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- - - - - - - |||||-||||| | 9 9 . 4 0 | - - - - - - - | <nettime> announcer | a | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | b << | - - - - Linda Wallace <hunger@systemx.autonomous.org> : PROBE | 1 1 | - - - - Eugene Thacker <maldoror@eden.rutgers.edu> : M/C/T Issue #2 | 1 2 | - - - - nmherman@aol.com : A Viewer's Guide to the Genius 2000 Video | 1 3 | - - - - SMART Project Space <smartps@xs4all.nl> : ALMANAC | Steve Reinke | 1 4 | - - - - RTMark Announcements <announce0025@rtmark.com> : Happy GrayDay.org | 1 5 | - - - - | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | | delivered each weekend into your inbox | | mailto:nettime-l@bbs.thing.net | | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 1 1 | - - - - http://www.machinehunger.com.au/probe _PROBE_ explorations into Australian computational space an exhibition of Australian new media arts, curated by Linda Wallace of the machine hunger company, to be held at the Australian Embassy in Beijing from October 15 till 24, 1999. _PROBE_ will see three (Justine Cooper, Leon Cmielewski and Patricia Piccinini) of the six artists on-site in Beijing, available for discussions with Chinese artists and technologists, the public and media. On the Sunday following the opening we will hold a forum at the show featuring the _PROBE_ artists, curator Linda Wallace and also Beijing-based curator Huang Du and artist Feng Mengbo. There will also be a number of floor talks over the ten days of the show.. _PROBE_ features the work of: Leon Cmielewski 'Dream Kitchen' (interactive animation) Brenda L. Croft 'west/ward/bound' (series of 5 digitally manipulated iris prints) Justine Cooper 'RAPT' (installation and video) Patricia Piccinini 'Protein Lattice' (Digiprints, C type photographs and computer generated video) Jen Seevinck 'blue in the bluebird' (computer animation) Zen Yipu 'Ghosts in the Shell' (laminated electrostatic prints) There will be a few CDROM works shown on the weekends of the exhibition, including Linda Dement' s In my Gash and Lloyd Sharpe and Wayne Stamp's Basilisk. The _PROBE_ website will be in the show, homed to the links page featuring a range of Australian net.art sites. Parts of the website will be translated into Chinese and housed at ChinaByte the News Ltd ISP in Beijing. _PROBE_ is assisted by the Australia China Council, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. For further information contact Linda Wallace linda@machinehunger.com.au linda wallace po box 1357 potts point sydney australia 2011 tel/fax: 61 2 6295 6309 studio: 61 2 6279 9687 http:/www.machinehunger.com.au - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 1 2 | - - - - >M/C/T_m3dia7cultur37t3chnology_issue2 >http://www.kk.kau.se/mct/start.html > > The Frankfurt School Fear of the Culture Industry in a Contemporary Perspective >Jesper Falkheimer Mijn Treinreis naar Holland A fictional documentary using stickers created with the Nintendo GameBoy Camera and Printer. >Robert Hamilton Organogenesis: Tissue Engineering >Eugene Thacker Virilio's Plea for Time: From Global Village to World City >Robert Hanke > > A little reflection might be in order as we stumble towards the new Millenium. In a series of opinion polls around the world citizens have been asked to come up with a single word that best expresses the feel of our now soon to be ending century. And the winner is; SPEED. Not much of a surprise really if one considers that most of us were not around for the first half of the century. Two writers who were around and who spent much time considering speed are Marshall McLuhan and Paul Virilio. McLuhan once mused that, "in the electronic age we are all living by music." Virilio wants us to believe that the speed of the transmission of information has collapsed the extension of the dimension of space and the duration of the dimension of time. Curious? Well, welcome to a new number of M/C/T. > >M/C/T_m3dia7cultur37t3chnology_issue2 >http://www.kk.kau.se/mct/start.html - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 1 3 | - - - - ++++++++ A Viewer's Guide to the Genius 2000 Video ++++++++++ The Interviews Were conducted by Max Herman and others using a Sony Hi-8 videocamera. There was no advance planning and the equipment used was the bare minimum. In some cases the lighting is bad, and the dialogue is sometimes difficult to hear, but every interview is a substantial part of the concept. The locations were in Minneapolis MN and the SF Bay Area. The Scripts In some interviews, the subject reads or responds to one of two small texts, printed on slips of paper called "talents." Contribution One What does it take to be a genius? Do you have it? Does anyone you know personally have it? What does the year 2000 mean? Does it mean this to you, or other people? How are the concepts of genius and the year 2000 connected? These questions written by the Genius 2000 Project. Lesson Two Christianity is a battle in the discussion of media control Crucifixion is an act of protest demanding access The Second Coming is god's final messenger God is the ineffable union of history and individual cognition: Genius 2000 The Structure Of the video is divided into four sections, each named for a stage in the Greek tragic cycle of Albos, Koros, Hybris, and Ate. These names do not control the meaning of the footage within each section; they're a frame of reference in which to make sense of the video as a "movie" and a chaotic jumble of unrelated concepts. The ancient form is meant to raise questions like: What does narrative mean? What does tragedy mean? How do we process information? Quotations Are used to break up the interviews and create connections. There's passages from Walter Benjamin, Thich Naht Hahn, Paul Tillich, the Gospel of Thomas, Sherwood Anderson, the American Heritage Dictionary, the St. Paul Pioneer Press, and William Blake. Themes and Terminology The video contains an internal vocabulary that reaches beyond the work itself. Some of the most direct refrains are the concepts of media, marketing, talent, history, cognition, genius, messiah, deity, technology, currency, progress, prophecy, religion, neurophysiology, narrative, art history, economics, communications, and syncretism. The Website The Genius 2000 Project Website is a user-friendly interface that supplies the background of the video and other Genius 2000 activities. Listserv archives, how to purchase the video, texts and images that explore issues raised in the video, ongoing developments, links, and contact addresses are among the many features of the website. Production Was completed at Bay Area Video Coalition in San Francisco CA. All funds were supplied by the artist. Bio for Max Herman Max Herman was born in 1969 in Minneapolis Minnesota, where he attended public schools. He studied at Oberlin College, and received a BA in English from the University of Wisconsin in 1991. Syracuse University awarded him a fellowship in 1995 to study literature and new media, and awarded him the Master's degree in 1998. He has written extensively on a variety of disciplines. Genius 2000 is his first feature-length video. ++++++++++++++++ This video is not entertaining or artistic by ordinary terms. It makes the most sense with a mixture of attentiveness and free association. It doesn't contain a coherent image of one idea or point of view. No work of art can be seamless and all-encompassing, but human acts do take place within expansive field of meanings. The people in this video are only presenting their thoughts on the subject at hand. Max Herman September 13, 1999 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 1 4 | - - - - ALMANAC, Special Edition | ALMANAC, Art on Television and ALMANAC, Special Edition are cable cast television-programs of Art cinema and video-art | Produced by SMART Project Space in association with Bellissima Foundation A1, Channel 26 of the Amsterdam cable network | every saturday from 23:00-01:00 hours October 1999: Steve Reinke Program (program follows below) 'The work is riddled with nonsense, but it is good, productive nonsense. ...the work declares early on that the boundaries of proper discourse have been neatly removed. Yet there is clearly much more at stake, for the work is highly structured: it is like a map, which is handsome in itself, but which lacks any suggestions about what exactly one is to do with it, or where to go with it. Yet it should not be thought that the artist is then that person best able to articulate the meaning of the work, or predict what will be the arrival point or destination of the thought process which has been set in motion. That's not the artist's job. Perhaps such works should be seen in the context of play, where the suggestions 'what if.....' or 'let's pretend that....' are the first to be presented, with the tacit agreement on the part of the viewer that the rules of the game are also in question.' (Gary Kibbins) 'Steve Reinke's perhaps ironic aim is to produce, before the year 2001, The Hundred Videos, which would constitute his oeuvre as a young artist by the age of thirty-six. These videotapes are short, witty subversions of lore passed on to us - the "knowledge" available as social history in the memory bank of our culture, preserved in the found footage of old films and television. As such, these resources are available genres that still hold popular appeal despite our awareness of their outdatedness. They also serve as documentary proof of the fictional discourses Reinke juxtaposes in his own ad-libbed voice-overs, micro-narratives pertaining to the truth value of (auto)biography or science. The ensuing deadpan reversal of forms inverts the naturalness of any of these discourses, whether they touch on scientific laws, social interaction, gender function, or sexual identity. His discreet send-ups have the effect of creating new subjects of knowledge, given our conditioning by these genres to accept their narratives as true.' (Philip Monk) '(...) it is the structuring of imagery and narrative in mass culture as it relates to gay sexuality, identity and popular discourses that Reinke parodies, analyses, plays out - while never appearing to take any of it seriously... (Reinke is interested in) the structure of sexuality and popular culture imagery rather than (in) its content. If there's no real, there's no genre: Reinke collapses the boundaries between documentary and fiction, between the most banal forms of film and video imagery and the most exalted. Moving through them all with equal abandon, Reinke creates a kind of shrine to a loss of the self in representation.' (Tom Folland) 'His slight, frothy videotapes manage to juxtapose high and low cultural idioms in an expansive way that destabilizes their respective contents and facilitates the emergence of new hybridizations. The tapes imitate and lampoon the hype, the authoritative pedantry, the elitism of expertise, the discursive style and the arcane vocabularies of institutionalised culture and they equeally expose the intellectual bankruptcy, sentimentalism and neo-conservatism associated with popular culture. They are highly funny and on target.' (Gregory Salzman) '(in a time) so dense with smart psychoanalytic cinema, Reinke wields the language of the unconscious as lightly as a portable video camera. He plays with the thinness of images and the inadequacy of words, the gap between language and desire. Ever inventive and curious, he uses video like a sketch pad... The series is woven together by Reinke's pleasant, diffident voice, which eases the viewer into improbable scenarios or appalling fantasies. ...Not masochistically but quasi-scientifically, Reinke mortifies the flesh in order to isolate desire: if you cannot both be and have, Reinke chooses to have.' (Laura Marks). 'Of course, I've painted myself into a corner. There is no reasonable response to these elaborative, extravagant claims. (Its not modesty that prevents me from commenting on the commentary. When it says above that I'm selfless, its true - I don't have an ego. And my id is rather unstable.) Let me admit: I made these little videos for two reasons, to amuse myself and to incite critical commentary. (The commentary is also to amuse me.) Each individual video in The Hundred Videos calls out for explication. They are meant to give rise to mounds of paper, explaining everything and then explaining it again, in a different way. This hasn't quite happened yet, but I feel that within twenty years there will be a quarterly Journal of The Hundred Videos, perhaps out of the University of Texas at Austin, filled with articles, musings, explications. I encourage you to catch the first wave of the upcoming Reinke industry and begin writing today.' (Steve Reinke) ALMANAC, Special Edition, Steve Reinke Program, october 1999 October 2 Major Motion Picture: Selections from the Hundred Videos, first part 80 min 1990-99 'These videotapes are short, witty subversions of lore passed onto us, the 'knowledge' available as social history in the memory bank of our culture, preserved in the found footage of old films and television. Serving as documentary proof of the fictional discourses Reinke juxtaposes in his own ad-libbed voice-overs, micro-narratives pertaining to the truth value of (auto)biography or science.' (Philip Monk) October 9 Major Motion Picture: Selections from the Hundred Videos, second part October 16 Spiritual Animal Kingdom 1998, 27 min, video, col/sd This tape is Reinke's version of a television variety show. It combines comedy skits in the form of monologues with musical interludes and short, aphoristic animations which could be commercials or bumpers. October 23 Incidents of Travel 1998, 5 min, video, col/sd Chapter synopsis headings from the 1846 best-seller "Incidents of Travel in Yucatan" form the textual material; the audio is a distorted (stretched-out) version of "Popcorn" by Hot Butter. In this journey, things move forward and backward at the same time. The destination reached may be indistinguishable from the starting point. Everyone Loves Nothing 1997, 12 min. By changing the context, a voice-over commentary gives new meaning to excerpts from home movies and medical documentaries, questioning the personal implications of scientific knowledge. Andy 1997, 9 min. Andy is a combination of a documentary portrait and an amateur porn movie. As Andy masturbates in his beautiful apartment, he describes, in voice-over, the process of and rationale for his decorating choices. An exercise in lifestyle anthropology. (Benjamin Cook) October 30 Afternoon 1999, 26 min. All in-camera editing, made one afternoon in the apartment of the filmmaker. For furhter information, you can contact Thomas Peutz, at: SMART Project Space Keizersgracht 720, NL-1017 EW Amsterdam P.O.Box 15004, NL-1001 MA Amsterdam Phone: +31 20 427.5951 / 427.5952 Phone/fax.: +31 20 420.6028 Email: smartps@xs4all.nl - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 1 5 | - - - - October 1, 1999 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (contact mailto:copyright@rtmark.com) WHICH IS WHICH? ON THE INTERNET, YOU NEVER CAN TELL Every day, thousands of people looking for the Internet sites of the ultra- right party in Austria (http://www.fpo.at), a Liberal candidate in Australia (http://www.realjeff.com), the Mayor of New York (http://yesrudy.com), and a copyright lobbying group (http://www.grayday.org) end up very confused. Each of the sites listed above is a "rogue"--a nearly identical version of a "real" site (http://www.fpoe.at, http://www.jeff.com.au, http://www.rudyyes.com, and http://www.greyday.org, respectively), altered to make a political point. The trend may have begun with the http://yesrudy.com site, which resembles http://rudyes.com so closely that an aide with the opposing campaign admitted in the New York Times to being misled (see http://rtmark.com/pressyrd.html and http://rtmark.com/bush.html). WWW.FPO.AT or www.fpoe.at? (contact unknown / mailto:joerg.haider@fpoe.at) Earlier this week, Austria's third-largest party, which was formed from the leftovers of the Nazi party, was shocked and distressed to find itself extensively and subtly mocked. The official website of the Freiheitlichen Partei Oesterreichs, which is considered very likely to become part of Austria's government after this Sunday's closely-watched elections, is http://www.fpoe.at/. http://www.fpo.at takes advantage of the fact that in German, the letter "o" with an umlaut can be written either as "o" or "oe"; the "FPO" site looks identical to the official FPOe site, but links directly to more overtly Nazi sites, replaces words like "information" with "propaganda," and makes use of many other instructive replacements. Like George W. Bush with GWBush.com (see http://rtmark.com/bush.html), the FPOe is using every legal tactic to shut down the rogue site, including a U.S. copyright suit (the "FPO"'s service provider is American) and appeals to the Austrian Minister of the Interior. But like Bush with the original GWBush.com site, the FPOe has so far been unable to stop this attack on its ideas and intentions. German-language press about the "FPO" site, from earlier this week, is at http://futurezone.orf.at/futurezone.orf?read=detail&id=4737&tmp=61046 and http://www.politik-digital.de/europa/laender/oesterreich/innenpolitik/fake.shtml WWW.REALJEFF.COM or www.jeff.com.au? (contact mailto:realjeff99@yahoo.com / http://www.liberal.org.au/cgi-bin/mail.cgi) Australian Liberal candidate Jeff Kennett joins the FPOe and Presidential hopeful George W. Bush in attempting to shut down Internet opposition--in Kennett's case, http://www.realjeff.com, which mocks Kennett's http://www.jeff.com.au. But Kennett's tactics are quieter than those of the FPOe and Bush. Addr.com (mailto:info@addr.com), until three weeks ago the Internet provider of http://www.realjeff.com, suddenly suspended its hosting without explanation, and has ignored repeated inquiries regarding the matter. Also, Kennett's http://www.jeff.com.au now merely defaults to the Liberal Party website, as if to avoid comparison. WWW.GRAYDAY.ORG or www.greyday.org? (contact mailto:press@grayday.org / mailto:press@greyday.org) Today, many Internet visitors will visit http://www.grayday.org hoping to learn more about "GreyDay," an annual call for stricter copyright laws for the Web. Last year, the October 1 event was written about in the New York Times, Wired News and the Village Voice. But whereas http://www.greyday.org calls for more copyright protection, http://www.grayday.org urges visitors to keep the Internet "free from phony copyright laws." Its authors, a team of Silicon Valley software programmers and graphic designers who call themselves Tell-all Computer Programmers & Internet Professionals (TCP/IP), claim to represent "the millions of people who have benefited and will continue to benefit from the free exchange of ideas, the hallmark of the Internet." There are many other subtle differences between the two sites. Whereas GreyDay.org urges Internet users to imagine "what if" copyright infringement leads to a lack of creativity on the Web, the spoof site implores visitors to imagine "what if there was no WWW... no Internet." According to TCP/IP spokesperson Cecil Park, "The call for more copyright laws on the Web is especially absurd considering the Web itself was made possible by the copyright-free distribution of the first Web browser [Mosaic] and the most popular Web server software [Apache]." (The name TCP/IP is a pointed insiders' joke. It stands not only for "Tell-all Computer Programmers & Internet Professionals," but for "Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol," the software at the heart of the Internet that was given away without copyright in 1981 by programmers at the U.S. Government's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.) RTMark (http://rtmark.com) uses its limited liability as a corporation to sponsor the sabotage of mass-produced products, and to discuss corporate abuses of the political process. One of RTMark's ultimate aims is to eliminate the principle of limited liability. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | | | | # 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