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| Richard Rinehart on Tue, 22 Aug 2006 13:55:47 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime-ann> [ann] Digital Culture class at Berkeley Art Museum |
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DIGITAL CULTURE 0101:
A New Public Course at the Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive
Thursday evenings, October 5-November 9
http://bampfa.berkeley.edu/courses
How does digital media influence our perception and experience of
space and time? What are its social implications? The first offering
in an exciting new initiative to present public courses at BAM/PFA,
Digital Culture 0101 gives you a chance to discuss issues like these
with artists and experts in the field, and promises a wide-ranging
and thought-provoking introduction to new media as they reflect and
interact with our culture.
Digital Culture 0101 and other upcoming courses are designed to
expand on BAM/PFA's exhibitions and programs to provide new contexts
and ways of interacting with the arts. A spring 2007 class will
explore the art and implications of the BAM exhibition Measure of
Time. Like the popular PFA film-lecture course Film 50, these classes
are open to the general public as well as UC Berkeley students (see
below for registration details).
Digital Culture 0101 draws upon the museum's pioneering use of
digital media and its commitment to digital art, within the larger
contexts of UC Berkeley's increasing attention to new media and the
Bay Area as a center of digital culture. The course offers a
non-technical look at issues surrounding digital media through the
lens of digital art, with special attention to works now on view in
Measure of Time. With session topics like "space and time," "the
body," "interactivity," "social context," and "collective memory,"
the instructor and guest speakers including Ken Goldberg, Scott
Snibbe, Camille Utterback, Jon Phillips, all practicing digital media
artists, will address such questions as:
- What is digital media and what makes it different from other media?
- How do people and computers interact with one another?
- What does it mean to be interactive?
- Can we believe what we see through digital media?
- Although we have more information than ever, are we becoming more
forgetful?
The course will be taught by Richard Rinehart, BAM/PFA's director of
digital media and a nationally exhibited new media artist. Rinehart
has taught at UC Berkeley for six years, currently in the Center for
New Media. A leader in the world of digital media and museums, he has
also curated exhibitions of digital art.
Course Schedule and Syllabus
When: Thursday evenings, October 5-November 9, 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Where: Museum Theater
Cost: $225 for six-session course; $175 for BAM/PFA members and
non-UCB students; free for UC Berkeley students
Advance Registration Required:
Online: http://bampfa.berkeley.edu/courses
By phone: (510) 642-5249, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily
In person: at the museum's Bancroft lobby admissions desk
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