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Table of Contents: [ot] envisioning cyberspace m e t a <meta@meta.am> framefunk~~-visuelles labor mit Mouse on Mars dirkholzberg <dirkk@khm.de> nettime announcer Rudolf Frieling <frieling@zkm.de> lecker issue out now - have a look Redaktion <response@i-love-u.ch> The latest from The Media Channel Robert Atkins <robertatkins@earthlink.net> RE: Artemisia Linda Kramer Award Recipient Artemisia Gallery <artemisi@enteract.com> Fw: THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ONHUMAN.SOCIETY@INTER david@2dk.net Cyber culture on TV John Armitage <john.armitage@unn.ac.uk> Visual Culture @ De Balie, 6 & 7 April, 2001 De Balie <epk@xs4all.nl> CODE CONFERENCE - CAMBRIDGE UK APRIL 2001 Bronac.Ferran@artscouncil.org.uk Webcast 131 with topic "24/7" Station Rose <gunafa@well.com> NEW ISSUE; NEW WORKS; NEW NEWS-- february/march 2001 issue "WIGGED.NET" <newsletter@wigged.net> ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 1 Feb 2001 00:11:03 -0700 From: m e t a <meta@meta.am> Subject: [ot] envisioning cyberspace http://www.caida.org/tools/visualization/walrus/ //m 127.0.0.1 http://meta.am/ 216.71.169.143 // ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 01 Feb 2001 12:07:35 +0100 From: dirkholzberg <dirkk@khm.de> Subject: framefunk~~-visuelles labor mit Mouse on Mars in der =?iso-8859-1?Q?k=F6lner?= tram am 3.2.2001 um 23.00 ............................................................................................................................................................................ einladung zu framefunk~~ livevideo visuelles labor von dirk holzberg und jörg pfeiffer musik : mouse on mars aus der kölner strassenbahn am 3.02.2001 23.00 uhr liveübertragung als stream im internet und auf 2step/viva2 Eine Stunde lang verwandelt sich ein Strassenbahnwagen in ein Video- und Klanglabor von Kölner Videokünstlern und der Elektronikband Mouse on Mars, die live vor Ort spielen wird. Der Sonderwagen durchkreuzt die Kölner Innenstadt, live-Kameras fangen den Raum inner- und ausserhalb des Wagens ein. Das entstehende Bildmaterial wird live editiert und via Videoprojektoren auf die vorbeiziehende urbane Landschaft zurückgeworfen. Wiederum abgefilmt ergibt sich eine Mischung von Aussen und Innen. Die Architektur der Rheinstadt wird Bestandteil und Projektionsfläche von Musik und Bildern. Die Strassenbahn kann als bewegliches Modul gesehen werden, das auf einer Zeitachse fährt. Die Gebäude am Rande bilden die Skala, durch die sich das audiovisuelle Labor bewegt. Durch Kamera/Beamer Kombinationen links und rechts des Wagens kann visuell vorwärts wie rückwärts ëgefahrení werden.... informationen unter: http://www.framefunk.de ............................................................................................................................................................................ invitation to framefunk~~ livevideo visual laboratory of dirk holzberg und jörg pfeiffer music: mouse on mars broadcasted out of the cologne tram 3.02.2001 23.00 uhr MEZ as streaming video and on tv : 2step/viva2 For the space of an hour a tram is transformed into an audio/visual laboratory by a group of artists accompanied by the electronic band "Mouse on Mars" who play live "on location" as it travels through the city centre of Cologne. Live cameras capture the inner and outer environment of the tram. The resulting video images are edited in real-time and then projected back onto the passing urban landscape.The resulting image stream is in turn filmed again, mixing the inner and outer space further. The architecture of this Rhine-city becomes an integral part of both the construction and the projection of the acoustic and visual timeframe. The tram becomes a mobile module which travels along a time axis. The buildings on the outskirts chart the scale of the time-line through which the audio/visual laboratory moves..... more information: http://www.framefunk.de ............................................................................................................................................................................ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 01 Feb 2001 14:23:59 +0100 From: Rudolf Frieling <frieling@zkm.de> Subject: nettime announcer sincere apologies to anyone who receives this twice, or receives this in error \\international\media\art award 2001 call for entries The \\international\media\art award 2001 is organized by the broadcaster Südwestrundfunk Baden-Baden (SWR) and by ZKM Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie Karlsruhe (Center for Art and Media), in co-operation with Swiss Television SF DRS and Arte (European Cultural Channel). The all-embracing concept of media art is intended to offer video tapes as well as media and interactive art projects a television forum. In the year 2001, the overall subject is: control space ? the vigilant society observation \ surveillance \ control \ attention "We must not let the 100-eyed all seeing colossus Argos become a mythical icon of our media society, we must be watchful for strategies of surveillance, be vigilant against the technology of reconnaissance, and defend civil society against the armament of vision, that is societyís new task." (Peter Weibel, ZKM) Seeing without being seen, surveillance, storage, control, observation - it is all possible in the wired society. The state knows what we own and what we earn, the bank knows our transactions, the travel agency knows our dreams, the insurance companies our risk factors, and the police store our data. We live in a transparent society where everything is observed by everybody, and through Information Technology we are constructing the panoptic society (pan = all, optikos = seeing). From Orwellís 1984 to Big Brother or The Matrix - surveillance has a new fascination - even advancing into the very structure of the individual psyche. This new market of attention promotes narcissism, exhibitionism, and voyeurism in the new playgrounds of the mass media. Where the Moderns feared and forbade, the Postmoderns say: enjoy! The tyranny of intimacy and the end of privacy in all their manifestations, from attraction to danger, composes the background for the subject "Control Space ? the vigilant society" for the \\international\media\art award 2001. Artists from all over the world are challenged to address this subject with their curiosity, their criticism, and their fantasies. The international jury consists of Lynn Hershman\\Media Artist, San Francisco; Chrissie Iles\\Curator for Media, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Christoph Joerg \\TV Editor and Producer, arte (La Sept) Paris; Friedrich Kittler\\Media Scientist, Humboldt-Universität, Berlin; Thomas Y. Levin\\Culture and Media Scholar, Princeton University, Princeton, N.J. They will attribute the following awards: \\international media\art\award 2001 \\ VIDEO \ 12 000 EURO \\international media\art\award 2001 \\ INTERACTIVE \ 12 000 EURO special award of the organizers\\ Production at the ZKM and SWR TV-Feature Deadline for entries: 15 march 2001 Please mail your address to medienkunstpreis@zkm.de for entry forms ? or go online: http://www.swr.de/medienkunstpreis/en/index.html (the site will be redesigned in the coming weeks but all necessary text information is already online) ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 01 Feb 2001 09:15:36 +0800 From: Redaktion <response@i-love-u.ch> Subject: lecker issue out now - have a look http://www.i-love-u.ch february issue 2001: "lecker" monthly appearing e-zine for multimedia art, monthly changing subject, no-commerce platform for cyber-artists, photographers, screen-designer, e-musicians, movie-makers, comic-developers... visit http://www.i-love-u.ch our snailmail: i love u ezine kellergaesslein 7 CH-4051 Basel Switzerland / Europe die redaktion (adnan, ruth, chm, eva, andrea, patrick, lovegod and so on... see editorial http://www.i-love-u.ch) To unsubscribe, write mailto:response@i-love-u.ch (subject: unsubscribe) <meta name=description content="www.i-love-u.ch - I love U - monthly outcoming e-zine - every time a new topic. Next month's theme: je ne sais pas du tout. feel free to join us and to send contributions to response@i-love-u.ch"> ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 01 Feb 2001 12:07:51 -0500 From: Robert Atkins <robertatkins@earthlink.net> Subject: The latest from The Media Channel JANUARY 31, 2001, NEW FEATURES: THE ART OF MEDIA SPECTACLE Artist/neurobiologist/ophthalmologist Warren Neidich talks art and infotainment with Media Arts editor Robert Atkins. http://www.mediachannel.org/arts/perspectives/neidich/front.shtml NEWS DISSECTOR: DUELING IMAGES AT DAVOS A police state erupted in the Alps as the World Economic Forum debated globalization - and ducked protests. Danny Schechter was there http://www.mediachannel.org/views/dissector/davos2001.shtml LOW POWER, HIGH IMPACT The demise of U.S. microradio disillusions those in emerging democracies who look to the United States as a model for citizen media access http://www.mediachannel.org/views/oped/molnar.shtml SOUNDTRACK FOR A REVOLUTION In memory of Milan Hlavsa, founder of the Plastic People of The Universe, we remember the band that wrote the songs of the Velvet Revolution. http://www.mediachannel.org/news/reports/jailhouse.shtml DAILY MEDIA NEWS Breaking news stories about the media internationally, from mainstream and alternative sources. http://www.mediachannel.org/news/today/ ******************************************************* NEW! THE MEDIACHANNEL BOOK CORNER Excerpts, reviews and interviews from some of the most exciting and provocative books and writers on media. From Pierre Bourdieu to Gareth Branwyn, Galeano, Newkirk, Schiller and more. Purchases help support MediaChannel through our partnership with Powell's Books. http://www.mediachannel.org/bookcorner *********************************************************** **FROM OUR AFFILIATES** KIDS' CRITIQUE A new tri-lingual Web discussion from UNICEF has children turning their critical eyes on worldwide media images of youth. http://www.mediachannel.org/front.shtml#kids DOT-COM DOWNSIZING Is this simply the rocky road of the new economy, or has the promise of online news proved empty? http://www.mediachannel.org/front.shtml#layoffs MEDIA READER * Hollywood's Drug War * A Love-Hate For Disney's "Mulan" * Kids Take Pictures In Kenya's Slums And much, much more... Plus: Streaming audio and video http://www.mediachannel.org/news/mediareader/front.shtml HOT STORIES MediaChannel affiliates offer the latest news and opinion on the world's top media stories. This week: Pacifica Radio, U.S. Election Coverage, Israel/Palestine Media Bias, Serbian Media and the AOL-Timer Warner merger http://www.mediachannel.org/news/hotstories MediaChannel welcomes our new affiliates: * Springfield Scene Alternative News * Periodistas Frente a la Corrupción * Alternative Museum * We Interrupt This Message http://www.mediachannel.org/ ******************************************************* MEDIACHANNEL SEEKS INTERNS! MediaChannel is seeking interns with a background in media studies, media activism, or with Web publishing, programming, and multimedia skills. Contact catherine@mediachannel.org ******************************************************* MEDIACHANNEL'S BULLETIN BOARD AND MARKETPLACE http://www.mediachannel.org/bulletinboards http://www.mediachannel.org/market jobs*events*action alerts*services*equipment*programming & more ******************************************************* THE JOURNALISTS' TOOLKIT http://www.mediachannel.org/getinvolved/journo THE ESSENTIAL BOOKMARK FOR ANY JOURNALIST Research tools, interview tips, Web writing guides and more! http://www.mediachannel.org/getinvolved/journo WEBMASTERS: YOU CAN ADD THIS ICON: http://www.mediachannel.org/images/jtoolkit-mediachannel.gif TO LINK TO THE TOOLKIT ****************************************************** =================================================== AS THE MEDIA WATCH THE WORLD, WE WATCH THE MEDIA. MediaChannel is a not-for-profit project of OneWorld and The Global Center, and is produced by Globalvision New Media. MediaChannel.org (http://www.mediachannel.org) is the first Web portal dedicated to international media issues, and the premiere Internet source for analysis and information about the media. Driven by content from a network of more than 570 international media organizations and contributors.. MediaChannel explores areas such as freedom of expression, citizen access to media, trends in media ownership, media arts and the intersection of media and politics. Support for MediaChannel.org has come from the Rockefeller Foundation, The Open Society Institute, the Arca Foundation, the Reebok Human Rights Foundation, the Puffin Foundation, the ABB group and individual donors. MediaChannel.org relies on grants and donations to continue its work. If you want to help, please make a tax-deductible donation to the Global Center, 1600 Broadway, Suite 700, New York, NY 10019. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - ------------ To subscribe, send a blank message to TheMediaChannel-on@list.mediachannel.org To unsubscribe, send a blank message to TheMediaChannel-off@list.mediachannel.org To change your email address, send a message to TheMediaChannel-change@list.mediachannel.org with your old address in the Subject: line To contact the list owner, send your message to TheMediaChannel-list-owner@list.mediachannel.org ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 01 Feb 2001 12:40:03 -0600 From: Artemisia Gallery <artemisi@enteract.com> Subject: RE: Artemisia Linda Kramer Award Recipient FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FROM: Artemisia Gallery RE: Linda Kramer Award Recipient Deanna Lee February Exhibition Show Dates: February 1st to February 24th Opening Reception: Friday, February 2nd, 5-8 PM In 1996, former Artemisia member Linda Kramer, recognizing the need to provide more free exhibition opportunities to emerging artists, provided the gallery with a bequest. The Linda Kramer Fund supplies one free exhibition space per year to an under-represented woman artist from the Chicago area. This year's Linda Kramer Award Recipient is Deanna Lee. Deanna Lee's beautiful and obsessive paintings and sculptures merge and transform the realistic rendering and the cartoon. A recent graduate of the MFA in Painting and Drawing at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Deanna is the recipient of this year's Linda Kramer Fund Award for Exhibition. About her own work, Deanna says: "My work is informed by processes of multiplicity (i.e. duplication, repetition, copy) and their implications for the ideas of consumption and the unique. Moving from individual paintings to arrangements of multiple painted objects, my recent work explores temptation, resistance, and ambivalence in a visual form. I am interested in the potential for the work to play multiple roles: as objects of desire and objects denied, as symbol and contradiction of the symbol, as parody and homage. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 2 Feb 2001 10:50:45 +0900 From: david@2dk.net Subject: Fw: (itrc-announce 172) THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ONHUMAN.SOCIETY@INTERNET > CALL FOR PAPERS AND PROPOSALS > ************************************************************* > > THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON HUMAN.SOCIETY@INTERNET > > July 4-6, 2001, Education Culture Center, Seoul, Korea > http://internet-conf.ewha.ac.kr, hsi2001@ewha.ac.kr > ************************************************************* > > > BACKGROUND OF THE CONFERENCE > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > The Human.Society@Internet conference aims to provide a forum > for gathering, discussions, and exchange of ideas and information > by researchers, students, Internet-related business people, > and government policy makers from Pacific Asia countries > on the socio-economic issues and changes brought on by Internet > technology. The conference solicits full-length research or > position papers on relevant subjects for the aim and themes > of the conference. > > > AREAS OF INTERESTS INCLUDE, BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO: > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > (1) Digital Divide > problems due to gap between advanced and developing > countries, between the wealthy and poor in the same country, > between farming and fishery regions, between generations, > and between gender. > > (2) Law and Regulations, Contents Control, Culture: > issues of distribution of unhealthy materials, laws and regulations > about the Web/Internet, Internet and privacy issues, intellectual > property rights issues. > > (3) Human Computing (technology with major potential for the next > generation Internet) > virtual reality, natural language processing, bio/nano tech, > mobile Internet, 3-dimensional multimedia. > > (4) Management/Economy > electronic commerce, virtual enterprise, etc. that are > related to the Internet. > > (5) Cyber Education > > (6) Cyber Governance > > (7) Medical Computing > > > SUBMISSIONS > ~~~~~~~~~~~ > Due Date: March 1, 2001 > Medium: email only. (ref. http://internet-conf.ewha.ac.kr) > > (1) Papers > A paper may be a research paper or a position paper. > It must be written in English. Suggested length is 10-20 > double-spaced, single-column pages. Submit to own country > PC Chair and the Global PC Chair (simultaneously). Papers > from a country for which there is no designated country PC > Chair should be submitted to the Global PC Chair. > > (2) Proposals for Tutorials and Panels > A proposal should include, in English, a half-page > description and outline of the proposed contents; > names, affiliations, and biographical sketches of the > speakers. Suggested length of a Tutorial is 90 minutes. > Submit to the Global Tutorials Chair and Global Panels > Chair, respectively, and the Global PC chair (simultaneously). > > (3) Applications for Exhibits > An application to exhibit at the conference should include, > in English, a description of the products to be exhibited, > and space needs. One or more 6-foot table tops are planned > for each exhibitor. The cost of space, and setup and tear > down (including any electrical work) will be borne by the > exhibitors. Submit to the Global Exhibits Chair. > > ============================================================= > We are currently discussing with Springer-Verlag about having > Springer-Verlag publish the proceedings as a Lecture Notes > in Computer Science. > ============================================================= > > > KEY DATES > ~~~~~~~~~ > * March 1, 2001 Paper Submissions Due > * April 23, 2001 Notice of Acceptance, > Rejection to Paper Authors > * May 22, 2001 Camera-Ready Papers > and Invited Talk Files Due > > ORGANIZED BY > ~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Human.Society@Internet Organization Committee > > MANAGED BY > ~~~~~~~~~~ > EIST, Ewha Women's University > Korea Network Information Center > > CONFERENCE SPONSORS > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Listed in the conference website. > > ORGANIZATION COMMITTEE > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > General Chair > ------------- > Won Kim, CEO of Cyber Database > Solutions, MaxScan, Austin, Texas. > Dean of EIST, Ewha W. Univ. > won.kim@cyberdb.com > Associate General Chair > ----------------------- > Tok-Wang Ling, Prof. of National Univ. > of Singapore > lingtw@comp.nus.edu.sg > > > All participating 11 countries/regions have their own > country/region General chair, and PC chair. > > Japan General Chairs > -------------------- > Shinji Shimojo, Osaka University > shimojo@cmc.osaka-u.ac.jp > Haruhisa Ishida, Keio University > ishida@tamabi.ac.jp > > Japan Program Committee Chairs > ------------------------------ > Hisao Nojima, NTT Communications Science Laboratories > nojima@rudolph.brl.ntt.co.jp > Suguru Yamaguchi, Nara Institute of Science and Technology > suguru@is.aist-nara.ac.jp > > Global Function Chairs (Korea) > ------------------------------ > Global PC Chair > Yoon-Joon Lee, KAIST > yjlee@cs.kaist.ac.kr > Global Exhibits Chair > Chul-Young Chong, Sangmyung U. > cyjung@pine.sangmyung.ac.kr > Global Keynote Speech Chair > Young-Chul Kang, Maeil Business Daily > young@mk.co.kr > Global Publicity Chair > Myung Kim, Ewha W. U. > mkim@ewha.ac.kr > Global Tutorials Chair > Chin-Wan Chung, KAIST > chungcw@cs.kaist.ac.kr > Myung-Joon Kim, ETRI > joonkim@etri.re.kr > > The Rest of the Korea-Based Funtion Chairs > ------------------------------------------ > Finance: Ki-Joon Chae, Ewha W. U. > kjchae@ewha.ac.kr > Hee-Joon Song, Ewha W. U. > hjsong@ewha.ac.kr > Local Arrangements: Hune Cho, Kyungpook U. > hunecho@kyungpook.ac.kr > Proceedings: Suk-Doo Choi, Ewha W. U. > sdchoi@ewha.ac.kr > Registrations: Eui-Kyung Hong, U. of Seoul > ekhong@venus.uos.ac.kr > Treasurer: Mi-Seon Kang, Ewha W. U. > KANGMS@ewha.ac.kr > > ----- end --------- > ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 2 Feb 2001 12:46:45 -0000 From: John Armitage <john.armitage@unn.ac.uk> Subject: Cyber culture on TV [Hi all, if any nettimers want to respond to this email and tell Paul about your own or other people's cultural work, please feel free to do so ... I haven't responded ... I haven't time ... John.] ================================================== - -----Original Message----- From: paul kerr [mailto:paul.kerr@octoberfilms.co.uk] Sent: Thursday, February 01, 2001 4:58 PM To: 'John.Armitage@unn.ac.uk' Subject: Cyber culture Hi John, I'm a TV producer researching a proposed programme about the impact of the Internet on culture. I guess novels written on/for the net are one outcome but otherwise all my searches turn up pre-existing art being written about on the net, bought and sold on the net etc. Has anyone done any work on the way the internet has actually impacted on Art (with specific examples of literary/fine art works which owe something to the net - whether or not they were created on/for it? (As Mike Figgis' movie Timecode reflects on digital technologies...) This is for a proposed series about the impact of other 'technologies' on the history of high culture - photography on painting, sound recording on music, and then the internet on culture. Any ideas, book suggestions etc gratefully received. Probably won't get commissioned these days anyway as there's no gardening/cooking/millions to be won. I am the weakest link. Goodbye. Thanks, Paul Kerr ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 2 Feb 2001 16:53:46 +0100 From: De Balie <epk@xs4all.nl> Subject: Visual Culture @ De Balie, 6 & 7 April, 2001 FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT ________________ Visual Culture De Balie, Amsterdam Friday 6th & Saturday 7th of April 2001 Visual Culture in De Balie An important theme for De Balie in coming months is Visual Culture. This new interdisciplinary terrain is typical for current times: it focuses on different disciplines simultaneously while searching for connections. Film, television as well as visual art, advertising, the urban environment and new digital and electronic presentation forms are part of Visual Culture, but also dress codes and the manner in which magazines and shops present themselves in our experience economy that is strongly based on visual stimuli. Visual Culture looks at the totality of visual messages, icons and codes that confront us on a daily basis. Two days, two themes The program kicks off on the 6th and 7th of April with a two-day research conference in the Balie in Amsterdam in which the subject Visual Culture will be explored. Our wish is to further reflection beyond establishing that so-called `high-' and `low' culture are increasingly less easy to distinguish from each other, that art, culture and commerce are currently developing ever more hand in hand and that our notions on art and culture are changing - among other things because contemporary image culture is a multiculture. Two main themes will be broached: the increasing interrelation of art, culture and economy and the mix of different image cultures in multicultural society. What does the convergence of all these cultural and social fields - that were hitherto separate - mean? What consequences will this all have? How, as an image producer caught up in that network of interests can one still take a critical stance and put it into practice? What then does such a critical stance look like? These questions among others will be dealt with. Who's attending? Nicholas Mirzoeff, an American authority and advocate of Visual Culture as a new perspective. Olu Oguibe, visual artist and art-critic, expert on critical issues on contemporary (African) art and cinema. Together with Okwui Enwezor editor of Nka, journal of contemporary African art. Cathérine David, artistic director of the last Documenta. John Akomfrah, a black film maker and critic who unlike anyone else is able to analyze and depict value judgements on the basis of ethnic and/or cultural differences. Jeff Rian, editor in chief of the magazine Purple. >From Holland those attending are among others: Felix de Rooij, artist and film maker, producer of the famous exhibition Wit over Zwart. Matthijs de Jongh, responsible for strategy at advertising agency KesselsKramer. Chris Keulemans, writer and journalist. Patricia Pisters, tutor and researcher into gender in film and video clips and co-author of a book on Madonna. Henk Oosterling, philosopher, associated with the center for philosophy and art at Erasmus University. Felix Janssens, graphic designer. But there will certainly not only be talk and theorizing. There are also many visual presentations involving people who are formative in Visual Culture themselves: artists, designers, media and theatre producers, fashion designers, photographers and architects, people from business and advertising - especially those whose perspectives cut across the boundaries of their discipline. An interdisciplinary field calls for an interdisciplinary approach. Preparations are being made on a special Visual Culture - website, that is currently being developed for the Balie by a group of students from the department of Interaction Design of the Hogeschool voor de Kunsten Utrecht (HKU). This will be operational in February 2001. Further information at De Balie: e jet.zeiss@balie.nl t +31-20-5535151 f +31-20-5535155. Research & production: Ineke Schwartz, Ingrid van Tol, Tessa Boerman, Jet Zeiss. _________ We kindly request you to send this message to interested parties in and outside your organization. A mailing will insure that everyone interested in the Visual Culture program of the Balie is kept up to date on developments. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 2 Feb 2001 18:49:17 -0000 From: Bronac.Ferran@artscouncil.org.uk Subject: CODE CONFERENCE - CAMBRIDGE UK APRIL 2001 > =20 > I'd be grateful if you could circulate the details of the CODE = conference > happening in Cambridge UK in April this year to the list. >=20 > CODE, Collaboration and Ownership in the Digital Economy, addresses = issues > around intellectual property, distributed research teams, the role of = the > public sector in relation to funding of R&D and the emergence of = virtual > centres of excellence which present new challenges to conventional = notions > of ownership in the scientific, cultural and technological realm. >=20 > Confirmed speakers include Richard Stallman, Bruce Perens, Michael > Century, Antoine Moreau, Anne Nigten, Bill Cornish, Geert Lovink, > Christopher Kelty, Roger Malina, Alok Nandi, Martha Woodmansee, John > Naughton, Marilyn Strathern, Drazen Pantic, Rishab Aiyer Ghosh, Bob = Young, > Robin Mansell.=20 >=20 > Topics for discussion include Recovering the Collective; Copyright = - -v- > Community; Private Interests: Freedom & Control; Distributing = Knowledge: > Reward and Responsibility and a final plenary on the Future of = Knowledge. >=20 > The event will be accompanied by an associated programme of = workshops, > talks and exhibitions.=20 >=20 > Cost: =A3180 for non-commercial attendees; =A3400 commercial. > Some bursaries are available - apply for details to=20 >=20 > bronac.ferran@artscouncil.org.uk > =20 > See http:\\www.cl.cam.ac.uk/CODE - ------_=_NextPart_001_01C08D48.D8B24F60 ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 2 Feb 2001 19:34:24 +0100 From: Station Rose <gunafa@well.com> Subject: Webcast 131 with topic "24/7" STATION ROSE STReaming-Fahrplan & more: <http://www.stationrose.com> dear Gunafa Netizen, here is the new Fahrplan: A) NetSTReam - Webcast 131 with topic "24/7" SUN/4.2.01, 9pm CET B) extra_infos 1_2_3_4 A) NetSTReam - Webcast 131 with topic "24/7" SUN/4.2.01, 9pm CET - ----------------------------------------------------------------- live @home <http://www.stationrose.com> topic: "24/7" content: always busy - always online versus ? extra: no more breaks? what about doing NOTHING? all versus nothing, always versus never, online versus offline- (Elisa Rose short slam) plus a best of the latest audio-visual compositions . B) extra_infos 1_2_3_4 - ----------------------- * extra_info1: STR interviewed in inkwell.vue conference (12.-26.1.2001) http://www.well.com/conf/inkwell.vue/ (go to "Browse the full list of topics", and there you are). the DISCUSSION was really active for 2 weeks, it will stay there. David Hudson was a great interviewer. the conference will be open during the next webcasts. * extra_info2: on the road to Transmediale, Berlin (6.-9.2). STR is there in the flesh. In the rucksack & in the bookshop at the festival is the new book "private://public". * extra_info3: coming up - new webcast conversations: on -> music with Achim Szepanski, Mille Plateaux label : TUE/20.2.01 on -> rights & ownership online, Napster, BMG, & more with Dr. Udo Kornmeier, lawyer for music, copyright and media : MON/26.2.01 *extra_info4: Station Rose curators for netart at a renowned art project this spring. stay with us & don´t go away! "Cyberspace is Our Land!" ;-) station rose 2-2001 ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 1 Feb 2001 21:19:14 -0400 From: "WIGGED.NET" <newsletter@wigged.net> Subject: NEW ISSUE; NEW WORKS; NEW NEWS-- february/march 2001 issue - --============_-1231043952==_ma============ Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" ; format="flowed" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable WIGGED.NET FEBRUARY 2001 E-NEWSLETTER--VOL. I ISSUE 8 Wigged.net (http://www.wigged.net) is a bi-monthly webzine focused on bringing innovative short videos, animations and interactive works over the internet. Our mission is to be a showcase, distribution and promotion center for media artists via the World Wide Web. Wigged.net is for audiences seeking innovative alternatives to traditional forms of entertainment. ****************************************** NOW SHOWING Check out featured artists in the new issue of Wigged.net: Paivi Hintsanen's The Book of Days. "The Book of Days" asks questions about time and origin, and about living now in this time. The sense of history is around us but we can't see it close enough; the world is full of places we haven't visited, cultures we haven't met but which we have learned from schools, books and media. This is richness but also a loss; when nearly everything is somewhat available, the endless information flow turns out to be just scratches on the surface. Knowledge and information are changing into confusion. 2000. Finland. Visit the "Now Showing" page at http://www.wigged.net Agricola de Cologne's A Virtual Memorial. A memorial project against the forgetting of the holocaust and for humanity. A collaborative project. 2000. Germany. Visit the "Now Showing" page at http://www.wigged.net Bob Barancik's Saved By Wallenberg. This video combines dramatic testimony by a survivor of the Budapest Ghetto with archival photos of the last days of Nazi terror. It honors the memory of Raoul Wallenberg, Swedish diplomat and humanitarian, who saved over 100,000 Hungarian Jews from the Holocaust. 2000. United States. Visit the "Now Showing" page at http://www.wigged.net Nanette Wylde's Arrested. "Arrested" is a play on preconceptions regarding social, ethnic, religious, and political affiliations. 1997. United States. Visit the "Now Showing" page at http://www.wigged.net Todd Margolis's LOCKUP. A VR experience that explores the processes of decision-making, fate & synchronicity. 2000. United States. Visit the "Now Showing" page at http://www.wigged.net Lou Anne Colodny's Changing. Both humorous and haunting, this video explores transformation and metamorphosis. 2000. United States. Visit the "Now Showing" page at http://www.wigged.net Reiner Strasser's the shrIne. An interactive flash piece created with material by Alan Sondheim (text, original pictures) and Annie Abrahams (sound). Alan: "We burrow through the visible, you can almost reach out and touch us; we are carried forth among the dead and wounded; our last chance at the steps of the shrine; we're burning within." Virtually un_fold the shrIne. 2000. Germany. Visit the "Now Showing" page at http://www.wigged.net Reiner Strasser's vib~ratio~n. Created for Bill Marsh's "D2K" project at Sunbrella in collaboration with Bill and Octavia Davis. Based on photograph (Bill) and sound mixes (Bill and Octavia) of the D2K demonstration in San Diego the experience of/in time is strengthened/cumulated by interacting with simultaneously re-combinable layers/events. 2000. Germany. Visit the "Now Showing" page at http://www.wigged.net Lena Marie Stuart & Jean-Yves Theriault's The Trial/Le Process. The collaborative Faux Pas uses art and technology to examine the concerns, ideas and attitudes of contemporary culture. "The Trial/Le Process" is a multimedia collage of dance-theatre, music and video that examines a woman=EDs subconscious struggle with pregnancy through her surreal dream. 2000. Canada. Visit the "Now Showing" page at http://www.wigged.net Marianne R. Petit's i carry your heart with me. Based on the poem by e.e. cummings by the same name, this three minute animation is set to Teodoro Anzellotti's accordion recording of Erik Satie's Gnossienne No. 3. 2000. United States. Visit the "Now Showing" page at http://www.wigged.net ****************************************** WIGGED NEWS Check out Mark Amerika's piece, "How to be an Internet Artist" Check out Peter Schmidegs's interview with Lloyd Kaufman of Troma Get a sneak preview to Markus Huemer's "Polke's Pasadena Stones" installation on view at Max Planck Gesellschaft in Munich, Germany from February 2 - March 23, 2001. =46ind out more about the artists who are featured in this month's issue of Wigged.net. The above articles can only be found on the "Wigged News" page at http://www.wigged.net ****************************************** STUFF YOU NEED Buy cutting edge cassettes, cds and cd-roms that are for sale on the "stuff you need" page at http://www.wigged.net. ****************************************** CALL FOR WORKS Seeking innovative and experimental new media works as well as animation and videos. Please visit http://www.wigged.net and go to the "submit media" page to fill out our on-line registration form and send requested materials. DEADLINE: April 1, 2001 for June/July 2001 issue. ****************************************** PUBLICITY OPPORTUNITY We are looking to promote your upcoming exhibitions and new releases. If you would like for us to promote your work either through our newsletter or Wigged.net webzine, please send your press releases to: Seth Thompson Wigged.net Woodland Interactive Group, Inc. 418 Woodland Ave. Akron, OH 44302 or you may e-mail press releases to seththompson@wigged.net. No file attachments will be accepted. If you have images that you would like to include, please send them via snail mail to the above address. Please Note: To remove your e-mail address from my list simply reply to this message and type the word "unsubscribe" in the Subject field at the top of your reply. If you have more than one e-mail address through which you might be receiving this, please be sure to list them all. - -- Wigged.net newsletter@wigged.net http://www.wigged.net # 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