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Archive: August, 2009

September 2009, Feature: BODY and SOUL, VisualContainer

VideoChannel – video project environments is happy to launch in September 2009 two new features
http://videochannel.newmediafest.org/blog/?p=658

1. BODY & SOUL
a selection of video works focussing on the performative aspect of transporting an artistic message in video, featuring videos by Hamza Halloubi, Beatrice Allegranti, Lital Dotan & Eyal Perry, Empar Cubells, Sinasi Günes, Elia Alba, Unnur Andrea Einarsdottir, Roland Wegerer, Alessandro Brucini, Joshua and Zachary Sandler, Virginie Foloppe
http://videochannel.newmediafest.org/blog/?page_id=614

2. VisualContainer – a platform for videoart from Milan/Italy
contributes a selection of Italian videos on the thematic aspects of “memory” & “identity”
curated by Giorgio Fideli, featuring works by Alessandra Arno’, Elena Arzuffi, Barbara Brugola, Pascal Caparros Iginio De Luca, Pietro Mele, Patrizia Monzani, Christian Niccoli Matteo Pasin, Cristina Pavesi, Sabrina Sabato, Enzo Umbaca
http://videochannel.newmediafest.org/blog/?page_id=278

Visit VideoChannel on also on Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=254368285194

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VideoChannel – video project environments
http://videochannel.newmediafest.org -
dedicated to art forms of video in a global context is a corporate part of [NewMediaArtProjectNetwork]:||cologne – http://www.nmartproject.net -
the experimental platform for art and new media from Cologne/Germany

info[at]nmartproject.net

WKE, PRA and Radio 23 Covers Time-Based Art Festival 2009

Portland, Oregon – August 26, 2009 – This year, WKE, Portland Radio Authority and Radio 23 join forces to broadcast Portland Institute for Contemporary Art’s (PICA) Time-Based Art Festival. Join host Alicia McDaid and rotating guests for nightly recaps of the Festival. See crowning moments from daytime performances, hear reviews and conversations with artists and audience members, and get an inside line on the late night insanity at The Works.

Daily video recaps starts September 4 at http://wk.com/wke

Live audio broadcasts starts September 3 at http://radio23.org

Audio/Video archives of TBA:08 is viewable at http://feeds.feedburner.com/PICA

Download TBA:09 Festival Guide at http://www.pica.org/tba/tba09/TBA09-Guide-Web.pdf

About WKE:
W+K makes advertising, media and art. The web gives power to independent creators and on demand media. WKE (WKEntertainment) is our take at renegotiating all these elements and make something interesting in the process: Provocative conversations on culture, music and all sorts of fascinating topics from Portland, Amsterdam, New York, Tokyo, Shanghai, Delhi and beyond.

About Radio 23:
Radio23.org is a non-commercial, freeform radio station dedicated to providing an international artistic platform for innovative and creative DIY broadcasters. The live and uncensored broadcasts from The Works at TBA:09 will be featured as a preview of Radio23’s new channel, Live Archive, which launches October 23rd, 2009.

About PRA Radio:
The Portland Radio Authority is a non-commercial, listener-supported radio station. As a free-form community media source, we are committed to bringing independent artistry and under-represented/minority viewpoints into regional and international view. We aim to become a trusted source of current and historical music education, while serving as a reflection of the Portland Arts and Music Community.

Contact:
Bram Pitoyo
WKE
wke@wk.com

The Worlds & Knowledges Otherwise Project Presents Volume 3, Dossier 1: Decolonizing the Digital/Digital Decolonization (III)

III. An/Other Digital World

Situated along variegated routes of contemporary “information” societies, the work of the artists and scholars included in this section constituted entangled sites of aesthetic, political, and economic arrangements across a range of digital media and Internet practices. These practices reconstruct relations of power in and through global media, and refigure the boundaries of that power, trespassing digital spaces or creating other spaces. They question normative codes, policies, and archives of the digital, while positing, and inhabiting, multiple digital worlds. These works contribute, as do all works in this dossier, to an/other digital thinking.

Read more

Metabolic City at Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum Sept. 18 to Jan. 4, 2010

Exhibition to explore visionary architecture of the 1960s

View online: http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/14493.html?emailID=25352

Aug. 21, 2009 — Amidst the cultural and political ferment of the 1960s, avant-garde artists and architects began embracing biological and scientific models as well as the potentials of emerging technologies to explore radical new directions in urban design, developing projects that were at once fanciful, complex and conceptually serious.
Warren Chalk and David Greene, *Electronic Tomato — Collage,” 1969.
Warren Chalk and David Greene, *Electronic Tomato — Collage,” 1969. Ink, tape, newsprint and felt-tip pen, 28 3/8 x 20 1/2″. Courtesy of Archigram Archives.

This fall the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington University in St. Louis will present Metabolic City, an exhibition surveying work by the British collective Archigram; the Japanese Metabolists (whose members include Fumihiko Maki, architect of the Kemper Art Museum); and the Dutch painter Constant Nieuwenhuys, an early member of the Situationist International.

Curated and designed by Heather Woofter, assistant professor of architecture in the Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts, Metabolic City will feature approximately 70 drawings, plans, models and conceptual projects, including rarely seen materials drawn from private archives and a sampling of work by influential predecessors.

Organized thematically, the exhibition explores theoretical and conceptual overlaps between these groups, all of which came to view the city as a kind of living organism, in which civil infrastructure forms the basis for social interaction and individual liberty. At the same time, though they articulated their views in explicitly political terms, each pioneered distinctive — and remarkably prescient — means of architectural representation, often employing techniques and processes that are only now entering mainstream practice.
Fumihiko Maki, *Golgi Structure,* 1967.
Fumihiko Maki, Golgi Structure, 1967. Digital photograph of model. Courtesy of Maki and Associates.

Networks of urban circulation were a major area of focus. Mechanical systems, roadways, pedestrian passages and other built environments frequently were conceived in relation to electronics, media and other immaterial connections. Archigram’s Computer City (1964), for instance, tracks the infrastructures that allow its futuristic Plug-In City (1962-64) to operate. Maki’s Golgi Structures (1968) — named for Nobel Prize-winner Camillo Golgli, who developed techniques for visualizing nerve cell bodies — alternate dense urban areas with unstructured open spaces. Encasing the latter are light-absorbing cells that facilitate communication, energy distribution and mechanical systems.

These figures also shared a belief that adaptable habitats could foster unprecedented levels of freedom and mobility. Archigram’s Walking City (1964) consists of mammoth “pods,” or cities built as ship-like vessels, capable of traversing the earth. Nieuwenhuys’ New Babylon North (1960) suggests a sprawling serpentine structure that could be shaped and reshaped by inhabitants, their labors supported by factories hidden below ground. Wall City (1960), by the Metabolist Kisho Kurokawa, envisions a series of movable plug-in units for living and working, the increased efficiency of which would shorten the workweek and encourage leisure travel.
Peter Cook, *Instant City — Airship M3,* 1968.
Peter Cook, Instant City — Airship M3, 1968. Collage of photographs and newsprint, overdrawn, 40 1/8 x 28 3/8″. Courtesy of Archigram Archives.

Growth patterns and life cycles are a part of all living systems, an observation that deeply influenced Kurokawa’s Metamorphosis (1965), which employs techniques derived from biological modeling to represent the transformation of urban spaces. Growth patterns of a media-based variety inform Archigram’s utopian Instant City (1960), in which large airships descend onto population centers to install infrastructure supporting community events, ranging from circuses to political rallies. As the airships move on to other locations, those infrastructural networks remain behind.

Underlying many projects was a hopeful yet critical view of new engineering technologies. Though this generation of artists and architects witnessed the effects of World War II and the mass destruction made possible by technological inventions, the emerging space age nevertheless sparked a sense of optimism and potential. For his Marine City (1961), the Metabolist Kiyonori Kikutake collaborated with marine engineers to detail entire metropolises constructed out at sea. Comprised of multiple towers connected in a ring, these structures would submerge beneath the waves during inclement weather and return safely to the surface as waters grew calm.
Peter Cook, *Plug-in City Study — Overhead view,* 1964.
Peter Cook, Plug-in City Study — Overhead view, 1964. Print off ink on tracing drawing with added color, 40 1/8 x 28 3/8″. Courtesy of Archigram Archives.

MILDRED LANE KEMPER ART MUSEUM

The Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, part of Washington University’s Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts, is committed to furthering critical thinking and visual literacy through a vital program of exhibitions, publications and accompanying events. The museum dates back to 1881, making it the oldest art museum west of the Mississippi River. Today it boasts one of the finest university collections in the United States.

Metabolic City will open with a reception from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday, Sept. 18, and remain on view through January 4, 2010. Both the reception and exhibition are free and open to the public. The Kemper Art Museum is located on Washington University’s Danforth Campus, near the intersection of Skinker and Forsyth boulevards. Regular hours are 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays; 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Fridays; and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. The museum is closed Tuesdays. For more information, call (314) 935-4523 or visit kemperartmuseum.wustl.edu.

In conjunction with the exhibition Dennis Crompton, a former member of Archigram, will host a gallery talk at 2 p.m. Sept. 19 in the Kemper Art Museum. Crompton — who also will attend the opening reception — spent last fall teaching in the Sam Fox School as the Ruth and Norman Moore Visiting Professor of Architecture.

OMFC – One Minute Film Collection

VideoChannel – video project environments -
http://videochannel.newmediafest.org
launched in August 2009 another highlight online

OMFC (One Minute Film Collection) is an ongoing project initiative chief curated by Wilfried Agricola de Cologne featuring at its start 67 films and videos with a duration of exactly one minute
http://videochannel.newmediafest.org/blog/?page_id=242

VideoChannel is welcoming Ali Zaidi (motiroti, London(UK)) as a guest curator selecting 14 films by directors from UK, India & Pakistan.
http://videochannel.newmediafest.org/blog/?page_id=507

Monika Dutta (UK), Shobna Gulati (UK), Hetain Patel (UK), Nikesh Shukla (UK), Ali Zaid (UK) , Nitin Das (India), Skanya Ghosh (India), Vishrajuti Ghosh (India), Nila Madhab Panda (India), Abhilash V. (India), Shazieh Gorji (Pakistan), Roshaan Khattak (Pakistan), Syed Ali Nasir (Pakistan), Sehban Zaidi (Pakistan)

The other thematic sections are

Family & Friends
–> http://videochannel.newmediafest.org/blog/?page_id=517

Sonja Vuk (CR), Antti Savela (SWE), Wolf Nkole Helzle, (Ger) Katherine Sweetman (USA) , Grace Graupe-Pillard (USA), Luisa Mizzoni (IT), Adrian Zalewski (Poland), Yin-Ling Chen (Taiwan), Harad Rettich (Ger), Fumiko Matsuyama (Japan), Junho Oh (South Korea)

Difference
–> http://videochannel.newmediafest.org/blog/?page_id=533

Lukas Mateijka (SK), Kriss Salmanis (Latvia), Lin Fangsuo (China), István Rusvai (Hungary), Antonio Alvarado (Spain), Karl Mendonca (USA), Veena Shekar (India), Tanja Koljonen & Joe Candido (Finland), Louis Hubert (France), Erik Peterson (USA), Suzon Fuks (AUS)

Mysteries
—> http://videochannel.newmediafest.org/blog/?page_id=537
Mores McWreath (USA), Toni Mestrovic (Croatia), Yoko Taketani (Japan), Agricola de Cologne (GER), Antony Rousseau (FR), Sreedeep (India), Sean Burn (UK), Roderick Coover & Nick Montfort (USA)
Sahra Bhimji (USA), Pierre-Laurent Cassière (France), Kika Nicolela (Brazil),

Past, Present & Future
–> http://videochannel.newmediafest.org/blog/?page_id=551

Kaspars Groshevs (Latvia), Hermes Mangialardo (Italy, Henry Gwiazda (USA), Lemeh42 (Italy), Mads Ljungdahl (Denmark), Paolo Bonfiglio (Italy), Harriet Macdonald (UK), Arthur Tuoto (Brazil), Victoria S. Weible (USA), Péter Vadócz (Hungary)

A Matter of Time
–> http://videochannel.newmediafest.org/blog/?page_id=556

Johanna Reich (Germany), Anders Weberg (SWE), Ron Diorio (USA), Bill Domonkos (USA), Xenia Vargova (Bulgaria), Alison Williams (RSA), Walter Van Rijn (UK), Nicole Rademacher (USA), Baptist Coelho (India), Milica Rakic (Serbia)

More info can be found on
—> http://videochannel.newmediafest.org/blog/?p=597
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CologneOFF, VideoChannel ,
VIP – VideoChannel Interview Project and VAD – Video Art Database are dedicated to art forms of film and video in the framework of [NewMediaArtProjectNetwork]:||cologne http://www.nmartproject.net -
the experimental platform for art & new media from Cologne/Germany
.
info [at] nmartproject.net

Oslo Screen Festival: Call for Entries

Oslo Screen Festival began in 2008 with the aim of bringing together young emerging artists working with video to present their work to Oslo audiences. The purpose of the festival is to focus on experimental video works and to emphasise emerging poetics of the medium.

We are now open for entries to the festival’s second edition in March 2010 and would like to invite artists and filmmakers to send us their works. An award of €1000 will be given to the best video. Please find regulation & entry form on our website www.screenfestival.no
The deadline for entries is October 15th.

Call: Soundart for SoundLAB VII

Call for entries
Deadline: 30 November 2009

2010 – 10th anniversary of [NewMediaArtProjectNetwork]:||cologne

SoundLAB – sonic art project environments is happy to launch the call for its next edition to be part of this anniversary celebrations, entitled:

SoundLAB VII – soundCELEBRATION
sound compositions made for the 10th anniversary!

For its 7th edition, planned to be launched in March 2010, SoundLAB would like to celebrate the power of sound as a tool for artistic creations and communications on occasion of the 10th anniversary of the global network it is embedded in and invites soundartists, musicians and composers to create for the 10th anniversary a special sound composition.

Please find detailed information, the regulations and entry form on
http://www.nmartproject.net/netex/?p=1423

Inauguración de la 9° Bienal de Video y Artes Mediales 09′ [ + Rx1000]

Tendrá lugar en el Museo de Arte
Contemporáneo (MAC Quinta Normal, Matucana 464 Metro Quinta Normal) el
día jueves 20 de agosto a las 19.30 hrs
Sitio Web Muy completo: www.bvam.cl

NIMk Depreciated, solo exhibition Cory Arcangel

The Netherlands Media Art Institute presents:

Cory Arcangel
Buffalo, New York, 1978, lives and works in Brooklyn, New York (USA)

‘Depreciated’

29 August – 14 November, 2009
opening 28 August 5:00 – 7:00 p.m. with DJ Cinnaman

The Media Art Institute proudly presents the first solo exhibition in The Netherlands by the 31-year-old ‘darling of new media art’, Cory Arcangel (US). Recent films, modified video games and computer installations by the artist will be shown in the context of earlier work.

Cory Arcangel hacks, manipulates and reuses various technological applications, including video games, web software, film and print media. In doing so he comments on digital media technologies and cultures while at the same time continuing to seek the possibilities that present themselves on the cutting edge of humor, theory and technological shortcomings. His interest in technology spans from the vernacular or non-expert to the conscious disrupting of digital techniques. Using techniques common to conceptual art and performance, Arcangel’s work often comments on the relationship between these two.

The Netherlands Media Arts Institute is showing Arcangel’s best known work, ‘Super Mario Clouds’ (2002-). The artist altered a version of the Nintendo game Super Mario Brothers in such a way that only an iconic, bright blue sky with clouds slowly drifting by remained. For the work ‘Structural Film’ (2007) Arcangel used the medium of film, which has been around a much longer time. In this work the iMovie filter that imitates dust and scratches from a time-worn film, called ‘Aged Film’, was applied to a blank image. Arcangel then transferred the resulting quicktime film to 16 mm film, so that the work becomes a contemporary pastiche of Nam June Paik’s ‘Zen for Film’.

Arcangel’s video installation ‘Sweet 16′ (2006), which by now could almost be called a classic, will also be presented. In this work two intros to the Guns N’ Roses video clip ‘Sweet Child O’ Mine’ sometimes run synchronously, and are sometimes totally out of sync. That is because the two videos’ lengths are off by one note. The artist’s love of music also emerges in his latest work ‘Drei Klavierstücke, op. 11′ (2009). In this video Arcangel brings together short YouTube fragments of cats walking on pianos. The artist edited all the separate fragments one note at a time, so that the cats collectively play Schönberg’s ‘op. 11′, a pioneering work of ‘atonal’ music.

Cory Arcangel completed his Bachelor in ‘Technology in Music and Related Arts’ at The Oberlin Conservatory of Music, in Oberlin, Ohio, in 2000. Together with friends from the conservatory, in 1998 the artist set up the programmers’ collective BEIGE. In addition to being an artist, Cory Arcangel is also a musician and performer. At the age of 27, Arcangel already had a solo exhibition in the Migros Museum in Zürich, Switzerland. Since then his work has been shown in group exhibitions in museums all over the world. Arcangel has had shows in commercial galleries in New York (USA), Paris (France), Salzburg (Austria), London (UK), Brussels (Belgium), Geneva (Switzerland), Stockholm (Sweden) and other.
http://www.beigerecords.com/cory/

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Contact for the press:
Marieke Istha, Communication istha@nimk.nl
+31 (0)20 6237101

Netherlands Media Art Institute
Keizersgracht 264
1016 EV Amsterdam
The Netherlands
http://www.nimk.nl

Opening hours: Tue t/m Sat and each first Sunday of the month Sunday September 6, October 4, November 1, 1300 – 1800 hrs. Entrance 4,50 (2,50 with discount). Museumkaart free

Facebook: www.facebook.com/NetherlandsMediaArtInstitute
Twitter: http://twitter.com/NIMk_nl
Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/nimk
Media Art Platform: www.mediaartplatform.nl

VOLTA6 Application Online Now

2010 DATES

VOLTA NY
March 4 – March 7, 2010
Invitational

VOLTA6, Basel
June 14 – June 20, 2010
Application now online!

VOLTA6 APPLICATION ONLINE!

2009 brought success and critical accolades for “Age of Anxiety,” VOLTA NY’s solo-project fair, and VOLTA5’s move to a stunning new location in Basel. Both editions attracted collectors, visitors and critics from all around the globe.

VOLTA NY, as much exhibition as art fair, features solo presentations by artists invited by co-curators Amanda Coulson and Christian Viveros-Fauné. VOLTA NY 2010 will again complement its sister fair The Armory Show with a lineup of exciting young and mid-career artists represented by 70 international cutting edge galleries. True to its original mandate, VOLTA NY remains strictly invitational, with the solo presentations loosely grouped around a theme to create a context for the viewer, making the experience as much exhibition as art fair.

VOLTA5, meanwhile, was unanimously greeted as the best-appointed satellite fair in Basel this year.
On August 4th, Andrew Hall on Artnews commented, “VOLTA6[...] in Basel is widely considered to be the number two art fair in the summer art blow-out, following Art Basel itself.”

Online applications for VOLTA6 can be made by visiting the website, www.voltashow.com

Exhibiting galleries for the 2010 dates will be selected by a Curatorial Board composed of international art critics and curators:

Adam Budak, Curator, Kunsthaus Graz
Jacopo Crivelli Visconti, Critic & Curator, São Paulo
Christoph Doswald, Art Critic and Curator, Zürich
Jasper Sharp, Curator and Writer, Vienna
Stephanie Smith, Curator, Smart Museum of Art, Chicago

The deadline for applications is September 15th, 2009

For more information, please visit our website, www.voltashow.com, or write to info@voltashow.com