AXIS on Sat, 23 May 1998 00:36:49 +0100 |
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Syndicate: AVATAR, Amsterdam/NL |
AVATAR Of multiple identities and postmodern times Oude Kerk, Amsterdam 29/5-14/6/98 Exhibition Symposium Webprojects Choosing another identity is not a new phenomenon. Everybody makes use of a different personality, or sub-personality, on some occasions, sometimes consciously, sometimes without noticing it, as when you pick up the telephone, or when you decide in front of the mirror in the morning what clothes to put on, taking the day's schedule into account. No one makes an issue any more of 'cross-dressing' or transvestitism (whether for Saturday night entertainment or otherwise), or the 'alter egoism' of persons behind certain telephone chat-lines. Literature in the behavioral sciences identifies increasing social pressure to perform as an important cause for this. Play in which a single identity is exchanged for a 'multiple personality' makes it possible to escape social control and conventions.The anonymity of urban society makes it still simpler to simultaneously lead various lives. But playing roulette with multiple identities is not wholly without risks. MPD (multiple personality disorder) appears to be more than a vagary of modern life: it is a new name for an old problem, schizophrenia. The rise of the electronic, virtual society has accelerated the development of sub-personalities. Even more frequently than in 'real' life, Internet users hide behind a disguise - their 'avatar.' Avatars are assumed when communicating in shared virtual spaces like chatboxes and MUDs (multi-user domains or dungeons). In fact, no Internet user knows the 'true' identity of those with whom he or she has contact. This fact is enhanced by the deceptive 'appearance' of the avatar, the digital 'alter ego' chosen or designed by the user themselves. One can create an avatar by simply choosing a different profession, or posing as being of a different age or the other sex. It gets more complicated when a person brings multiple avatars into play. It then becomes an essential question whether this is merely an innocent game, a necessary adaptation to changing social circumstances, or a liberation from the straightjacket of the generally accepted concept that a healthy personality consists of a number of concentric skins surrounding a real or notional core. Thanks to the fast development of technology, avatars can take on an increasingly real form. There are presently avatars with a photographic face and a voice, such as can be found in The Palace, a commercial web meeting-place. This development injects new life into electronic space, and closes the gap between the virtual world and what is apparently 'real life.' Avatar shows projects by artists who investigate the phenomenon of the 'multiple personality.' In addition to photography, video and installations, projects using new media will be central in the event. During AVATAR a video screening will be organised in MonteVideo's 2-Hoog-Achter area. Artists, behavioral scientists and media experts will debate one another in the symposium (De Balie, 6-7/6). Organisation Paradox, Axis, De Balie, Maatschappij voor Oude en Nieuwe Media, MonteVideo/TBA, De Oude Kerk Programming Bas Vroege (Paradox), Deanna Herst (Axis), Martine Brinkhuis (De Balie), Eric Kluitenberg, Yvonne Le Grand Funding Mondriaan Foundation, Amsterdams Foundation for the Arts, VSB Foundation, XS4ALL Artists Janine Antoni (USA), Jemima Brown (GB), Hamish Buchanan (CDN), Jake & Dinos Chapman (GB), Susan Collins (GB), Luc Courchesne (CDN), Deborah Hammon ( USA), Lynn Hershman (USA), Merel Mirage (NL), Tony Oursler (USA), Ine Poppe/Jetty Verhoeff (NL), David Rasmus (CDN), Humberto Rivas (ARG), Cindy Sherman (USA), Debra Solomon (NL), Annie Sprinkle (USA), Vibeke Tandberg (N), Bea de Visser (NL), Gillian Wearing (GB) _ Symposium How to Bake an Avatar(t) On Virtual Identities & Digital Alter egos Saturday June 6 + Sunday June 7 On Saturday, June 6, and Sunday, June 7, De Balie is organising an international symposium on the play with multiple identities in virtual environments on the Internet. The adoption of an alternate identity and personality is a distinctive mark of the new forms of communication that have emerged around the net. Especially in multi-user environments (MUDs & MOOs), where numerous people can be present simultaneously and more or less anonymously, many people tend to adopt a fictive personality. The representation of a real-life person in such a virtual environment is usually called an Avatar. But how do you give shape to a personality without a body? How can a body without flesh and blood be taken seriously? If there no longer is a body, how do you know to whom you are talking? And how do people identify with a space that has no fixed dimensions, especially when that space is constituted only by words, as is the case with the majority of MOOs? How do people establish their identity in these new digital environments? The role- playing games and the many new text- based forms of communication on the net (besides MOOs, in particular chat channels, e-mail and newsgroups) were identified early on as a contemporary renaissance of writing culture, a hybrid somewhere between the traditional forms of writing, oral culture and the telephone conversation. Recently these net environments have also acquired a visual shape: three-dimensional worlds, where the Avatars can take on continuously shifting appearances. The cyberfantasies of the net as a parallel space -hyphen the quake game worlds on the net where cyber-clans threaten each other's virtual lives-, the matrix, cyberspace, the fictions of cyberpunk literature, again appear to have come one step closer to reality. Is this really a new space, where people can explore and play around with their multiple identities? Is the Avatar the recipe to meet the challenges of our post modern era and the rapidly emerging information society that threatens our customary definitions of identity? During the symposium, these questions will be examined from many different points of view: as a philosophical challenge, as an object of sociological wonder, from the perspective of the incessant MUDer, from a cyberfeminist perspective, as a literary and artistic phenomenon, as a new media hype. This virtual cooking class will be guided by: Susan Collins, Jos van Dijck, Yvonne le Grand, Volker Grassmuck, Margot Lovejoy, Jos de Mul, Sadie Plant, Ine Poppe, Michiel Schwarz and Don Slater, among others. How to Bake an Avatar(t) Sat 6/6 14 - 17 / 20 - 22.30 Sun 7/6 11 - 13 / 14 - 17 Cinema de Balie Until the End of the World ( Wim Wenders, 1992, 157 min) In the year 199? a young woman, Dommartin, crisscrosses the world in search of Hurt, whom she has met briefly. Hurt has a camera in order to record images that the blind can perceive, and is pursued by bounty hunters. The ultimate road movie, in which a number of colourful characters pass in review... Fri 5/6 23.00 The symposium in De Balie is connected with the exhibition AVATAR, of postmodern times and multiple identities, from 28 Mai untill 14 June shown in the Oude Kerk in Amsterdam. Avatar shows projects by artists who investigate the phenomenon of the 'multiple personality.' In addition to photography, video and installations, projects using new media will be central in the event. During AVATAR a video screening will be organised in MonteVideo's 2-Hoog-Achter area. Info symposium: De Balie Martine van der Brink Kleine-Gartmanplantsoen 10 1017 RR Amsterdam T +31 (0)20 5535151 www.balie.nl Info AVATAR: Axis, bureau voor de kunsten vm, Oudezijds Voorburgwal 72, 1012 GE Amsterdam T +31 (0)20 4655530 E axisvm@xs4all.nl