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Table of Contents: International Day of Action Against Surveillance Cameras mollybh@netspace.net.au ISEA2000/ Espace Landowski expose... "ISEA2000" <isea2000@art3000.com> CYBERSEX CYBERSALON ki gomez" <niki@cybersalon.org> Webcast 128 + STR live in San Francisco gunafa@well.com CFP: Internet Research 2.0 - INTERconnections jeremy hunsinger <jhuns@vt.edu> 1st Anniversary Conference in Finland on citizen participation ronda@ais.org (Ronda Hauben) Third Multi-Literary Event at the Flying Saucer Cafe Alan Sondheim <sondheim@panix.com> Genesis - BernadetteCORPORATION Vanessa Black <whitecube@asia.com> New Works at Dystopia ....at Tribes Gallery>> cristine wang <cristinewang@yahoo.com> -- COO-EE - [Cuckoo 1] - Kirsty Cameron + Violet Faigan -- Cuckoo <cuckoo@cuckoo.org.nz> ARTS WIRE OPEN HOME "George(s) Lessard" <media@web.net> ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 4 Dec 2000 15:56:53 +1100 (EST) From: mollybh@netspace.net.au To: nettime@bbs.thing.net Subject: International Day of Action Against Surveillance Cameras Message-ID: <200012040456.PAA03289@tempest.netspace.net.au> (from Surveillance Camera Players) very exciting news! anyone free on 14 Dec 2000 to collaborate on an *international* day of action against surveillance cameras? below is the letter from the French collective "Smile, you are being filmed" It says (I can't find my dictionary so bear with me): <start> we are a collective that puts on actions against videosurveillance, we have existed since 1995 and we function at the national level. we are looking to make contact with you to create an international pool of information. Last year, we organized a day of action in several cities simultaneously. Why not at the international level? On 14 December, we are organizing a "camouflage" action using masks and so forth in a public place in Paris. <end> RSVP Bill Bonjour Bill, Nous sommes un collectif qui menons des actions contre la vidéosurveillance, nous existons depuis 1995 et nous fonctionnons au niveau national nous cherchons à rentrer en contact avec vous pour créer réseau international avec échange d'infos. L'année dernière, nous avons organisé une journée d'action sur plusieurs villes simultanément. Pourquoi pas un jour au niveau international? Le 14 décembre, nous organisons une action "camouflage" avec masques et foulards dans un endroit public parisien contre les caméras. Amilcalement jean-pierre (collectif "souriez,vous êtes filmés") - ----------------------------------------------------- This mail sent through IMP @ Netspace http://www.netspace.net.au/ ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2000 11:58:25 -0800 From: "ISEA2000" <isea2000@art3000.com> To: eliza@art3000.com Subject: ISEA2000/ Espace Landowski expose... Message-ID: <200012041058.DAA04738@adar25.adarweb.com> > CE MESSAGE EST AU FORMAT MIME. Comme votre lecteur de courrier ne comprend pas ce format, il se peut que tout ou partie de ce message soit illisible. - --MS_Mac_OE_3058775919_447694_MIME_Part Content-type: text/plain; charset="ISO-8859-1" Content-transfer-encoding: quoted-printable The English version follows the french one. Du jeudi 7 au dimanche 10 decembre 2000, dans le cadre de la manifestation ISEA2000, 10e Symposium International des Arts Electroniques, la ville de Boulogne-Billancourt expose dans la nef de l'Espace Landowski, trois artistes de l'univers numerique: Yuri Sunahara, Rania Ho et Miguel Chevalier. Le vernissage aura lieu le jeudi 7 decembre a 18h30. Espace Landowski 28 avenue Andre Morizet 92100 Boulogne-Billancourt T=E9l. : 01 55 18 53 70 Moyens d'acces: Metro: ligne 9 Bus: 126 et 175 station Marcel-Sembat. - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------= - - >From the 7th to the 10th of December 2000, within ISEA2000, 10th International Symposium on Electronic Art, la ville de Boulogne-Billancourt shows in the nave of the Espace Landowski, three digital artists: Yuri Sunahara, Rania Ho & Miguel Chevalier. The preview will take place on the 7th of December at 18h30. Espace Landowski 28 avenue Andre Morizet 92100 Boulogne-Billancourt T=E9l. : 0033 1 55 18 53 70 Acces: Metro: ligne 9 Bus: 126 et 175 station Marcel-Sembat. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 04 Dec 2000 12:53:55 +0000 From: "niki gomez" <niki@cybersalon.org> To: <nettime-l@bbs.thing.net> Subject: CYBERSEX CYBERSALON CYBERSEX @ Cybersalon Sexual assistance for humans Monday 11th December 2000 ICA (institute of contemporary arts), the mall, london SW1 5AH Tube: Charing Cross/Piccadilly xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Film screenings: @ 4.30pm (=A32.50), 8.30pm (=A34.50), 10.15pm (free for Cybersalon ticket holders) Cybersalon presents the UK premiere of I.K.U- a Japanese cyber-porn film where the Genom Corporation send out replicants to gather data through sex. "I.K.U. invents a future cybersexual universe" (Sundance festival) http://www.i-k-u.com xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >From 6.30pm in the theatre: =A34/=A32 (conc) /=A31.50 (ICA members) Discussion: Speakers: Shu Lea Cheang [artist and director of I.K.U] Cherie Matrix: [Feminists Against Censorship] Seats are limited for the talk- to book call the ICA on 0207 9303647 - -The talk will be broadcast simultaneously in the ICA bar - -Live web cast on www.cybersalon.org from 7pm GMT - -Ask questions remotely via the Web or through text messaging projected into the talk xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx after the talk =A32/=A31.50 >From 9pm in the bar and theatre: I.K.U. LiVE jam RENDER #1 VJs: SanFranDisco DJ: Koh I .K.U. as a self-mutating digital cinema genre that writes and rewrites sequential render, IKU LiVEjam renders collective cinematic experience. Launch of the ANTI-Rom Wildlife Supersampler with live music from: Manuka and Monoman Ms Seraphin (finger lickin'/vinyl addiction) Pirate TV (a Ninja Tune project) invite you to partake in their live web broadcast Featured digital art: interactive sex toys, animations and video work ends: midnight http://www.cybersalon.org xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 4 Dec 2000 15:41:57 +0100 To: gunafa@well.com From: Station Rose <gunafa@well.com> Subject: Webcast 128 + STR live in San Francisco STATION ROSE STReaming-Fahrplan & more: <http://www.stationrose.com> dear Gunafa Netizen, A) NetSTReam - Webcast 128 today, MON/4.12.00, 9pm CET B) STR performing live in San Francisco C) <body part> ram file in the webcast-archive A) NetSTReam - Webcast 128 tonight, MON/4.12.00, 9pm CET - ------------------------------------------------------- live @home topic: STReaming a realtime rehearsal for san francisco from e-home content: MIDI-compositions including the brandnew "10 gruene Punkte" extra: the last session before catching the plane B) STR performing live in the U.S., San Francisco.: - --------------------------------------------- * MIDI-live-Performance at Blasthaus, San Francisco. date: Sat. 9.12.2000, around 11pm place: 78 Minna Street Please check out the website, as well as http://www.blasthaus.com/joypad/index.html for details and schedule. We are very happy to play live in San Francisco again, and composed "10 gruene Punkte" (10 green dots) exclusively for that. We shall play different MIDI-pieces for circa 50 minutes. So please check out in time when to be there. We shall have the new book "private://public" with us, too. Besides the performance at Blasthaus, which is located in the center of multimedia gulch, just a block away from SFmoma, we will find time to do field research on the digital climate in SF today. We shall report on what we saw and what we heard in one of the coming webcasts. C) new ram file in the webcast-archive: - ------------------------------------- One of the rare moments when a webcast was archived had come again: "Webcast 126" (67 min.) is now online again, as it is the beginning of a <series of body-STReams>. http://www.stationrose.com/Realvideofiles/realvideofiles1.html In this webcast Elisa Rose is showing her eyes only, looking from cyberspace directly into your eyes. There is a very reduced animation together with it, and a special composition by Gary Danner in this realtime piece of netart. Other parts of the body will be featured throughout the next months, going down to the toes finally. At the beginning of the file there is a 5-7min. intro with music by serge gainsbourg. ________________________________________________________ Station Rose Info: STReaming a la Station Rose, started in January 1999, blends performance, lectures (STR in conversation with guests in the studio) and multimedia jam sessions into a unique form of Net Art. 127 webcasts have taken place so far. Main topic in the program of Station Rose webcasts are live-sessions in realtime, where sounds & visuals are STReamed from the studio into the net. Acoustic highlights of these sessions are published on vinyl. Station Rose is one of the first multimedia bands & net artists in Europe. Being online (at the WELL) since 1991, STR did their first online-live events, namely Gunafa Clubbing in Frankfurt, in 1992. The brandnew book "private://public" which is out NOW, and is the ManifeSTATION of webcasting, netart, plug-ins, recording realtime yes or no, and more. It was produced by artists, not by critics. This publication, in german and english, came out of webcast-conversations with Geert Lovink, Petra Klaus & Hans Romanov, Bazon Brock, Birgit Richard, Stefan Weber, Thomas Feuerstein and Josephine Bosma. (ISBN 3-85266-114-5; 296 pages, edition selene, Vienna 2000. Details are on the website.) Get yourself a cosy armchair as well as the book, and enjoy reading in wintertime. stay with us "Cyberspace is Our Land!" ;-) station rose 12-2000 ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 05 Dec 2000 09:22:48 -0500 From: jeremy hunsinger <jhuns@vt.edu> Subject: CFP: Internet Research 2.0 - INTERconnections To: nettime-l@bbs.thing.net >CALL FOR PAPERS >INTERNET RESEARCH 2.0: INTERconnections > >The Second International Conference of the Association of Internet >Researchers >OCTOBER 10-14, 2001 >University of Minnesota >Minneapolis-St.Paul Minnesota, USA > > >Deadline for submissions: Friday, March 2, 2001. > > >The Internet's ever-increasing points of connection to almost every >element of 21st century life have prompted strong interest in >understanding the social aspects of cyberspace. The popular press offers >wave after wave of speculation and vague forecasts, but what is really >needed to help us understand how to live in our wired world is research: >research that is collaborative, international, and interdisciplinary. > > > >The Association of Internet Researchers invites paper, presentation, and >panel, proposals on topics that address social, cultural, political, >economic, and aesthetic aspects of the Internet. > >There's an extra comma between "panel" and "proposals" > >Here's a version with these 2 minor changes for cutting and pasting: > >CALL FOR PAPERS >INTERNET RESEARCH 2.0: INTERconnections > >The Second International Conference of the Association of Internet >Researchers >OCTOBER 10-14, 2001 >University of Minnesota >Minneapolis-St.Paul Minnesota, USA > >Deadline for submissions: Friday, March 2, 2001. >The Internet's ever-increasing points of connection to almost every >element of 21st century life have prompted strong interest in >understanding the social aspects of cyberspace. The popular press offers >wave after wave of speculation and vague forecasts, but what is really >needed to help us understand how to live in our wired world is research: >research that is collaborative, international, and interdisciplinary. > >In September 2000, over 300 people attended the first international >Conference of the Association of Internet Researchers (AoIR) at the >University of Kansas. This Conference built connections among Internet >researchers from across a range disciplines and from around the globe. In >October of 2001, INTERNET RESEARCH 2.0 will offer an opportunity to >reinforce and extend these connections. IR 2.0 will bring together >prominent scholars, researchers, practitioners, and students from many >disciplines and fields for a program of keynote addresses, paper >presentations, formal discussions, and informal exchanges. > >IR 2.0 will be held on the campus of the University of Minnesota, one of >the world's most technologically innovative campuses. The conference will >provide opportunities to network, learn from other researchers, hear from >leading players in Internet development, and take in the sights and sounds >of the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul. > >The Association of Internet Researchers invites paper, presentation, and >panel proposals on topics that address social, cultural, political, >economic, and aesthetic aspects of the Internet. We welcome submissions >from any discipline, as well as work from those producing new media or >working in multimedia studies. Panel presentations which establish >connections across disciplines, institutions and/or continents are >especially encouraged. We also seek presentations which will make creative >use of Internet technologies and techniques, including (but not limited >to) digital art and e-poster sessions. > >We suggest the following as possible themes for proposals. > >* communication-based Internet studies >* digital art >* distance education and pedagogy >* e-commerce and business >* gender, sexualities, and the Internet >* human-computer interaction (HCI) >* international perspectives on the Internet >* Internet technologies >* law and the Internet, including privacy and copyright issues >* methodological issues in Internet studies >* new media and Internet journalism >* psychology and the Internet >* the "Digital Divide" >* race and cyberspace >* rhetoric and technology > >This list is not meant to be exclusive, but rather to trigger ideas and >encourage submissions from a range of disciplines. When we are able to >identify scholars from a range of disciplines pursuing shared themes, we >will work to bring these scholars together for panel sessions. > >When preparing proposals, please consider the convention's conventions: > >* Most conference sessions will be 90 minutes, with no less than the >final thirty minutes >reserved for discussion. > >* The average time allotted for a paper or presentation will be 15 >minutes. > >If these time constraints are not appropriate for your panel/presentation, >please highlight this in your proposal. Also, please include any unusual >equipment needs or special considerations that might affect your presentation. > >Individual paper and presentation proposals should be no more than 250 >words. Panels will generally include three or four papers or >presentations. For panel proposals, the session organizer should submit a >150-250 word statement describing the panel topic, including abstracts of >up to 250 words for each paper or presentation in the panel. > >Graduate students are highly encouraged to submit proposals. They should >note their student status with their submissions, and, if they wish, >submit completed papers so their work can be considered for a special >Student Award. The winner of the Student Award will have conference fees >waived. > >We also invite proposals for pre-Conference workshops. These proposals >should be submitted as soon as possible (no later than January 31, 2001) >so that the workshops can be publicized. > >All proposals should be submitted electronically at ><http://www2.cddc.vt.edu/confman/>http://www2.cddc.vt.edu/confman/ > >It is preferred that you use HTML to minimally format your submission. > >The deadline for submissions of paper/session proposals is Friday, March >2, 2001. > >If you have questions about the program, conference, or AoIR, please contact: > >Program Chair: Leslie Shade, University of Ottawa, shade@aix1.uottawa.ca >Conference Coordinator: John Logie, University of Minnesota logie@tc.umn.edu >A(O)IR President: Steve Jones, sjones@uic.edu > >More Information about IR 2.0 can be found on the Conference Website: ><http://www.cddc.vt.edu/aoir>http://www.cddc.vt.edu/aoir > >For more information about the Association of Internet Researchers, >including information on joining the Association, visit AoIR's website at ><http://aoir.org>http://aoir.org </blockquote></x-html> Jeremy Hunsinger http://www.cddc.vt.edu Instructor of Political Science Center for Digital Discourse and Culture Webmaster/Manager CDDC http://www2.cddc.vt.edu/cyber 526 Major Williams Hall 0130 http://www.cddc.vt.edu/jeremy --my homepage Virginia Tech (yes i need to update it) Blacksburg, VA 24061 (540)-231-7614 icq 5535471 ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 5 Dec 2000 09:31:49 -0500 (EST) From: ronda@ais.org (Ronda Hauben) To: nettime-l@bbs.thing.net Subject: 1st Anniversary Conference in Finland on citizen participation The so-called Democratic and Republican Party squabbles that have been dominating US election news leave out the real issues of the recent Presidential electorial campaign. The real issue that is underlying the crisis in the American government right now is that the current party processes and practices leave out the American people. A government needs connections with its citizens to be able to function and both the Democracy and Republican parties have increasingly seen the corporations as their citizens, not the American people. That is the basis of the current constitutional crisis in the US, rather than whether some candidate got their votes counted or not counted. Most of the American people didn't vote for either of these two candidates and for good reason. Democracy is not the result of voting for candidates chosen by a process that leaves most of the citizens out. And that leaves them out after the election as well. December 3, 4 and 5, 2000 happen to be an anniversary of an important event that broke through this narrow framing of issues of what democracy means. It is the anniversary of a European Union conference in Tampere, Finland last year (December 3, 4, 5, 1999) on the subject of how can citizens have more of a voice in the decisions made by governments. This conference was called Citizen Agenda 2000 NGO Forum and the program is online at http://www.citizen2000.net It was a conference held by the NGO's of the European Union. There was also, most importantly, a seminar about potential of the Internet to make increased citizenship participation in government decisions possible. This seminar (Civic Participation, Virtual Democracy and the Net) is described in http://www.citizen2000.net/E2.html The speakers at the seminar presented a varied set of experiences of research in trying to determine the potential of the Internet. Included in the seminar was the talk I gave "Is the Internet a Laboratory for Democracy? The vision of the Netizens versus the E-commerce Agenda. A number of interesting problems were raised at the seminar including the need for all citizens to have access to the Internet if it is to make it possible for citizens to have more say in the decisions of government. And the problem was identified of government representatives who claim that because they are elected they don't have to listen to citizens and their concerns, but can choose to listen to whomever they wish (i.e. corporate interests). An important point raised during the seminar was that it is critical for citizens to make a record of their efforts to participate in government processes and decisions, and to document the fact that their input is not being considered as a means to change the situation. In the talk I gave I spoke about the issue of the US government privatizing first the backbone to the US portion of the Internet, and now trying to privatize the public essential functions of the Internet's infrastructure. And that it is crucial that citizens know of these activities and continue the challenge that is being raised about them. There needs to be an international means of protecting these essential functions. A proposal toward such a goal was submitted to the US Department of Commerce but thus far has not been taken seriously by the US government.. The proposal is online at http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/domainname/proposals/hauben/hauben.html The conference in Finland followed directly after the protests in Seattle and some of the NGO's had sent representatives to the protests and then to the conference. The conference was in an important way a clear statement of what the protests in Seattle and Washington and Prague and at the Democratic and Republican Conventions in the US have been about. The vision of the socio-technical pioneers who began the research which has resulted in the Internet was of a network that would make it possible for citizens to participate in the decisions of its development. (See Part II of "Netizens: On the History and Impact of Usenet and the Internet" http://www.columbia.edu/~hauben/netbook) The concept of citizen and of netizen are important concepts for our times and the conference in Finland one year ago has helped to rekindle the vision of the pioneers of the Internet for increased human-to-human communication and of increased citizen participation in the decisions governing their lives which can be facilitated by the developing computer network. Ronda ronda@panix.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 5 Dec 2000 14:38:34 -0500 (EST) From: Alan Sondheim <sondheim@panix.com> To: nettime-l@bbs.thing.net Subject: Third Multi-Literary Event at the Flying Saucer Cafe Third Multi-Literary Event at the Flying Saucer Cafe! Alan and Nada and Azure are pleased to announce the second event in a new reading/video series in Brooklyn at The Flying Saucer Cafe at 494 Atlantic Avenue, between Third Avenue and Nevins Tuesday, December 12th, 8:00 p.m.: ****TOD THILLEMAN AND ALAN SONDHEIM**** TOD THILLEMAN was born and raised in Racine, Wisconsin. He moved to New York at the age of 18 and worked for a brief period with Pace Editions. After ABC NO RIO, the abandoned Williamsburg waterfront, paper-making, the typewriter, protests and marches, the guitar, Reagan and the 1980's, he started the reading series at CBGB's 313 Gallery on the Bowery. He now produces (with his wife, Katya Edwards) fiction, poetry, and art books through their small company Spuyten Duyvil. He is the author of Wave-Run and The Corybantes (Spuyten Duyvil), A World of Nothing But Nations (Hive), The New Frequency (Ma'arri), Wallpaper & Lightning (Hive), 1988: An Artist's Diary (PNY|MEB), Between (Jensen/Daniels), Blank Verse (PNY|MEB), Anatomical Sketches and Daemon of the World (800th Trap), and the novel Gowanus Notecard Abduction. ALAN SONDHEIM is from Kingston, PA. He works in texts and multi-media. His work is widely disseminated on and off the Internet. Sondheim is comoder- ator of Wryting, Cybermind, and Cyberculture; editor of the Lusitania anthology, Being on Line, ex writer-in-residence for the Trace online writing community; and has been collaborating with the dancer Foofwa d'Imobilite (formerly of Stuttgart Ballet and Merce Cunningham), and Azure Carter. Foofwa, Azure, and Alan will be performing a short piece, Ennui, discussing their work; Alan will also read from the Nikuko Parables texts. (I'll give a free, older version, of my cdrom away to anyone who comes, by the way - at least until they run out. The newest version is for sale cheap as usual. - Alan.) How to get there: Take the 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or D or Q to the Atlantic Subway stop and walk underground to the Pacific Street exit (at the N or R or M Pacific Street Stop) or take the B or N or R or M - in any case, go out the Pacific Street Exit (right exit), take a right - at the end of the block you will be on Atlantic Ave. Take a left on Atlantic, and about two and a half blocks down, between Third and Nevins, you will find the Flying Saucer Cafe. $3 donation. - ---- ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 06 Dec 2000 15:49:11 -0500 To: whitecube@europe.com From: Vanessa Black <whitecube@asia.com> Subject: Genesis - BernadetteCORPORATION we are pleased to show at the WHITE CUBE a proposal by BernadetteCORPORATION GENESIS constitutive elements of a trendy neighborhood Thursday 7 Dec 20-22 pm C. Sundtsgt. 55 ____________________________________________________ visit our website: http://www.societyofcontrol.com/WhiteCube *** BernadetteCORPORATION appears courtesy of American Fine Arts, CO. Colin De Land Fine Art *** ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 6 Dec 2000 14:03:23 -0800 (PST) From: cristine wang <cristinewang@yahoo.com> Subject: New Works at Dystopia ....at Tribes Gallery>> To: nettime <nettime-l@bbs.thing.net> hi! a few new works have arrived, which were not on view the nite of the opening, so please stop by the gallery to see them: HEATH BUNTING: "Natural Reality Superweed 1.0 DIY Kit" DANIEL GARCIA ANDUJAR: "Technologies to the People", propaganda pamphlets + posters, "phoney" cd-rom. BETTY BEAUMONT: "Decompression" Ocean Landmark Project video SONG DONG: "Broken Mirror in Beijing" performance on street at: Tribes Gallery 285 East Third Street (2nd Fl) New York NY 10009 (F train to 2nd Ave. bet ave c+d / east village) "Dystopia + Identity in the Age of Global Communications" Dec. 2-Jan 13, 2001 for more info http://www.artnet.com/tribes.html [online exhibition + documentation images + video forthcoming] +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Shopping - Thousands of Stores. Millions of Products. http://shopping.yahoo.com/ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 7 Dec 2000 17:40:31 +1300 From: Cuckoo <cuckoo@cuckoo.org.nz> To: Cuckoo <cuckoo@cuckoo.org.nz> Subject: -- COO-EE - [Cuckoo 1] - Kirsty Cameron + Violet Faigan -- - ---------------------------------- CUCKOO - ---------------------------------- Cuckoo is an ongoing itinerant project working gratis with artists and the contemporary art community. (In other words we put on shows in other people¹s galleries.) Our first installment is at the former Archill Gallery in Auckland, Aotearoa (before the Moving Image Centre¹s programme opens there in February), corner Great North Rd and Elgin St, Grey Lynn. The first of four projects this summer there will be: Violet Faigan and Kirsty Cameron opening 6pm Wednesday 13th December plus a video programme with work by Tessa Laird Nova Paul Dylan Rainforth Yuk King Tan Ronnie Vaevae All shows in this series will be open from 11am-6pm on the Thursday, Friday and Saturday following the opening. - ---------------------------------- FOR MORE DETAILS - ---------------------------------- Check our website at http://www.cuckoo.org.nz or call the inpho line on +64 9 274 8889 ext 8190. Send us your address and get on the e-mailing list now for updates <cuckoo@cuckoo.org.nz>. - ---------------------------------- We warmly welcome any offers for temporary exhibiting space. Cuckoo is presently Jon Bywater, Judy Darragh, Daniel Malone, Ani O¹Neill and Gwynneth Porter. - ---------------------------------- STOP THE PRESSES ! - ---------------------------------- Cuckoo #2 (cuckoo! cuckoo!) will be at the Anna Bibby Gallery in late January-early February. Programme details will be posted on the website real soon. - ---------------------------------- MAILING LIST - ---------------------------------- You have received this message from Cuckoo because we believe you have an interest in events and opportunities related to contemporary arts and culture. If you no longer wish to receive notification of upcoming events just reply to this message with the subject line: REMOVE _.--. .-"`_.--.\ .-.___________ ."_-"` \\ ( 0;------/\"'` ,."=___ =)) \ \ / \ `~` .=`~'~) ( _/ / / \ =`---====""~`\ _/ / \ `-------"` / \ jgs / \ ( ) '._ _.' '----' ------------------------------ From: "George(s) Lessard" <media@web.net> To: mediamentor@egroups.com Date: Wed, 6 Dec 2000 22:12:50 -0500 Subject: ARTS WIRE OPEN HOME ARTS WIRE OPEN HOME Arts Wire's website at http://www.artswire.org is a central place to visit the cyberhomes of the diverse artists and art organizations who are Arts Wire members. ____________________________________________________ Via / From / Thanks to: ______________________________________________________ Arts Wire CURRENT December 5, 2000 Arts Wire CURRENT Volume 9, No. 49 Arts Wire CURRENT Arts Wire CURRENT Judy Malloy, Editor Arts Wire CURRENT jmalloy@artswire.org _______________________________________________________ Arts Wire CURRENT is a project of the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) -- http://www.nyfa.org Arts Wire is NYFA's national online communications project. Arts Wire CURRENT features news updates on social, economic, philosophical, and political issues affecting the arts and culture. Your contributions are invited. Contact Judy Malloy, editor, at jmalloy@artswire.org To encourage the exchange of arts information and perspectives, Arts Wire CURRENT contents are not copyrighted unless specifically stated. We ask that you cite Arts Wire CURRENT as well as Arts Wire's url (http://www.artswire.org) when reprinting material. In addition, Arts Wire is interested in documenting the use of material from Arts Wire CURRENT in other newsletters, publications and on online networks. Please send a copy to: Judy Malloy at the email address above. _______________________________________________________ ______________________________________ ------------------------------ # 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