Fullscreen
Blogs : the electric kitchen
BLOG: the electric kitchen

the electric kitchen


News from the kitchen sink ...

Dieser BLOG berichtet über Fundstücke der Medienkunst ...
Add to Technorati Favorites
Suche:

Media Theory on the Move: Transatlantic Perspectives on Media and Mediation

By kiilo am 9.06.2009 11:15
from: http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/weblog/2009/05/28/transatlantic/ (external link)


Media Theory on the Move: Transatlantic Perspectives on Media and Mediation

A Conference Report by Inge Ploum


On May 21 2009, 15 media theorists and philosophers from Germany, Hungary, the United States and Canada gathered in Potsdam’s Am Neuen Palais (Germany) for an international conference on different perspectives, approaches and traditions in media theory. Media Theory on the Move was organized by Dieter Mersch, chairman of Media Studies at the University of Potsdam, his colleagues at EMW (Europäische Medienwissenschaft Department of the University of Potsdam), and four esteemed MA students, sponsored the Fritz Thyssen Stiftung für Wissenschaftförderung.

For three days (program), a divers array of media scientists, theorists and philosophers had the pleasure of discussing their perspectives on media and mediation. Though the presentation titles ranged widely, from Joachim Paech’s ‘Popular Fiction, Popular Art and New Media: On the Way to Medienwissenschaft in 1970’s Germany’ to Peter Bexte’s ‘Prepositions and Things: Some Reflections on Relations’, the theme of movement continued to be the Ariadne’s thread throughout the conference. The constant motion of space and time surrounding our media landscape, coupled with our movements of thought on understanding media (ourselves and the world), turned out to be a challenging theme for discussion. It generated a heterogeneous debate including topics on the movements of interactivity, images, things, the symbolic, communication, time and contingency. In a challenging exploration of the problems floating through transatlantic media theory, philosophy and practice, ‘Media Theory on the Move’ prompted a creative and critical space-time to further develop discussions on the movement of movement.

more ... (external link)


nettime-i - Position in Flux comments

By kiilo am 9.06.2009 09:33
from: http://www.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-0905/threads.html (external link)
(Besser dort nachlesen)


sehr interessante Diskussion als Nachlese des Symposiums "position in flux":

Biennale Venedig - Launch Embassy of Piracy

By kiilo am 8.06.2009 23:50

Biennale Vendig - Der Internet Pavillion

By kiilo am 8.06.2009 23:43
from: http://www.biennale.net/ (external link)



The Internet Pavilion


The Internet has been accepted as part of this year's Venice Biennial but not the Vatican. The Vatican church submitted a request for establishing its own, religion based, Pavilion in the Biennial but it was turned down, at least for this year. The Internet was accepted instead via the First Internet Pavilion. This text is the history and the present of the Internet Pavilion. It is written and constantly updated by Miltos Manetas and Jan Aman and it will incorporate opinions and ideas that will 'surface' on the Forum that can be found below at this page. Feel free to let your contribution and if you want, your name. Our intention is to re-define and we-write everything: all terms can be re-newed, all systems can be destroyed and build again. This Internet is cool but it is also a nightmare: a campus of un-forced work and a desert of screens. We want a new Internet and we want to be free from our machines, we want to be able to send an email without computers, blackberry and other devices. Ultimately, we want to satisfy the 3 Kleinrock complains:

1. We should be able to connect by any device
2. The device should be able to connect from anywhere
3. The device should be invisible, even immaterial.

June 02,09


The Internet is this new cool and free country floating above all the older ones. That's where we go to do many different things, communicate, create, exchange. Sadly, most people go to the Internet only to work and they start hating it and hope that it will just go away. And they are right: computers and new technology are still in the domain of Science and for reasons of manipulation, are advertised as the “World of Tomorrow”. Instead of helping us do what we really want (work less or not at all), they enslave us and now we all work more. This is not the fault of the Internet itself though, but its because it is proposed and accepted as something virtual and futuristic. We now have enough with virtual and futuristic stuff, we want instead a new Internet and even new Internets that don't hypnotize us in front of computer screens, that help us destroy the system every time that this is possible and that ultimately are our friends and will never become tools of command and repression.

Was macht eigentlich Alexei Shulgin?

By kiilo am 2.06.2009 23:25
found on: http://www.vbs.tv/video.php?id=24669409001 (external link)

In this edition of Motherboard, VBS tours Electroboutique, the electronics production company cum roving cyber-art kiosk of Russia's leading non-pornographic artist, Alexei Shulgin. Shulgin hasn't been hep to the internet from its very beginning, but he's definitely been onboard since at least the Compuserve days. In the early 90s, he was one of the first artsy types to adopt the then-brand-new World Wide Web as a medium, creating web pages filled with maddening arrays of random-seeming pictures and text blocks and hidden links to games and secret files and similarly weird and frustrating link pages, as well as helping curate the work of his net-art contemporaries. Shulgin was also the organizer of the world's first international exhibition of people's computer desktops.

Part I


Part II




Sience Gallery - INFECTIOUS: STAY AWAY

By kiilo am 2.06.2009 13:23
from:http://www.sciencegallery.ie/Infectious

INFECTIOUS: STAY AWAY


A free exhibition exploring mechanisms of contagion and strategies of containment.

OPENING HOURS: 12:00-20:00 Tuesday-Friday? and 12:00-18:00 Saturday-Sunday?
Science Gallery, Trinity College, Pearse Street, Dublin 2. Directions

Please note that the exhibition is closed on MONDAYS.
For groups of over 10 people please contact in advance.

ARE YOU INFECTED?

THE INFECTION HAS TAKEN HOLD. Over 23,000 individuals have already been exposed to the INFECTIOUS exhibition in the Science Gallery. If you are brave enough to enter the containment zone on Pearse Street you are advised to wear protective clothing. INFECTIOUS is a major new exhibition exploring mechanisms of contagion and strategies of containment through science and art including a live epidemic simulation, an opportunity to have your DNA swabbed from your cheek and analysed and to get up close and intimate with a Petri dish as you cultivate the bacteria from your lips in our Kiss Culture experiment. Looking for the results of your DNA test? Visit the PCR Lab page.


WATCH THE INFECTIOUS VIDEO:




--> more ... (external link)

Heise.de - Preisträger der Ars Electronica 2009 stehen fest

By kiilo am 2.06.2009 09:51

Beinahe übersehen ...



aus:http://www.heise.de/newsticker/Preistraeger-der-Ars-Electronica-2009-stehen-fest--/meldung/139465




Preisträger der Ars Electronica 2009 stehen fest


ars_electronica.jpg

Anfang des Jahres wurde das neue Ars Electronica Center (AEC) eröffnet. Linz ist in diesem Jahr Europäische Kulturhauptstadt. Vergrößern

Bild: Ars Electronica Die Veranstalter des Linzer Medienkunst-Festivals? Ars Electronica haben am heutigen Mittwoch die diesjährigen Preisträger des "Prix Ars Electronica" bekannt gegeben (PDF-Datei). Aus insgesamt 3017 Arbeiten wählten die Jury-Mitglieder? 22 Projekte aus, die nun mit "Goldenen Nicas", Sachpreisen, einem Stipendium sowie Preisgeldern bis 10.000 Euro geehrt werden. Das Gesamtpreisgeld beläuft sich in diesem Jahr auf 122.500 Euro – laut Veranstalter ist der "Prix Ars Electronica" damit der "weltweit höchstdotierte Wettbewerb für Medienkunst".



mehr ... (external link)

 

 


Alexander Lehmann - Du bist Terrorist!

By kiilo am 28.05.2009 21:55
Dies geisterete durch die Netzwelt und darf hier natürlich nicht fehlen. AUch um zu zeigen, was anderswo - FH Kaiserslautern - im Bachelor passiert:

--> http://www.dubistterrorist.de/ (external link) respekt + gratulation

presseanzeiger.de - Wie man das Web 2.0 in den Griff bekommt

By kiilo am 28.05.2009 21:29
from: http://www.presseanzeiger.de/meldungen/it-computer-internet/283560.php (external link)

25.05.2009 12:12:42

(PA) Zahlreiche Unternehmen sehen sich in der interaktiv gestalteten Medienwelt mit neuen Herausforderungen konfrontiert. Wurde früher Werbung vor allem über den Vertrieb und die Buchung von Drucksorten geregelt, nimmt heutzutage das Direktmarketing überhand. Die Gründe dafür liegen auf der Hand: die Erreichbarkeit ist garantiert, das Kundensegment kann auf Personen genau spezifiziert werden, oft machen sogar die Kunden selbst den ersten Schritt und versorgen sich mit Informationen über Newsletter und anderen Instrumenten á la Twitter. Internet ist also der neue Vertriebsweg, um sich und seine Leistungen oder Produkte zu bewerben. Doch wo es Vorteile gibt, da sind auch die Nachteile nicht weit.

[...]]

Observer – Remover – Constructor heißen die drei Schlüsselbegriffe, die das Internet auch für ihr Unternehmen zu einer angenehmen Spielwiese in Bezug auf Online Marketing und Ruf-Management? werden lassen.

Kommentar: mmmh falls jemand noch kein Thema hat ... evtl., geht da etwas automatisiert? ;-)

mehr ... (external link)
super mehr YEA!... (external link)

we make money not art about Positions in flux

By admin am 19.05.2009 10:51

from http://www.we-make-money-not-art.com/archives/2009/05/the-netherlands-media-art-inst.php (external link)

please read also:

 

The symposium focused on three of the most relevant topics of current media art practice: the relevance and involvement of new media art on the political and social sphere; new geographies in media art; the possibilities and challenges that the open source movement is proposing to the production of artworks or exhibitions.

Given my total and shameful laziness i probably won't have/take the time to blog everything but the Netherlands Media Art Institute will upload the videos of the talks online in the future and i'll be sure to update this blog post when this happens.

Susanne Jaschko, who curated and organized the conference, made a couple of very timely and interesting remarks in her introduction to the symposium. And that's where i'll start:

0aapositjsusanne.jpg
Image from NIMK's Positions in Flux set

There are some traces of an acceptance of new media art from the institutional art world. Last year, two exhibitions have highlighted this tendency: Deep Screen - Art in Digital Culture at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, a show organized with a double objective: getting a sample of contemporary media artists living in The Netherlands and buying some artworks to be added in the permanent collection. The second exhibition, Holy Fire at iMAL in Brussels, had the so far very unusual purpose to explore how new media art, bypassing all the stereotypes connected with its presumed immateriality and difficulties of maintenance, was able to enter the art market.

Media art has come a long way since the NIMK opened. Which does not mean that the self-conception of the whole field is not as cloudy as ever: some say that new media art has never become mature, others believe that it has reached its peak in the '90s, others would add that new media art will never integrate concepts of contemporary art, etc. Not only is the Netherlands Media Art Institute celebrating its 30th anniversary, but Transmediale has just turned 20 and Ars Electronica is going to be 30 this year, it's time to take a critical look at where we are now and which directions we want to take.

There was a time when cultural funding bodies set the course but things started to take another turn when, in 2003, the Walker Art Center decided to reduce its media art programme to a minimum and last year the whole media art community was shocked by the news that the Institute of Contemporary Art in London was closing its performance and new media program. Artistic Director Ekow Eshun justified the decision as follows:

As an institution dedicated to the contemporary moment it is important that we continually review the timeliness and relevance of our activities and at times make decisions on that basis.

New media based arts practice continues to have its place within the arts sector. However it's my consideration that, in the main, the art form lacks the depth and cultural urgency to justify the ICA's continued and significant investment in a Live & Media Arts department. Following discussion with the ICA Council and the Arts Council - and agreement from both bodies - I have decided to close the department.

At the other end of the spectrum, LABoral Art and Industrial Creation Centre, which opened in 2007, has proved over and again that it is possible to fill its gigantic white space with new media art exhibitions of great quality. And, once again, the exhibition Deep Screen at the Stedelijk has shown that some contemporary art institutions see the relevance of new media art.

So what does it mean today to be an artist in a networked society? Artists, curators and institutions today work on grounds that are increasingly loose, they struggle to define themselves. Technology -though it has lost much of its fascination- has the potential to enrich art, culture and society. It is one of the driving forces of today's society and culture, it has brought important discussions about public domain, commitment, open source, etc.

 

read more ... (external link)

 

Seite: 1/18 Next Page Fast Next Last Page
1 2 3 18

social bookmarking

Digg  del.icio.us  Blinklist  Furl  Reddit  Blogmarks  Magnolia  Sphere  Yahoo!  Technorati  Blue Dot  Simpy  Newsvine  Stumble Upon  co.mments.com  Blinkbits  BlogMemes 

Was ist das?