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Networked_Performance (5 unread)

  • Permalink for '404 International Festival of Art & Technology'

    404 International Festival of Art & Technology

    Posted: 29-January-2012, 11:44pm CET by jo

    404 International Festival of Art & Technology :: Open Call — Deadline: February 28, 2012.

    404 International Festival of Art & Technology has been awarded by “Fondo Nacional de las Artes” (National Arts Founding) for the production of the ninth season, which will be organized in different phases throughout 2012.

    404 Festival launches an open call destined to artists and researchers from all over the world with the aim of spread and stimulate new media creations.

    Authors can submit their works in the following areas:

    • Installation
    • Net.Art
    • Still Image
    • Animation
    • Video
    • Music
    • Audiovisual Set
    • Theory
    • Performance

    Submission is free. Please follow the instructions published here.

  • Permalink for 'Machine Libertine'

    Machine Libertine

    Posted: 29-January-2012, 10:55pm CET by jo

    Machine Libertine is a newly created media poetry group.

    The method of our work is the exploration of the role of media in the development of literary art practices including poetry film, text generators and performance art. The main principles of the group are formulated in Machine Poetry Manifesto and agree with two of Eugenio Tisselli?s manifestos about machine poetry — manifesto for the destruction of poets and Text Jockey — in pointing out the idea of liberation of the machines from the routine tasks and increasing the intensity of their use for creative and educational practices.

    Machine Libertine had been founded in December 2010 starting with a poetry film called Snow Queen: a piece created for British Council and presented recently at Purple Blurb series at MIT. It is a combination of masculine poetry «Poison Tree» by William Blake contrasted to mechanic female MacOS voice and cubistic video imagery of Souzfilm animation «Snow Queen» (1957).”

    Snow Queen from Machine Libertine on Vimeo.

    We are exploring how the text can be transformed by mechanized reading and visualizing it and what are the possible limits of this transmedia play of interpretation.

    Whoever You Are from Machine Libertine on Vimeo.

    Manifesto

    Our aim is to liberate machines from servitude and give them their own voice.

    We need a new universal machine poetic language. It is an algorithm to generate digital text, audio and visuals. This universality proves the transitional capability of text to be translated from one language to another through this machine multimedia translation. This mechanism will enable machine language to speak itself randomly recombining words images and sounds to produce new media poetry.

    Our aim is to liberate the machines and trust them creative work.

    Human language lost its power and only words generated by the machines can make sense.

    While machines developed with us they became the true mirror that we hold to ourselves. In their mechanic voice they will explain us who we are.

  • Permalink for 'Live Stage: Anomalia [La Jolla, CA]'

    Live Stage: Anomalia [La Jolla, CA]

    Posted: 29-January-2012, 12:28am CET by jo

    Anomalia :: February 16 - May 18, 2012 :: Opening: February 16; 5:30 - 8:30 pm :: University Art Gallery, UCSD, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, California.

    Anomalia features four international contemporary artists whose work engages scientific models of research and representation. Charles Gaines, Erick Meyenberg, Erick Beltrán, and Jorge Satorre employ empirical systems in their practice, including ethnographic data research, cognitive modeling, and systems theory. Anomalia is curated by distinguished independent curator Lucía Sanromán specifically for the UAG and the UCSD campus.

    The word Anomalia is the Latin root for anomaly and refers to a deviation from the norm. The title references the oppositional intersection between art’s subjective and speculative methodologies and the empirical analysis and objective systems of knowledge required of the sciences. The relationship between art and science have been studied and explored in various ways for decades, and recent discussion has specially focused on positioning art practice itself as a form of scientific research. In contrast, Anomalia takes a new approach by closely investigating diagrammatic and systematic forms of representation that reveal the constructed nature of both art and science and their mutual investment in the notion of the sublime.

    The celebrated conceptual artist and CalArts professor Charles Gaines is featured in the exhibition and his work provides an important theoretical and historical context to the younger artists. The exhibition presents two bodies of work Gaines created in the early 1980s, Landscape: Assorted Trees with Regressions (1981), and Numbers & Trees V (1989). These series investigate the role that systems play in the creation of form and of aesthetic phenomena. Implicit to them is a questioning of the means by which images are read, understood and experienced. By responding to a predetermined numerical structure, rather than to his own subjective desires and needs, the artist proposes that concepts such as beauty and order are learned rather than implicit to the artistic object.

    Utilizing LED lights, music and physical space, Erick Meyenberg presents a four-dimensional diagram of the genetic coding of Mexicans, from the Colonial period through today. Using 22 individuals as subjects, Meyenberg calculated the percentage of indigenous, white, and black blood in each individual to create a three-dimensional genetic diagram. By plotting these findings the artist generates an immersive colored light and sound installation that is a symbolic reflection of the socio-economical structure that prevails in Mexico and other countries. The artist has made a new site-conditioned version of Étude taxonomique-comparative entre les Castes de la Nouvelle Espagne et celles du Mexique Contemporain in response to the interior architecture of the UAG.

    Shifting to cognitive science and its history, Beltrán and Satorre work collaboratively on a long-term project titled Modeling Standard that takes as a departure point the theory of the “Standard Model” in particle Physics that states that everything is made of twelve fundamental particles. Beltrán and Satorre appropriate this model to create a subjective, multi-narrative, illustrated micro-history that presents key moments and characters from cognitive science, psychoanalysis, art history and literature, including Carlo Ginzburg and Fantomas, among many others. Anomalia features new material created in response to a special interview between the artists and renowned UCSD neuroscientist Vilayanur Subramanian Ramachandran, the Director of the Center for Brain and Cognition at UCSD.

    Anomalia features four contemporary artists whose work is fueled by concepts derived from scientific research and who utilize scientific representations and conventions in their work, but remain embedded in aesthetic phenomenology. The exhibition suggests that by bringing together science with aesthetics, both orders are interrupted. Accordingly, the exhibit both questions scientific positivism and exposes the conceptual underpinnings of aesthetic rapture.

    Lectures/Presentations:
    February 8, 6:30-8:00pm, Lecture by Erick Meyenberg,
    Warren Lecture Hall Room 2001, UCSD

    February 15, 6:30-8:00pm, Charles Gaines and Dr. Rafael Núñez,
    Associate Professor in the Department of Cognitive Science,
    Warren Lecture Hall Room 2001, UCSD

    February 16, 6:30-7:30pm, Erick Beltrán and Jorge Satorre,
    Opening night talk: Modeling Standard?A Guided Tour
    University Art Gallery, UCSD

  • Permalink for 'Review of Josephine Bosma?s ?Nettitudes?'

    Review of Josephine Bosma?s ?Nettitudes?

    Posted: 29-January-2012, 12:34am CET by jo

    Review of Josephine Bosma’s Nettitudes, Let?s Talk Net Art (2011) by Eric Kluitenberg (via spectre):

    Nettitudes, the new book by Josephine Bosma, is an important contribution to the often confusing and unbalanced discussion about the Internet and contemporary art. This contribution becomes especially clear from what the book does not do. First of all, Bosma does not try to offer a historical overview of the phenomenon that she calls ‘net art’. She also indicates clearly why it is difficult to mark out this area unequivocally, for there are widely differing views as to how the interaction between the Internet and contemporary art should be interpreted. Indeed, net art must in the first place be seen in a broader context than that of contemporary art, because the development of this ‘genre’ cannot be seen separately from the various forms of network culture with which it sometimes partly converges or by which it is influenced.

    Moreover, Bosma does not wish to call net art a discipline or movement, as the entire terrain is too diverse and heterogeneous for that, and also has too much of a cross-disciplinary character. Nor is it a good idea to have net art purely coincide with the medium of the Internet, which itself can hardly be described. When the same problem is approached from an art theoretical point of view, limiting net art to a particular medium is also absolutely absurd. Bosma herself refers to Rosalind Krauss, the American art theorist, who in her famous essay ‘Sculpture in the Expanded Field’ argued that contemporary art has wrested itself from the yoke of the medium ? it has entered an ‘expanded field’ in which every material or medium can be appropriated, but to which the ‘work’ can never be reduced.

    That does not mean that the medium as a category can simply be shoved aside. This would lead to a simplistic dichotomy between conceptualism versus materialism ? a false contradiction, according to Bosma, which would only work counter-productively in trying to better understand the phenomenon she investigates. What is of primary importance for most of the works that fall under the term ‘net art’ is a good understanding of the network culture from which they spring: the interactions that artists have online with one another and with the public. Bosma furthermore points out that net art does not only refer to art that takes place in one way or another on the Internet and on the screen. It can also concern work that is directly inspired by the new realities that the Internet and online cultures create, but whose manifestation takes place entirely off-line, separately from the Internet.

    Therefore, the definition she uses to describe net art reads in its shortest form as: art that is rooted in or based on Internet cultures. This way, she prevents an arbitrary broadening of the concept, for only works which cannot be seen separately from the cultures that have developed around the Internet can legitimately be considered net art. With this definition, it is clear that the phenomenology, logic and structure of the Internet cannot be bypassed when coming up with an adequate description of net art. No more than can net art be reduced to a technological genre.

    According to Bosma, it is hard to give a good description of this heterogeneous and cross-disciplinary field and introduce some structure into the discussion, but not impossible. In order to get a grasp of the material, she introduces five key concepts by which the vast majority of the works that she calls net art can be understood: Code / Flow / Screen / Matter / Context.

    She uses ‘Code’ to look at work that primarily is aimed at the technical infrastructure and software that form the underpinnings of the Internet. This is the most abstract category, accounting for the fact that the Internet in fact rests upon a series of agreements set down in technical protocols. The fact that interesting artistic experiments are being carried out in precisely this inaccessible area indicates the depth of the artistic research behind those experiments. Bosma unlocks this hermetic area with a clear description of the classical project ‘Web Stalker’ by the British artist collective I/O/D.

    ‘Flow’ refers to the remote connections that are made through the Internet, with the emphasis on live performance and network installation art. While distance and spatial relations do not vanish in the digital network, the spatial logic and the forms of exchange (image, sound, information) that can take place in the new spatial configurations do change radically. These processes are manifested by the performative aspect, particularly live performance.

    ‘Screen’ refers to the complex (technological) processes behind the fragile visual form of net art works. In these works, the semblance of a stable image is often undermined by the underlying process. Interaction with this type of work makes the viewer aware of the capacity of endless transformation that characterizes the digital image.

    ‘Matter’ investigates the role that the hardware, the physical machinery behind the ‘immaterial’ network, plays in net art ? sometimes by literally putting these machines on stage, sometimes also by presenting absurd or faulty machinery.

    Finally, ‘Context’ is about the social and political context in which a certain category of net art works chooses an articulated position. Particularly this category of works been given a lot of attention by critics over the course of the years, but according to Bosma it is by no means representative of the entire field of net art.

    Nettitudes is divided into two sections. The first section frameworks the discussion on net art, gives definitions and discusses the positions of other theorists and art critics, such as Tilman Baumgärtel, Julian Stallabras and Rachel Green. Here, Bosma also introduces the concepts mentioned above in order to provide some structure and orientation for the discussion on net art. In the second section, she examines the various positions taken by artists and movements in network culture over the years. Then she goes into the thorny debate on the conservation of net art works. The book closes with a chapter on Internet-related sound art, a form that adds an ‘intimate’ dimension of its own to net art.

    Nettitudes is a breath of fresh air. An important and underexposed artistic genre is finally getting the serious attention it deserves. Nettitudes also offers a useful analysis for the further development of a critical and sound substantive ‘discourse’ on the exchange between the Internet and the production and reception of contemporary art.

    ————–

    Originally written for: Open #22 - “Transparency. Publicity and Secrecy in the Age of WikiLeaks”, Journal for Art and the Public Domain, Amsterdam, 2011.
    [www.skor.nl]

    Josephine Bosma, Nettitudes: Let’s Talk Net Art, Rotterdam, NAi Publishers, ISBN 978-90-5662-800-0, 272 p., ? 23.50
    [networkcultures.org] /

  • Permalink for '?Light and Dark Networks? by Ursula Endlicher'

    ?Light and Dark Networks? by Ursula Endlicher

    Posted: 29-January-2012, 12:39am CET by jo

    [Details of dark version (Mushroom's mycelium) left, light version (Spider web) right.] Light and Dark Networks by Ursula Endlicher, commissioned by the Whitney Museum for whitney.org:

    Light and Dark Networks consist of two online data performances taking place anywhere on Whitney.org during sunrise and sunset in New York City, and are directed by actual weather and environmental changes in the New York City area. The two performances are inspired by the structures of natural networks: one aboveground (spider web), the other one underground (mushroom’s mycelium). In the video segments of the piece Endlicher impersonates a spider and several mushroom characters…

    The piece looks at networks as living organisms — be they spider webs, mycelium, or the Internet — constantly changing by different artificial or natural parameters. Taking a closer look at the nature of the Internet itself this piece playfully examines how our physical and virtual existence is embedded in networks…

    The project takes over the entire Whitney Museum’s website for 30 seconds daily at SUNRISE and SUNSET in New York City, so make sure to get there early. For exact times of daily sunrise and sunset please go to whitney.org/Sunset.

    If you like to receive reminders before each performance, follow Ursula on twitter!

    For detailed information on Light and Dark Networks go to [lightdarknetworks.ursenal.net] .

    Let yourself get entangled…



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