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Redes de arte

Observatorio de noticias de arte contemporáneo en blogs nacionales e internacionales.

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Redes de arte es un observatorio global de noticias de arte contemporáneo, centrado en blogs nacionales e internacionales de temática artística. Arte10 selecciona regularmente los mejores blogs, para acercarlos al público en formato de feed.


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  • Permalink for '.txt/080928'

    .txt/080928

    Posted: 28-September-2008, 4:13pm CEST by Greg J. Smith

    Aram Bartholl - Friends

    I've decided to start semi-regularly posting dispatches as to my current reading list. If I didn't bookmark so compulsively with delicious I could use that services auto-publication feature but I've decided I'd rather be a bit more selective in highlighting writing (online or otherwise) that has caught my eye. I'll probably be posting these .txt messages two or three times a month and the content will generally fall within the scope of discussion here on Serial Consign.

    • Witold Rybczynski takes designers KBAS to task on their recently dedicated Pentagon Memorial. Rybczynski critiques the statistics driven design methodology of the project and charges that it fails to deliver anything beyond a superficial reading of the tragedy of American Airlines Flight 77.
    • This week Theo Honohan published a succinct essay on web/space/social media artist Aram Bartholl's Friends workshop (pictured above) which was held at Futursonic earlier this year.
    • I enjoyed new media researcher Anne Helmond's Software Studies presentation, so it is great to have access to her full Masters thesis Blogging for Engines. Blogs under the Influence of Software-Engine Relations - which is introduced and downloadable here.
    • Marshall Kirkpatrick at ReadWriteWeb provided a great overview of the role of current.tv and twitter in augmenting and annotating the presidential debates on Friday.
    • In regards to that archaic "book" technology, I'm currently reading Ian Bogost's "comparative video game criticism" text Unit Operations (and my head is spinning).
  • Permalink for 'Facade Failure'

    Facade Failure

    Posted: 26-September-2008, 12:58am CEST by Greg J. Smith

    Sean Galbraith - Blue Screen of Death

    Here is a project you won't see on Interactive Architecture any time soon. The above image, aptly titled Blue Screen of Death was shot by Toronto photographer Sean Galbraith last November. It captured several large display screens on a downtown Toronto retail building in a rather vulnerable state. This is the side of media architecture that we don't see documented on design blogs as failures, glitches and malfunctions don't exactly reinforce the idea of building envelopes as a surface for a seamless media experience. There is something unnerving about error messages at an architectural scale - perhaps they are flickering reminders that even the city needs an occasional reboot. [via blogTO]

  • Permalink for 'Tentative Spaces'

    Tentative Spaces

    Posted: 25-September-2008, 3:00pm CEST by Greg J. Smith

    Civilization - Revolution

    [Civilization Revolution]

    This morning my first contribution to Mez Breeze's excellent Augmentology 1[L]0[L]1 "GAM3R 7H30RY" blog went live. In the coming months I'm going to be developing a series of posts for Augmentology entitled Tentative Spaces which will explore the cultural and spatial quality of interface and information overlays in gaming. I'm interested in how gamers occupy these spaces and how they sit outside and "on top" of narrative. I plan to use this writing project to formalize and further develop many of the ideas I've explored in past posts on gaming like Ways of Seeing Digital Space, Notes on Operational Narrative and Learning from Liberty City. So rather than say any more, here is a link to the post.

  • Permalink for 'IMA Dashboard - Museum Analytics'

    IMA Dashboard - Museum Analytics

    Posted: 23-September-2008, 2:42am CEST by Greg J. Smith

    Indianapolis Museum of Art - Dashboard

    Pictured above is a screen capture of the dashboard for the Indianapolis Museum of Art (IMA), an interesting web project that came my way via the always reliable delicious account of Dan Hill some weeks back. Having just visited the Newseum in Washington (which I'll post about soon), and given the scope of the Curediting issue of Vague Terrain, I've been doing a lot of thinking about the relationship between exhibit space and media.

    Perhaps in a bid for increased institutional transparency, the IMA has opted to port a wide variety of operational data onto a dedicated microsite. As evidenced by the capture above this includes new additions to museum holdings, work on loan, membership information, student visits, volunteer hours, power consumption as well as web related data such as the length of the average website visit and Facebook fans. An excerpt from the mission statement for the dashboard:

    The goal of the Dashboard is to seek to quantify and report out on areas of activity of general interest to museum observers and to particular interest to museum studies specialists, colleagues, and patrons.

    These various streams of data provide a curious, if somewhat fragmented view into various curatorial, institutional, infrastructural and web realms that the IMA occupies.

    Indianapolis Museum of Art - Dashboard - New Work

    The top half of the above image displays the thumbnail gallery a IMA web user receives when clicking on "Works of Art - New Works on View". This gallery allows a user to drill down and get information about a recent acquisition. This isn't really anything to write home about considering the web presence of other similar institutions but piping all this additional information online is quite novel.

    While I applaud the effort of this interactive venture, I do think it is strange that the IMA has dropped their holdings into an array alongside the somewhat banal metric tracking the average length of a web visit - a rather curious juxtaposition. Stranger still is the fact that the "front page" of the dashboard contains links to social media stats but a user has to root around to find the (really interesting) financial analytics for the museum. Since when does anybody in the art world care about meter readings? We clearly want to get the skinny on the endowment keeping our favourite art institutions afloat.

    Indianapolis Museum of Art Website

    What does interest me about this web project is the manner in which it sits both alongside and outside the scope of the main IMA site. If a user starts examining work through the dashboard there is a possibility that they may be rerouted into one of the more obscure IMA collections, perhaps one they may not have selected to examine otherwise. My earlier navigation and layout grumbling aside, it is refreshing to see an institution willing to take some chances on their web presence and deviate from the generic museum and gallery "high culture institution" flavoured templates.

    Google Analytics Screen Capture

    [Google Analytics - display & interface]

    Poking around the IMA dashboard got me thinking about other possibilities for the conflation of institutional and web analytics. Since it is not an "online gallery", why is the IMA so concerned with displaying their web stats? Let's be clear, the work is catalogued online, it is not net.art. In my opinion, what could be much more interesting would be to track the "performance" of pieces of art in the display space and put this information online. Why not employ proximity and motion sensors to track crowd density and "average linger lengths" at each piece? It could make for some interesting analysis of holdings and help study how visitors engage the work on display. Perhaps the IMA should give George Legrady a call if they are bent on connecting the gallery floor with the screen space of the web.

  • Permalink for 'Vague Terrain 11: Curediting'

    Vague Terrain 11: Curediting

    Posted: 16-September-2008, 7:49am CEST by Greg J. Smith

    Eva and Franco Mattes (0100101110101101.ORG), Perpetual Self Dis/Infecting Machine

    [Eva and Franco Mattes (0100101110101101.ORG) / Perpetual Self Dis/Infecting Machine - Custom made computer infected with the virus Biennale / 2001-2004]

    A new issue of Vague Terrain has launched and I'm quite excited to help spread the word about this provocative body of work. Vague Terrain 11: Curediting-Translational Online Work is a CONT3XT.NET organized survey of contemporary thinking about new media art, online curation and broader web culture.

    The issue includes work from: Joasia Krysa, Laboratorio 060 (Lourdes Morales, Javier Toscano, Daniela Wolf), Annette Finnsdottir, Eva Moraga, CRUMB (Beryl Graham and Verina Gfader), Ela Kagel & Ursula Endlicher, Michelle Kasprzak, Furtherfield (Marc Garrett, Ruth Catlow), Geoff Cox, Jodi.org (Joan Heemskerk, Dirk Paesmans) and Domenico Quaranta. Neil Wiernik and I also contributed a text on our experience in developing Vague Terrain as a publishing/distribution platform over the last three years.

    I'm extremely impressed with the work that CONT3XT.NET (Sabine Hochrieser, Michael Kargl & Franz Thalmair) have assembled and it was a pleasure to work with Franz in consolidating this material over the last few weeks. Please take some time to examine Vague Terrain 11: Curediting-Translational Online Work.

  • Permalink for 'Radio Silence'

    Radio Silence

    Posted: 14-September-2008, 10:04pm CEST by Greg J. Smith

    The Serial Consign post hiatus is officially over. I'll be making an announcement about Vague Terrain tomorrow and I'm working on a gaggle of posts and interviews. I'm hoping the sounding of the death rattle of summer will help me focus on this project once again as the last few weeks have been a haze of polygons and CSS.

    I am happy to report that a new skin/framework for this site is under construction. I had a great conversation with the amicable Michael Surtees while he was visiting Toronto several weeks back and it got me thinking about the separation between design and content in blogging. In addition to rethinking the basic skin and functionality of this site I've been spending a lot of time reconsidering how content is classified and archived and how it can feed into external writing projects. I want to move beyond viewing this site as a "collection of posts" and towards integrating it with my broader creative practice. So that said, I plan on playing with the format of post "types" as well as refining the overall scope of discussion on Serial Consign in the coming months. So, existential web-presence angst aside, let's get started...



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