention of perspective was not merely a technique for visual representation, but also enabled the development of linear and sequential structures for organising thought and perception. This engendered specific subjectivities; the visual self, the self-contained, atomised individual of western society. For more on this notion of acousticspace and how it relates to our use of electronic media, see 'Acoustic Cyberspace' by Erik Davis ------------------------------------------------------------ <earshot> exploration, navigation and composition of sound on the web <http://www.deepdisc.com/earshot> ------------------------------------------------------------ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 2 0 | - - - - Collecting Global TV News at the Turn of Century Call for participants in a global collaborative project devised by video artist Zhang Peili. As the century comes to a close, the night of 31 December will be the most awaited time of the year world-wide. It will be an unique and epoch-making event, full of explicit and implicit meanings and a moment of both retrospection and anticipation. Television media around the globe will use different voices and perspectives to talk about the same issues, the end of the twentieth century, and expectations for 2000. AIMS AND OBJECTIVES. * To find collaborators for each participating country and to ask them to videotape the main television news program broadcast at 7 p.m. in the evening of 31 December. (In most countries the evening news is shown at 7 p.m. Should this not be the case, the collaborator should record the program according to the standard evening news time of his/her country). * Once recorded I will collect all the participating countries TV news and display it in a video installation,with a channel for each TV set and a TV set for each country * The countries whose TV news are needed for the project should fall within one or more of the following categories : -countries with international or regional influence; -countries possessing a distinctive character or representing a different perspective than Western mainstream in terms of politics, religious beliefs, style of life or cultural aspects; -countries playing an important role in regional conflicts. * The recording should begin a little before the program so to make sure that the opening titles are included. * The length should include the whole broadcast of the news, including the weather forecast at the end, in case this should follow immediately after. (Therefore it is safe to assume it will need a 180 minute videocassette.) * Each program will be kept in its original language and the contents will be translated into Chinese, English, Arabic and Russian in an accompanying brochure to be distributed to the public. RECORDING FORMAT The accepted format for the video-tapes are : VHS, SVHS, Hi8, Mini Digital Cassette, U-Matic or Betacam. The program can be taped directly through any means offered by the public television network. The content should be continuous and complete, and the sound and image should as clear as possible. PARTICIPATION IS STILL NEEDED FOR THE FOLLOWING COUNTRIES: ASIA: Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Turkey, Lebanon, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria, Philippines. EUROPE: Northern Ireland, Yugoslavia, Greece, Romania, Poland, Ukraine, Russia. AFRICA: Angola, Nigeria , Somalia, Rwanda, Uganda, Congo, Central African Republic, Zambia, Libya, Algeria, Guinea, Cameroon, Sudan, Mozambique. AMERICA: Mexico, Panama, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Cuba, Colombia, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Peru, Uruguay. OCEANIA: Fiji. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The names of all participants will be printed in a special brochure presented together with the piece, unless you prefer to remain anonymous. The documents generated in the process of obtaining each video-cassette will also be exhibited with the work after receiving permission from each collaborator. EXPENSES I will reimburse each collaborator for the expenses encountered for the taping and shipping of the cassettes. The success of the project relies upon our collaboration Thanking you in advance for your support. INTERESTED PARTIES CONTACT Zhang Peili October 1999, Hangzhou, China Mail Address:Hangzhou Arts and Crafts School Hangzhou 310016 People's Republic of China Telephone/fax number: 0086-(0)571-6955193 E-mail: Zpeili@163.net - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 2 1 | - - - - NEW MEDIA: Working Practices in the Electronic Arts Please see the research results which are now posted on our web site at: www.lse.ac.uk/depts/gender/newmedia - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 2 2 | - - - - I want to set up a web page with my art work. I do not want to use my own pc as a server, however, I would love a web site with my own domain name. Does anyone know how to get this?? If not, does anyone know a good place to get a web page space from. I want to pay for the space as I do not want ads on my site. Thanks, Dean New York City - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 2 3 | - - - - please send me your hand. http://www.stations.org/2Khands - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 2 4 | - - - - -----Message d'origine----- De: Alban Saporos [SMTP:alban.saporos@theobvious.zzn.com] Date: mercredi 10 novembre 1999 11:58 Objet: SOLIDARIDAD con NETWORK ART Chain Campaign - SNA CC Chers confreres, dear partners La net.art fatigue fait les gros titres sur la plupart des mailing-lists de la communaute artistique. Devant pareille urgence, j'ai decide de lancer aujourd'hui la the net.art tiredness makes the headlines on the majority of the mailing-lists of the artistic community. In front of similar urgency, I have decide to launch today the SOLIDARIDAD con NETWORK ART Chain Campaign - SNA CC Parce qu'elle prend ce qu'il y a de meilleur dans l'hacktisme et dans l'economie de l'information pour lever des fonds de soutien, cette campagne ne vous coutera absolument rien et pourra aider un net artist a recouvrer la sante. Because it takes the best of hacktism and of the economy of information to raise funds of support, this campaign will cost you absolutely nothing and will help a Net artist to recover health.. [COMMENT AGIR ?] Faites-suivre cet appel, diffusez-le le plus possible, ne coupez pas la chaine et rappelez-vous le SUBJECT, c'est important. Soyez le chainon manquant ! [HOW TO ACT?] Forward this call, as much as possible diffuse it, do not cut the chain and point out you the SUBJECT, it is significant Be the missing link! MERCI DE VOTRE GENEROSITE. THANK YOU FOR YOUR GENEROSITY. Votre YOU Alban Saporos Information Charity Business Chairman ------------- Alban Saporos critique d'art et commissaire d'exposition. "L'art a l'epreuve de l'information" conseil aux artistes et licence de Systeme Nerveux Artistique. Stating the Obvious. All meta, all the time. <http://www.theobvious.com/> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 2 5 | - - - - NY Arts Magazine http://nyartsmagazine.com ---------------------------- November issue! Get the full art world picture right now while it's happening! (The printed version is on the newsstands). Don't forget you can use our chat page at http://nyartsmagazine.com/bbs/ and post; openings, news, events, questions and debate the issues. Join the international art community and NY Arts in its rapid expansion on=20 the web and in print at http://nyartsmagazine.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------- NY Arts Magazine #37, November 1999 issue features: 7 Mob RuleShows: Art Moving, Bingo Hall, Eyewash, Flip Side, Leo Koenig, =20= =20 Momenta, Pierogi 2000, Star Sixty-Seven. 11 letter to Giuliani by Mark von Schlegell 13 Other Considerations:"SENSATION" a conversation with Charlotta Kotik =20= =20 by Horace Brockington 14 Minimalia: Reduction, Phenomenology, and Essence by Robert C. Morgan 17 Visiting Joan Jonas with Rachel Yuens 19 Sensation by H. Zinnes 20 SVA digital Salon 60 students/artists 22 Art: Nature or counternature by Wolfgang Becker 24 BRITISH UNDERGROUND FILM OF THE LATE 90=92s=92 by Jane Gang 27 Whitney and MoMA Look Ahead Into the Past =20 by Harriet Zinnes 29 What=92s =93Old-Fashioned=94? by Piri Halasz 33 Art (Out) of This Century by H. B. 34 Narratives. by M. Meikle 37 The Transcendental.. by James Kalm 38 MICHAEL ST. JOHN by Jane Gang & Millree Hughe 40 Daze on Muralists 42 Stray Dog: The photographs of Daido Moriyama by James Trainor 45 Cuba 46 Balthus George Saru by Valery Oisteanu 48 ARTISTS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES 49 centerfold with Elaine Reichek 52 The Constellations of Francesco Clemente =20 54 Downing Project by Shin Yi 55 Children of Berlin 57 Andre Masson 59 E.W. Godwin: Aesthetic Movement Architect and Designer. by Ana Maria Torres 60 Chilean Architecture: Mathias Klotz 63 The Essl Collection of Contemporary Art=20 64 From New York to Tel Aviv by Lori Nozick 66 Issey Miyake Making Things by A. M. Torres 67 Letter from Paris by Nina=20 Zivancevic 68 Dazzling by Design: by Theodore Bouloukos 69 Reviews/previews Ron Ehrlich @ Stephen Haller, NY2K: A Cultural Survival Kit for the New Millennium @ CHARAS/ el Bohio,=20 Another City for Another Life: Constant's New Babylon @ The Drawing Center Joan Jonas Videos @ Pat Hearn Gallery Thoughts in Sculpture @Montclair State University Trevor Winkfield @ Tibor de Nagy Drawing in the Present Tense" @ Parsons School of Design Gallery - Janet Kusmierski =93Paintings=94 @ Elizabeth Harris Gallery, Yuri Kuper @ Yoshii Gallery Mara Held @ Christiane Nienaber Gallery, Eckhard Etzold, @Au Base "Why Draw a Landscape?" @Karen McCready Fine Art Photic II with @ Eyewash Carrol Dunham @ Metro Pictures John Currin @ Andrea Rosen Alex Katz @ Brent Sikkema John Wesley @ Jessica Fredericks Gallery Kiki Lamers @ CRG iki Smith @ Pace Wildenstein Justine Kurland @ Patrick Callery Gallery Jerry Kearns @ P.P.O.W. =93In black and white=94 @ Admit One Gallery Andreas Slominski @ Metro Pictures=20 Tim Steele @ Rare Gallery lem Crosby & Ulrich Wellmann @ Patricia Sweetow Gallery Masami Teraoka @ Catharine Clark Gallery Juan Sanchez @ El Museo del Barrio "The Lottery" @ The Rotunda Gallery Kuni=E9 Sugiura @ Leslie Tonkonow Artworks and Projects Julie Roberts @ Sean Kelly Gallery "Cildo Meireles" @ The New Museum of Contemporary Art "Inverted Odysseys" @ Grey Art Gallery, New York University Cocktails" @ Sotheby=92s Robert Creely @New York Public Library 83 Picks Christopher= =20 Chambers 90 Krzysztof Wodiczko -Critical Vehicles: Writings, Projects, Interviews= =20 LISTINGS 98 the photo of the month -Copyright =A9 NY Arts Magazine, 1999.=20 ...and more on our web site.... ------------------------------------------------------- http://nyartsmagazine.com e-mail:nyartsmaga@aol.com NY Arts Magazine 473 Broadway, 7fl New York, NY 10013 tel:1-212-274-8993 fax:1-212-226-3400 USA - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 2 6 | - - - - Thundergulch reminder of November events 1-3. Next week -- Two public presentations followed by another the following week Note: Various locations and times 4. Plus video installation by Thundergulch Artslink resident from last season -- Krassimir Terziev @ The Kitchen 5. Plus videos still on view @ Rockefeller Center 1. Monday, November 15 -- <italic>More and Less</italic> (interactive exhibition & artists' talk) 12:30 pm @ ITP Interactive Telecommunications Program, Tisch School of the Arts,NYU 721 Broadway, South Elevators to 4th floor, NYC An exhibition of pioneering interactive multimedia projects at the intersection of art and technology, featuring the work of the NYU Interactive Telecommunications Program Interval Research Fellows: Dan O'Sullivan, Camille Utterback, Daniel Rozin, and Emily Weil. Viewing of exhibition followed by artists' talk @ 1:30 pm. (Seating limited for artists' talk; open to first 50 people) www.itp.nyu.edu ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2. Tuesday, November 16 -- SVA's 7th Annual New York Digital Salon 8 pm @ VOID, 16 Howard Street, NYC (corner of Mercer) Featuring <italic>Composite Cells</italic>, a solo A/V performance by Jarryd Lowder and <italic>Les Jaseurs</italic>, a performance by G.H. Hovagimyan and Peter Sinclair,as well as animations, from this international exhibition of computer art organized by the School of Visual Arts in NYC. (On view at the Visual Arts Museum at the School of Visual Arts from November 8-December 15) www.sva.edu/salon ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3. Monday, November 22 -- Thundergulch/World Views 6:30 pm @ Harvestworks, 596 Broadway, Suite 602, NYC New media work created by some recent residents from LMCC's World Views residency program that takes place on the 91st floor of the World Trade Center. Featuring Jennifer & Kevin McCoy's long term, multiple media project, Airworld (www.airworld.net), sponsored by the Walker Art Center and a selection of digital video work by Paul Pfeiffer. ```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````` 4. Multimedia Bulgarian artist, Krassimir Terziev, who was an Artslink Fellow with Thundergulch last year, has a video installation on view at The Kitchen: <italic>Reader/Everything Seems to Be Alright </italic> Through November 27: Tuesdays-Saturdays, 2-6 pm @ The Kitchen 512 West 19th Street (between 10th & 11th Avenues) 212-255-5793 www.thekitchen.org -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5. Thundergulch @ Rockefeller Center Extended through the month of November "Arts Interlude" Video Wall Program @ 1251 Avenue of the Americas Mondays and Wednesdays: 12 - 2 pm (between 49th-50th Streets, east Concourse) Thundergulch was approached by Ark Restaurants Corporation (owners of Lutece, the Bryant Park Grill, and scores of other first-class establishments nationwide) to curate a program of artists' videos and animations for a new restaurant called Z-DIM that will open in Southfield, Michigan later this fall. (www.arkrestaurants.com) In order to celebrate this arts/business partnership and to showcase some of the artists' work in the New York area, Thundergulch has selected a sampling of the full program to showcase as a "sneak preview" to the opening of the restaurant. [ . . . ] Programs organized by Thundergulch Director Kathy Brew Thundergulch, c/o LMCC, 5 World Trade Center, Suite 9235, NYC 10048 tgulch@artswire.org www.thundergulch.org 212-432-0900, ext. 223 Thundergulch is a program of the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. Funding for Thundergulch is provided by the AT&T Foundation, the Bell Atlantic Foundation, the City of New York Department of Cultural Affairs, Heathcote Art Foundation, Media Arts Technical Assistance Fund, the National Endowment for the Arts, Electronic Media and Film Program of the New York State Council on the Arts, the May and Samuel Rudin Family Foundation, and the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. Thundergulch is also grateful for support from the Alliance for Downtown New York, the Chase Manhattan Foundation, J.P. Morgan, the New York Information Technology Center, Rudin Management, the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey, Parsons School of Design, and Harvestworks Digital Media Arts. _____________________________________________________________________________ Thundergulch c/o Lower Manhattan Cultural Council 5 World Trade Center, Suite 9235 New York, NY 10048 tel (212) 432-0900 fax (212) 432-3646 email: tgulch@artswire.org http://www.thundergulch.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 2 7 | - - - - On the 18. December 1999 between 8 and 9 pm German (GMT+1) time we will create a Live Broadcast Audio-Art Sculpture on stage in Cologne/Germany. You are invited to join us by sending some of your thoughts (max. 99 words) or sounds (Audio-Files max. 18 seconds) by E-mail during this time. The hour will be dedicated to: "Illusion of the End" " Tithonos, son of Laomedon, was carried off by the Godess Eos because of his incredible beauty. She begged Zeus for his imortality and he granted this wish, but Eos had forgotten to ask for eternal youth as well. So Tithonos grew soon old, but could not die. Transformed into a cricket you can still hear his longing songs today." "Illusion of the End" is a multimedia radioplay, which will be recorded and broadcast live. The announcer utters the cancelation. Muscians perform "The Big Bang". Monolog's of possible beginnings sound of the stage. Several video-monitors project the "Talking Heads", giant pictures of modern fairy-tellers, speaking of beginnings, ends, immortality and transitoriness. The musicians collect sounds without the illusion of ever hearing their endings. The internet serves as an ear through which live Audio-Files and speech-converted e-mails are heard. On stage a sound-installation, a box, from it emit voices telling of crickets and timekeeping. The "Big Crunch" reverberates from the instruments. The renouncer proclaims the anouncement. Performer: Dr.Hartmut Dedert and Grace Yoon Internet-Remix Charly Jungbauer Musicians: Alexandr Alexandrov, Blixa Bargeld, Roman Bunka, Jeanne Lee, Serguei Letov, Youri Parfenov, Mal Waldron Talking Heads (on Video): Doris Dörrie, Marusa Krese, Malachi Favors, Oskar Pastior, Ulrike Trüstedt, Bernhard Waldenfels, Hermann de Vries Sound-Boxes: CULT-LAB Mona Göschel & Charly Jungbauer Hope to hear from you, Grace Yoon and the I.O.T.E. team If you have a sound or a thougth but you are unable to send us mail during the above time frame you can also send it in advance to: e-mail: iote@cult-lab.de web: www.cult-lab.de/iote.html - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 2 8 | - - - - Hoping that members of this list won't feel that the following is innappropriate: The idea that something is proposed as not worth keeping sparks debate; some more serious, some more quirky, some invested in political opacity, and some in humour. Why do we keep what we keep; what attachments, preferences, habits and beliefs do these 'things' reveal? What do we (both as individuals and social bodies) collect? What do our collections say about 'us'? What do our rubbish bins say about us? At the moment that these 'things' are given, they pass into a liminal space of indeterminate value, that might or might not resolve itself through the processes of representation and interaction. Values for 'us' - values for 'them', social values, personal values, notional values, national values, commodity values, mnemonic values. Value-transitions, rather than value-fixities, are implied and intended by the project's title, our collaborative approach, the work and the work's frame. Things Not Worth Keeping (a collaboration between artist, Kirsten Lavers and poet/publisher, cris cheek) is realising itself through what we have come to call 'occurrences'; installations, works in video, bookart and hypertext - still more are planned. Many of these are interactive and participatory. Aspects of occurrences to date are documented / presented on this website http://thingsnotworthkeeping.com To coincide with the website's *launch* we're offering the opportunity for about 10 readers of this list (we're sending this to several lists - so apologies herewith cross posting in advance) to take part in our forthcoming *occurrence* 'Millennium Collection', which has been commissioned by The Small Acts At The Millennium Consortium. We're wanting to allot 100 places on the mailshot list from the various e-communities with which we've been involved over the past few years. We'll have to operate it by taking the first 10 - ish responses from each. So be quick, first come first in. A total of 1000 people will be invited by targetted (snail) mailshot to propose a thing of their own that they consider to be 'not worth keeping', and to suggest why this might the case, on or about December 31st 1999. Approximately 100 things will be chosen and photographed to form a 'millennium collection'. The collection will subsequently be redispersed amongst the contributors - each person receiving a thing donated by someone else and a souvenir catalogue.The project will culminate in a virtual collection website, distribution of the catalogue and documentation in The Small Acts For The Millennium book to be published by Black Dog (London). If you would like to be involved in this project please e-mail your name and snail mail address to: collection@thingsnotworthkeeping.com. Deadline for inclusion: December 1st 1999 But anyway,enjoy 'thingsnotworthkeeping.com' and we'd welcome any feedback or responses. Kirsten Lavers cris cheek 'millennium collection' is commissioned by Small Acts At The Millennium, a series of time based projects funded by the Millennium Commission and the Arts Council of England. This project has also received support from Eastern Arts Board. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | | | | # 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