Richard Rinehart on Tue, 28 Aug 2001 07:19:55 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] New Media(tors): The Social Life of Digital Art |
You are all invited to participate: remotely if you are remote in relation to Berkeley, California, and in person if you are nearby. Richard Rinehart ----------------------------------------------- New Media(tors): The Social Life of Digital Art Co-organized by the Berkeley Art Museum / Pacific Film Archive and GenArtSF, a discussion among new media artists and audiences about their role in society and the new economy and the effects of network culture on the creation, interpretation, collection, and preservation of contemporary visual art. New Media(tors): The Social Life of Digital Art includes three interactive components, an email discussion list, a panel event, and a video conversations kiosk. Panel Date: Sun, Sept 23, 2001 Panel: 12:30-2pm: Pacific Film Archive Theater, 2575 Bancroft @ Bowditch Reception: 2:00-3:00pm: Berkeley Art Museum, 2626 Bancroft Admission: free Space: Limited seating. First come, first seated URL: http://www.bampfa.berkeley.edu/events/mediators/ Organizers: Marisa Olsen, GenArtSF; Richard Rinehart, BAM/PFA Participants: Shawn Brixey, artist & professor digital media, art department, UC Berkeley; Alex Galloway, artist & editor/ director of technology @ Rhizome.org; Lynn Hershman, artist & professor/director, media arts program, UC Davis; Jason Lewis, artist & founder, Arts Alliance Laboratory; Moderated by Richard Rinehart, artist, director of digital media, Berkeley Art Museum, & faculty, art department, UC Berkeley. The explosion of digital art has created a new social and economic environment within the arts community and culture at large. Increasing numbers of artists as well as presenters, collectors, media and tech industry partners, and audiences are the active agents finding their way through this new digital sub-culture. This event will track the new modes of operation being used to adapt in this new environment. How are digital artists surviving in a medium that is difficult to sell? Are presenters changing their own economic models? How are the larger artistic and curatorial professions measuring achievement? How are collectors responding to intangible and ephemeral art works? How does the unique relationship to the technology industry affect digital art? Are the audiences for digital art the same or different from traditional art audiences? At this event, artists, collectors, and presenters will demonstrate their own ways of adapting to the shifting social and economic implications of digital art - the audience will be the final panelist, representing itself in the discussion. The conversation will start online, where attendees are encouraged to fill out a short audience survey on the website. The results of this snapshot of digital art audiences will be shared at the event. Panelists will kick off discussion topics on the email list before the event to get wider geographic input and focus ideas for the event. This event is free of charge in order to encourage broad attendance, and will be followed by a reception. New Media(tors): The Social Life of Digital Art includes three interactive components: 1. An open email discussion list which takes place for a few weeks in September 2001 and leads into the panel/event. This discussion list will include all of the event panelists/artists and organizers as well as anyone on the internet who would like to join this discussion, ask questions, or share their experiences. The discussion list will provide a public forum which expands the geographic reach of the event, and invites people to investigate the social life surrounding digital art, including these questions... How are new media artists interacting with art institutions or each other in ways which are different/same from traditional media artists? How is the education of artists adapting, if at all? How are artists making a living working in media which are hard to sell? How does valuation happens with perfectly reproducible works, and what is the impact on collecting as a social and economic function? How is such work being preserved (which has direct implications for collecting, buying, and selling)? How are new media artists engaged or part of an external industry in a way that filmmakers might be, but painters are not? How to subscribe to the Mediators email discussion list. Send an email addressed to: majordomo@listlink.berkeley.edu that contains this single line in the body of the mail message: subscribe mediators Notice that this does not include your actual e-mail address. Majordomo will determine that information based on your email so long as you are mailing to majordomo@listlink from your own account. 2. A public panel presentation and community discussion event Described above. 3. A public reception following the panel at which attendees are invited to interact with each other, and to contribute their thoughts and reactions to the issues on the museum's video conversations kiosk. There is a multimedia kiosk in the lobby where the reception will be held . Here you can record a short digital video clip of yourself speaking about your thoughts after the event, your experiences, and your own answers to any of the questions above or anything you want to ponder on the issues. Some of these video comments, along with video clips from the panel, will be posted on the Mediators web page as the third part of the conversation, completing the triangular communication flow between artist-institution-audience. These will also comprise the lasting record of New Media(tors): The Social Life of Digital Art. GenArtSF <www.genartsf.org> GenArts mission is to strengthen and empower the community of young artists, to cultivate a new generation of arts audiences, and to connect the arts community to the community at larage. GenArt pursues these goals through a wide range of programs with innovative approaches to education, community outreach, and exhibitions. GenArtSF is a project of the San Francisco Foundation Community Initiatives Fund. Berkeley Art Museum / Pacific Film Archive <www.bampfa.berkeley.edu> The University of California Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive serves the University by making aesthetic experiences a vital part of the life of its community. BAM/PFA inspires, educates, and brings together the various audiences of the Berkeley campus and Bay Area and engages national and international audiences through access to its collections and educational resources, and through the presentation of adventurous, scholarly, and culturally diverse exhibitions of art and cinema. ------------------------------------- Richard Rinehart --------------- Digital Media Director, Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive www.bampfa.berkeley.edu --------------- Instructor, Department of Art Practice art.berkeley.edu --------------- University of California, Berkeley _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold