geert on Thu, 11 Apr 2002 01:33:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] The Digital Media Lecture Series continues at the IHC |
From: "george legrady" <glegrady@cox.net> The Digital Media Arts Lecture Series is pleased to continue its spring 2002 lectures at the McCune conference room in the Interdisciplinary Humanities program. ' The UCSB Digital Media Arts Lecture Series' has been initiated by George Legrady to introduce to the campus and the Santa Barbara community a broad range of activities in contemporary digital media arts of the last 15 years with an emphasis on visual arts related practices that occur at the intersections of technology and culture. The invited speakers will consist primarily of practitioners and theorists with interdisciplinary backgrounds, who will address a range of issues dealing with the theory and practice of digital media. The Lecture series is sponsored by a special Humanities HRI Research & Curricular Initiative grant, in conjunction with the Media Arts & Technology graduate program, and the department of Art Studio. All lectures are free and open to the public. ________________________________________ The spring lectures will consist of 5 lectures by practitioners and theorists in media arts. The schedule is as follows: 1) April 15, Monday 4pm, the IHC McCune Conference room Luc Courchesne, Prof of Information Design, University of Montreal http://www.din.umontreal.ca/courchesne/ Will present a survey of his multi-screen, immersive environment, interactive installations. Luc Courchesne received the BA in Design at the Nova Scotia College of Art & Design and a MS at the MIT in Visual Studies. His installations have been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, NY, Tokyo¹s ICC museum, Paris' Science Museum at La Villette, Karlsruhe's ZKM/Medienmuseum, Montréal's Musée d'art contemporain amongst others. ________________________________________ 2) April 22, Monday 4pm, the IHC McCune Conference room Johan Grimonprez: INDEPENDENCE DAY REALTIME, videolounge The evening will focus on the relationship between mass culture, technology and terrorism. Currently lecturing at the School of Visual Arts in New York, Mr. Grimonprez attended the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program (1993) in New York. He has been part of numerous, international festivals and exhibitions, including Documenta X, (Kassel, 1997). Published INFLIGHT with Hatje/Cantz last year. ________________________________________ 3) April 29, Monday 4pm, e-studio, Art Department Lev Manovich, Prof of Media Arts and Theory, UCSD www.manovich.net Will present his current book-in-progress INFO-AESTHETICS and show a number of projects: "little movies", designed for the Web (1994); the Freud-Lissitzky Navigator, a conceptual software for navigating 20th century history; Anna and Andy, a streaming version of Tolstoy's novel; and Soft Cinema commissioned by ZKM for its upcoming Cinema Future exhibition. Lev Manovich is the author of The Language of New Media (The MIT Press, 2001), Tekstura: Russian Essays on Visual Culture (Chicago University Press, 1993) as well as many articles which have been published in more than twenty countries. Manovich was born in Moscow and has been working with computer media as an artist, computer animator, designer, and programmer since since 1984. He is in demand as a lecturer around the world, having delivered over 70 lectures in the US, Europe and Asia since 1999. ________________________________________ 4) May 6, Monday 4pm, the IHC McCune Conference room Eric Paulos, robotics engineer and artist www.paulos.net Tools, techniques, and systems deployed for novel interactions between humans across a variety of communication channels will be discussed. Tele-presence, tele-embodiment, tele-obliteration, and tele-crime: the new forms of human contact and expression. How will they be designed? What benefits will they provide? What new social conventions and metaphors will emerge from these physical artifacts? Finally, how can artists and scientists work together on addressing the ethics and consequences of our technological environment? Eric Paulos received his PhD in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from the University of California, Berkeley. His research, scientific, artistic, and social interests revolve around robotics and internet based telepresence, particularly the physical, aural, visual, and gestural interactions between humans and machines and various permutations of these interactions. ________________________________________ 5) May 13, Monday 4pm, the IHC McCune Conference room Maja Kuzmanovic, media artist, Brussels (pending confirmation) Principal, FOAM http://www.f0.am/ MA.in Interactive Multimedia. Art, University of Portsmouth. Prior to founding FoAM, she has focused on non-conventional research and application of technologies, ranging from Internet to Mixed Reality (including ubiquitous and wearable computing) and fully immersive VR - CAVE environments. For her work in these fields, she was elected as one of the Top 100 Young Innovators by MIT ¹s Technology Review and worked in residency within several European Research Centres, such as Starlab in Brussels, Dutch National Centre for Mathematics and Computer Science (CWI) in Amsterdam and German National Institute for Information Technology (GMD) in Sankt Augustin. ____________________________________ Professor George Legrady Media Arts & Technology | Art Studio University of California Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA legrady@arts.ucsb.edu tel. 805.893.2026 (office) fax. 805.893.7206 http://www.georgelegrady.com _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold