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Table of Contents: Geert Lovink booksigning & reception: Monday, April 21 "LEONARDO (mk)" <isast@well.com> Life=?ISO-8859-1?B?uQ==?=s (re-)emergence: philosophy, culture, and politics Gregor Claude <gregor@zoom.co.uk> Radio Slavoj Doug Henwood <dhenwood@panix.com> Interview with Sadie Plant "Steffen Bohm" <s.g.bohm@warwick.ac.uk> V2_: new release V2_Archief V2_Organisation <marije@v2.nl> Online Advocacy and Lobbying Panel Session Webcast "Steven Clift" <slc@publicus.net> Switch Volume 18: Software as Cultural Production "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> complex net art diagram "abraham linkoln" <abelinkoln@hotmail.com> i18 of Switch|Journal "_stephan" <ccom@gmx.net> Frontline(s) "Steffen Bohm" <s.g.bohm@warwick.ac.uk> London: Diaspora Capital "Lachlan Brown" <l.brown@london.com> for London-based visual artists "Lachlan Brown" <l.brown@london.com> en) Baxter2003 protest camp coverage & information dr.woooo@.SYNTAX-ERROR "debates&Credits. Meda Art in the Public Domain": web journal of the project Tania Goryucheva <tangor@redline.ru> Never wake up? "Melody Parker Carter" <agricola-w@netcologne.de> ephemera vol 3, no 1 (feb2003) "Obembe, A.O." <aoo5@leicester.ac.uk> ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Apr 2003 13:34:10 -0700 From: "LEONARDO (mk)" <isast@well.com> Subject: Geert Lovink booksigning & reception: Monday, April 21 > This message is in MIME format. Since your mail reader does not understand this format, some or all of this message may not be legible. - --B_3133431254_3164176 Content-type: text/plain; charset="ISO-8859-1" Content-transfer-encoding: quoted-printable FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ZeroOne to Celebrate Release of Geert Lovink=B9s Latest Book, "Uncanny Networks: Dialogues with Virtual Intelligentsia" ZeroOne: The Art and Technology Network, will host a booksigning and celebration for the MIT Press release of Uncanny Networks: Dialogues with Virtual Intelligentsia by Geert Lovink, 6 p.m., reception, 7 p.m., presentation, Monday, April 21, at IDEO, 831 High Street, in Palo Alto. Th= e evening is being co-presented by CADRE Laboratory for New Media at San Jose State University, Leonardo/The International Society for the Sciences, Arts and Technology, and IDEO. According to Joel Slayton, professor of Digital Media and director of the CADRE Institute at San Jose State University, the topics explored by Lovink could have long-range impact on our evolving civilization, =B3There is no mor= e important issue than opening up the discourse on tactical strategies, cultural laboratories and spaces of intervention that question how art, politics, and economics are relational.=B2 In his new book, Uncanny Networks, Lovink, who is an Amsterdam-born media theorist, net critic and activist, based in Brisbane, Australia, conducts a series of online interviews with artists, critics, and theorists 3=8E4 those who are intimately involved in building the content, interfaces, and architectures of new media. He does this over a period of weeks and months= , and allows the participants to compose documents of depth and breadth, rather than simply snapshots of timely references. Lovink approaches these interviews as imaginative texts that can help create global, networked dialogue. The interviews collected in this book are with preeminent artists, critics, and theorists who are intimately involved in building the content, interfaces, and architectures of new media. The interviewees include: Mark Dery, Kodwo Eshun, Bruno Latour, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Lev Manovich, and Slavoj Zizek. The topics discussed include digital aesthetics, sound art, navigating deep audio space, European media philosophy, the Internet in Eastern Europe, the mixing of old and new in India, critical media studies in the Asia-Pacific region, Japanese techno tribes, hybrid identities, the storage of social movements, theory of the virtual class, virtual and urban spaces, corporate takeover of the Internet, and cyberspace and the rise of nongovernmental organizations. =B3With this event, we are pleased to continue to showcase contemporary thought on art and technology 3=8E4 thought that allows us to imagine new possibilities. Lovink=B9s forward-thinking new work is a fascinating prophecy to consider as the Internet continues to change our lives,=B2 said Andy Cunningham, founder and chairman of ZeroOne. According to artist, author and engineer, Ken Goldberg, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley, Uncanny Networks presents original thinking on media theory. =B3Lovink is quick to question the conventional wisdom: the result is fresh and insightful, especially given the recent changes in the landscape,=B2 Goldberg said. Uncanny Networks will be available for sale, at a discounted price, at the April 21 event. It is also available in bookstores or directly from MIT Press for $27.95, or at a 30% discount (and benefit to Leonardo) through Amazon at=20 http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0262122510/leonardoonlin-20/103-0646= 5 12-3207862 About ZeroOne: The Art and Technology Network ZeroOne: The Art and Technology Network is a non-profit organization with the mission of inspiring possibility through the synergy of art and technology. ZeroOne fuels creative art and technology projects by providing infrastructure support and project management, technical resource= s and funding. Tapping into Silicon Valley=B9s technical talent, equipment and entrepreneurial spirit, the organization is a catalyst for artistic innovation. By expanding cultural horizons through art and technology, ZeroOne gives a whole new generation of artists and patrons an opportunity to change the world. =20 About The CADRE Laboratory for New Media CADRE Laboratory for New Media, located in the School of Art and Design at San Jose State University, the oldest public institution of higher educatio= n in California, is an interdisciplinary academic and research program dedicated to the experimental use of information technology and art. A theoretical and critical orientation provides a conceptual context in which artistic activities are defined. Faculty and students have participated in the evolution of media technology for over 15 years. Distinguished facultie= s representing interdisciplinary interest have created a unique academic environment dedicated to envisioning the cultural frontier and implementing theoretical strategies that will lead there. About Leonardo/ the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology Leonardo began international publication of its print journal in 1968, and has continued to focus for more than 30 years on writings by artists who work with science- and technology-based art media. The International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology Press was founded in 1982 to further the aims of Leonardo by providing avenues of communication for artists working in contemporary media. Leonardo/ISAST continues this work through its print journals, book series, CD series, web journal, web sites and other activities. Its book series, published by MIT Press, publishes texts by artists, scientists, researchers and scholars that present innovative discourse on the convergence of art, science and technology. Envisioned as a catalyst for enterprise, research and creative and scholarl= y experimentation, the book series enables diverse intellectual communities t= o explore common grounds of expertise. For more information, see www.leonardo.info=20 =20 About MIT Press The MIT Press is the only university press in the United States specializin= g in science and technology and committed to exploring new fields and new modes of inquiry. The Press's enthusiasm for innovation is reflected in its continuing exploration of the electronic frontier. Since the late 1960s, it has experimented with electronic publishing tools. From the paper-tape systems through IBM Composers to its present-day use of direct-to-press production technologies, its intensive use of the Internet, and its commitment to new electronic products3=8E4whether digital journals or entirel= y new forms of communication3=8E4MIT Press has continued to look for efficient and effective means to serve its readership. =20 About IDEO IDEO, an award winning international design firm, identifies opportunities for innovation and evaluates new ideas through rapid prototyping. The firm offers complete innovation and design services, from strategy and concept development to engineering and production. The company creates products, services, and environment for companies pioneering new ways to provide valu= e for their customers. Drawing on twenty years of experience in the field of innovation and design, IDEO defines and develops new futures for industry leaders. IDEO=B9s multidisciplinary teams include specialists from fields including human factors, cognitive psychology, business strategy, design planning, industrial design, interaction design, graphic design, architecture, mechanical and electrical engineering, software and manufacturing. Notable projects include: the first commercial computer mouse for Apple Computer and a collaboration with Rem Koolhaas to create invisible technology at the innovative Prada Epicenter in New York City. =20 Press Contact: Steven Brewster 415.618.8736 sbrewster@cunningham.com ### =20 - --=20 Geert Lovink's "Uncanny Networks: Dialogues with the Virtual Intelligentsia," the latest volume in the Leonardo Book Series, includes interviews with artists, critics, and theorists who are intimately involved in building content, interfaces, and architectures of new media. Order your copy @ http://mitpress.mit.edu/Leonardo/isast/leobooks.html ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 15 Apr 2003 10:22:55 +0100 From: Gregor Claude <gregor@zoom.co.uk> Subject: Life=?ISO-8859-1?B?uQ==?=s (re-)emergence: philosophy, culture, and politics Life¹s (re-)emergence: philosophy, culture, and politics A one-day conference * Friday 23 May 2003 * Goldsmiths College * London Ian Gulland Lecture Theatre * 10am - 6pm Speakers: Brian Massumi (University of Montreal): Living Memory John Mullarkey (University of Sunderland): Bio-Aesthetics or the Memory of the Senses Luciana Parisi (University of East London): Abstract Sex: bio-digital machines and symbiotic micropolitics Jamie King (Mute/University of Minnesota) and Matthew Hyland (Wolverine): An inherited agenda for annihilating nothingness Howard Caygill (Goldsmiths College): Life and Energy Scott Lash (Goldsmiths College): Comments on ŒLiving Memory¹ - -- -- -- -- In recent years life has emerged as a concept of extraordinary scope, reaching into a wide variety of fields. In the tradition of continental philosophy, life as well as related concepts (virtuality, emergence, multiplicity, etc.) opens up novel ways in which crucial ontological problems can be addressed. In the social sciences, the concept of life has begun to redefine critical disciplines such as cultural studies. In more praxis-oriented fields such as management (complex adaptive systems), or computing (a-life), life is increasingly established as a central paradigm. Most visibly, though, it is the advances in the fields of biotechnology and biomedicine that has led to the problematisation of life. Clearly, the conceptual terrains covered by the different notions of life diverge rather substantially. Life, it seems, does not always equal life. Or does it ever? In the context of this conference, life's (re-)emergence is strongly linked to the comeback of Henri Bergson. His philosophy of life shall serve as point of departure for the exploration of life¹s importance for mind, individuality, and culture. It is our intention to provide a platform on which connections can be drawn among heterogeneous approaches to life. In doing this, we hope to be able to create a temporal life-machine that can be employed to explore new approaches to philosophy, culture and politics. Attendance is free, but please reserve seats in advance. For reservations, conference abstracts, schedule, or any other information, email Maria Lakka <cup01ml@gold.ac.uk>, phone 077 21 76 21 31, or see <www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/cultural-studies> ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 14 Apr 2003 13:59:51 -0400 From: Doug Henwood <dhenwood@panix.com> Subject: Radio Slavoj Ok, my interview with Slavoj Zizek is in the can, and will run on my show this Thursday, 5-6 PM NYC time, WBAI 99.5 FM NYC and on the web at <http://www.wbai.org>. He talks in this interview about the war on Iraq, just what's different about the Bush version of American imperialism, the role of fantasy in politics (e.g., the entirely false but widely popular belief that Saddam was behind 9/11), and a million other things in an interview that will take up the entire show. If you miss it live, it'll be up on the web late Thursday/early Friday at <http://www.leftbusinessobserver.com/Radio.html>. - -- Doug Henwood Left Business Observer 38 Greene St - 4th fl. New York NY 10013-2505 USA voice +1-212-219-0010 fax +1-212-219-0098 cell +1-917-865-2813 email <mailto:dhenwood@panix.com> web <http://www.leftbusinessobserver.com> ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2003 21:48:03 +0100 From: "Steffen Bohm" <s.g.bohm@warwick.ac.uk> Subject: Interview with Sadie Plant The following interview with Sadie Plant, conducted by Chris Land, has just appeared in 'ephemera: critical dialogues on organization' (www.ephemeraweb.org) Mobile Mutations By Sadie Plant and Chris Land Abstract: Between May 2002 and March 2003, Chris Land conducted an email conversation with Sadie Plant, in which they discussed topics ranging from life and work outside the institutions of academia to the future of the human species. Along the way, this virtual conversation ranges across neuro-pharmacology, the Situationiste Internationale, mobile telephony and the characterisation of the current global situation by a paradoxical conjunction of increasing mobility and tightly policed immobility. Through a series of engagements the general question is posed as to whether mobility itself is an increasingly fundamental arena for the contemporary exercise of power and what this conception of mobility might mean in an age of pervasive information technologies. Where mobility and communication are increasingly intertwined both issues need to be increasingly interrogated in relation to the transformations or mutations that they perform. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Apr 2003 17:05:49 +0200 From: V2_Organisation <marije@v2.nl> Subject: V2_: new release V2_Archief - --=======6E1F55B3======= Content-Type: text/plain; x-avg-checked=avg-ok-646E63E2; charset=iso-8859-1; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable New release V2_Archief: LP/CD '(FAVORITES)' by Roel Meelkop Roel Meelkop - '(FAVORITES)' LP/CD Two years in the making, and available just before the end of the year=20 2002. '(FAVORITES)' is Roel Meelkop's first real remix project. All=20 material used has been taken from vinyl (for the LP) and CD (for the CD)=20 and take a special place in Meelkop's personal music history. The term=20 remix is perhaps not completely appropriate, it is much rather an=20 assimilation of the influence these tracks have on Meelkop's musical=20 development. '(FAVORITES)' can therefor be seen as a homage to the artists.= =20 This resulted in 18 tracks that fit in Meelkop's world and also subtly=20 refer to the original. LP/CD '(FAVORITES)', 18 tracks Price: =80 17,50 More information can be found on www.v2.nl/store. At this URL it is=20 possible to order the LP/CD online. You can also order the LP/CD by sending a reply e-mail, mentioning your=20 name, address, town and zip code, country and telephone number. V2_ will=20 then contact you about the payment procedure and shipping possibilities. The order will be send to your home address as soon as V2_ has received=20 your payment.=20 - --=======6E1F55B3======= Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; x-avg=cert; x-avg-checked=avg-ok-646E63E2 Content-Disposition: inline - --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.463 / Virus Database: 262 - Release Date: 17-3-03 - --=======6E1F55B3=======-- ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 22 Apr 2003 14:18:59 -0500 From: "Steven Clift" <slc@publicus.net> Subject: Online Advocacy and Lobbying Panel Session Webcast For those of you interested in online activism - this webcast on online advocacy and lobbying puts a more institutional twist on effective ways to use this medium to organize and make your voice heard in the political process. Steven Clift http://www.publicus.net P.S. I am always interested hearing about online advocacy success stories and lessons learned <clift@publicus.net> for my Democracies Online Newswire <http://www.e-democracy.org/do> <- subscribe free here. *** Democracies Online Newswire - http://e-democracy.org/do *** ---- Please Forward ---> Online Advocacy and Lobbying Webcast This event was hosted by E-Democracy <http://e-democracy.org> and the Institute for New Media Studies <http://www.inms.umn.edu> at the University of Minnesota. Have you ever wondered: - - What were the top e-mails received by Governor Jesse Ventura? - - What people think when an interest group doesn't have a website? - - What is an advanced collaborative online advocacy network? - - What is online advocacy and lobbying anyway? If so, then listen to the online advocacy webcast from: http://www.e-democracy.org/neoamn Or directly from: http://www.inms.umn.edu/neoamn/onlineadvocacypanel.ram The webcast includes audio with Power Point slides in Real format or audio-only for download in MP3. Short and to the point panelist presentations were followed by audience questions and an engaging discussion and debate. This is one of the best panel sessions ever held on this topic in general, and likely the only one freely available on the Internet. Minnesota is known for its depth of online political activity - lessons learned here are valuable everywhere. The dynamic panelists include: Robbie LaFluer - Director, Minnesota Legislative Reference Library Marcia Avner - Public Policy Director, Minnesota Council of Non-Profits - Author, Lobbying and Advocacy Handbook for Nonprofit Orgs. David Strom - Legislative Director, Taxpayers League of Minnesota Brian Elliott - Political Coordinator, Clean Water Action Alliance - Minnesota Environmental Action Network Christine Nelson - Former Director of Citizen Outreach, Governor Ventura's Office Linda Jean Kensicki - Panel Moderator - Asst. Professor, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Minnesota Stay tuned next week for the announcement about the Net & Elections panel or get a preview at the same site. Sincerely, Steven Clift Visiting Fellow <http://www.publicus.net/fellow> - February 2003 Institute for New Media Studies, University of Minnesota ^ ^ ^ ^ Steven L. Clift - W: http://www.publicus.net Minneapolis - - - E: clift@publicus.net Minnesota - - - - - T: +1.612.822.8667 USA - - - - - - - ICQ: 13789183 *** Past Messages, Discussion http://e-democracy.org/do *** *** To subscribe, e-mail: listserv@tc.umn.edu *** *** Message body: SUB DO-WIRE *** *** To UNSUBSCRIBE instead, write: UNSUB DO-WIRE *** *** Please send submissions to: clift@publicus.net *** - ------- End of forwarded message ------- ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 23 Apr 2003 00:50:11 -0700 From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: Switch Volume 18: Software as Cultural Production switch.sjsu.edu Volume 18: Software as Cultural Production Only recently have critics, theorists and artists begun to address the implications of interface outside the protological simplicities of human machine interaction. The CADRE Laboratory for New Media is pleased to announce SWITCH Volume 18 Interface: Software as Cultural Production. Volume 18 features discussion transcripts from this years CADRE Invitational. The CADRE Invitational represents a yearlong series of discussions with renowned artists, theorists, curators and scientist. Topics include social and cultural inequality, the emergence of the virtual class, the economy of attention, the role of entrepreneurialism, tactical and network protocols, distributed control, authority, surveillance, cooperation models and cultural imperialism. Participants include Jan Hauser, Marisa Olson, Peter Lunenfeld, Maggie Morse and Douglas Englebart. We are also pleased to present the first English translation of Pierre Levy' s The Collective Intelligence Game along with a description of his research at the University of Ottawa. Software as Cultural Production includes interviews with Oliver Grau, author of Virtual Art; Stelarc; and Time O'Reilly. Also featured are essays by Margaret Morse, The Poetics of Interactivity, Low Tech/High Concept by Jenny Hager and Slipping the Interface by Jennifer Henderson. Michael Chernobrod offers a review of Resfest 2002. Also included in this volume is a curatorial project by John Bruneau and Michael Chernobrod entitled Digital Insights presenting the work of CADRE OpenGl projects exploring information mapping. SWITCH is the new media art journal of the CADRE Laboratory for New Media of the School of Art and Design at San Jose State University. It has been published on the Web since 1995. We are interested in fostering a critical viewpoint on issues and developments in the multiple crossovers between art and technology. Our main focus is on questioning and analyzing as well as reporting and discussing these new art forms as they develop, in hopes of encouraging dialogue and possible collaboration with others who are working and considering similar issues. SWITCH aims to critically evaluate developments in art and technology in order to contribute to the formation of alternative viewpoints with the intention of expanding the arena in which new art and technology emerge. Switch is produced by graduate students of the CADRE Laboratory for New Media at San Jose State University. First published in 1995. Archives available on-line. Executive Editor: Joel Slayton Managing Editors: Stephan Hechenberger and Matt Mays Contributing Editors: Mark Gonzales, Jennifer Henderson, Michael Velasquez, Jenny Hager, Brett Stalbaum, Sheila Malone, Geri Wittig http://switch.sjsu.edu/ Contact Stephan Hechenberger ccom (at) gmx (dot) net Joel Slayton joel (at) well (dot) com PS: A couple of days ago we were slashdotted: http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/04/15/0437224&mode=thread&tid=189&tid= 95 ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 13 Apr 2003 01:49:20 +0000 From: "abraham linkoln" <abelinkoln@hotmail.com> Subject: complex net art diagram complex net art diagram: a remix of mtaa's simple net art diagram now up at http://www.linkoln.net/complex/ abe _________________________________________________________________ MSN 8 with e-mail virus protection service: 2 months FREE* http://join.msn.com/?page=features/virus ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 15 Apr 2003 18:57:04 -0700 From: "_stephan" <ccom@gmx.net> Subject: i18 of Switch|Journal - ---[ switch.sjsu.edu Announcing Volume 18: Software as Cultural Production Only recently have critics, theorists and artists begun to address the implications of interface outside the protological simplicities of human machine interaction. The CADRE Laboratory for New Media is pleased to announce SWITCH Volume 18 Interface: Software as Cultural Production. Volume 18 features discussion transcripts from this years CADRE Invitational. The CADRE Invitational represents a yearlong series of discussions with renowned artists, theorists, curators and scientist. Topics include social and cultural inequality, the emergence of the virtual class, the economy of attention, the role of entrepreneurialism, tactical and network protocols, distributed control, authority, surveillance, cooperation models and cultural imperialism. Participants include Jan Hauser, Marisa Olson, Peter Lunenfeld, Maggie Morse and Douglas Englebart. We are also pleased to present the first English translation of Pierre Levy's The Collective Intelligence Game along with a description of his research at the University of Ottawa. Software as Cultural Production includes interviews with Oliver Grau, author of Virtual Art; Stelarc; and Time O'Reilly. Also featured are essays by Margaret Morse, The Poetics of Interactivity, Low Tech/High Concept by Jenny Hager and Slipping the Interface by Jennifer Henderson. Michael Chernobrod offers a review of Resfest 2002. Also included in this volume is a curatorial project by John Bruneau and Michael Chernobrod entitled Digital Insights presenting the work of CADRE OpenGl projects exploring information mapping. SWITCH is the new media art journal of the CADRE Laboratory for New Media of the School of Art and Design at San Jose State University. It has been published on the Web since 1995. We are interested in fostering a critical viewpoint on issues and developments in the multiple crossovers between art and technology. Our main focus is on questioning and analyzing as well as reporting and discussing these new art forms as they develop, in hopes of encouraging dialogue and possible collaboration with others who are working and considering similar issues. SWITCH aims to critically evaluate developments in art and technology in order to contribute to the formation of alternative viewpoints with the intention of expanding the arena in which new art and technology emerge. Switch is produced by graduate students of the CADRE Laboratory for New Media at San Jose State University. First published in 1995. Archives available on-line. Executive Editor: Joel Slayton Managing Editors: Stephan Hechenberger and Matt Mays Contributing Editors: Mark Gonzales, Jennifer Henderson, Michael Velasquez, Jenny Hager, Brett Stalbaum, Sheila Malone, Geri Wittig Contact Stephan Hechenberger ccom (at) gmx (dot) net Joel Slayton joel (at) well (dot) com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2003 21:48:03 +0100 From: "Steffen Bohm" <s.g.bohm@warwick.ac.uk> Subject: Frontline(s) The following paper, a collection of images of the war in Iraq and the movement of resistance against it, has just appeared in 'ephemera: critical diaolgues on organization' (www.ephemeraweb.org) Frontline(s) By Sian Sullivan Abstract: The challenge of theorising and analysing socio-political phenomena can feel overwhelming given today's somewhat threatening realpolitik (9/11, US-led wars on Afghanistan, Iraq and now, perhaps, Syria) and the rapid pace with which (dis)information is received, digested and discarded. Through an act of 'literary montage' construction, and prefaced by some interpretation of my own, I offer this 'exhibit' as an attempt to highlight this sense of dislocation whilst simultaneously 'building a picture'. A specific concern is to problematise the notion of 'the frontline'. Given blatant military and economic imperialism by the US, underscored by the construction and fetishising of the rational subject under modernity and the social democratic state, I suggest that frontlines are located in any public or private space where the legitimacy of these interests and categories is questioned. Expressions of difference, including peace activism, thus become "proliferating illegitimacies" and are policed as such. Against this context, the texts positioned here tell of growing realisation and fear of the coldness and instrumentalism at the heart of empire-building, of which both the horrific violence currently inflicted on Iraqi people, and the discounting and suppression of dissent to war worldwide, are part. For a global anti-capitalist/pro-justice movement that recognises trade in arms as a core constraint on human potential, reaching beyond this fear - - retaining the hope of the 'politics of possibility' with which this 'movement of movements' has come to be identified - emerges as a latent and essential challenge. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Apr 2003 03:11:24 -0500 From: "Lachlan Brown" <l.brown@london.com> Subject: London: Diaspora Capital for announcements: - ----- Original Message ----- From: CreativeCapital <creativecapital@platform-3.co.uk> Date: Thu, 10 Apr 2003 15:52:51 +0100 To: CreativeCapital e-group <creativecapital@platform-3.co.uk> Subject: London: Diaspora Capital > LONDON: DIASPORA CAPITAL > > www.culturalco-operation.org > > > > LOG ON TO LONDON: DIASPORA CAPITAL > London¹s fastest growing network of artists of diverse cultural origin > > > Are you a London-based artist from one of the capital¹s many national and > faith communities? Would you appreciate greater profile for your work? > > Or are you an arts programmer seeking to engage more fully with the city¹s > growing cultural diversity? > > Then visit London Diaspora Capital at www.culturalco-operation.org > > This new artists¹ resource increases the visibility of under-recognised or > emerging artistic talent within London¹s diverse communities and encourages > cross-cultural dialogue and networking. > > - Audiovisual profiles on 100+ artists and growing > > - one million page hits in first six months > > - free set of professional photographs for artists featured > > - initial analysis of training and development needs > > - future links being developed with artists from New York, Paris, Berlin, > Cape Town and other world cities > > Call or email us with contact details of an artist/group you think we should > consider for inclusion in this resource. > > Cultural Co-operation, Toynbee Studios, 28 Commercial St, London E1 6AB > T: 020 7456 0400/3 F: 020 7456 0401 E: ldc@culturalco-operation.org > > Funded by Arts Council England, London, Association of London Government, > City Parochial Foundation > > Cultural Co-operation Ltd is an independent arts charity that promotes > cross-cultural contact, dialogue and understanding. > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > For further information on the contents of this email please contact the > relevant organisation directly. To unsubscribe from this e-group please > reply to this email with "no thanks" in the Subject line. > > For further information about CreativeCapital, please visit the website > http://www.creative-capital.org.uk or email creativecapital@platform-3.co.uk > > If you are an arts organisation interested in joining CreativeCapital, > please contact Christina Christou at Arts Council England - London on 020 > 7608 6115 or email christina.christou@artscouncil.org.uk > Lachlan Brown Toronto (416) 666 1452 - -- __________________________________________________________ Sign-up for your own FREE Personalized E-mail at Mail.com http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Apr 2003 03:13:59 -0500 From: "Lachlan Brown" <l.brown@london.com> Subject: for London-based visual artists for announcements 2, > Please find below the latest e-letter from Artquest packed full of > opportunities and information for London-based visual artists. > > We are forwarding this e-letter as a one-off. If you would like to receive > further e-letters from Artquest, please subscribe by sending an email to > info@artquest.org.uk > > ____________________________ > > Artquest e-letter > No. 9 > 15 April 2003 > http://www.artquest.org.uk We apologise for any cross postings. > Artquest is funded by Arts Council England and The London Institute. > > Welcome to Artquest's e-letter No.9, our update to subscribers. If you know > of anyone who may benefit from current information relating to opportunities > for visual artists and craftspeople in London and beyond, please forward > this e-letter to them. To subscribe to our e-letter and e-bulletins, contact > info@artquest.org.uk. If you would like to be deleted from the Artquest > emailing list please contact info@artquest.org.uk and type 'unsubscribe' in > subject title. > > Artquest aims to provide a website which is both accurate and current. We > therefore welcome any feedback and comment. If you come across any > inaccuracies, redundant information or would like to have information posted > on the site, please contact us at russell@artquest.org.uk. Artquest does not > post 'third party' information and opportunities on its e-letters in order > not to duplicate existing organisations newsletters and so that subscribers > receive concise emails which promote only Artquest related events and > initiatives. > > ========================================================================= > > INDEX > 1. The Artlaw Archive > 2. Critical Directions 4 > 3. Curator / Practitioner Seminar > 4. Making Successful Applications > 5. Media Contacts > 6. What's New @ Artquest > 7. Other Artquest Services > > ========================================================================= > > PLEASE REMEMBER THAT ARTQUEST OPPORTUNITIES ARE ONLY OPEN TO VISUAL ARTISTS > LIVING AND WORKING IN LONDON. > > 1. The Artlaw Archive > Artquest is pleased to announce that Artlaw, a regular feature in Art > Monthly magazine since 1976, will be available on the Artquest website at > www.artquest.org.uk/artlaw from 27 May 2003. To bookmark this page for > future use go to http://www.artquest.org.uk/artlaw/ > > This important historical archive will be free to view and search online and > covers over 25 years of art related topics such as contracts, copyright, > droit de suite, freedom of expression, moral rights and patronage. > > Artquest has recently been gifted this significant archive by art law > barrister Henry Lydiate. Henry has written the Artlaw page in Art Monthly > magazine since 1976. This archive, comprising about 250,000 words, will > reside in a new area of the Artquest website entitled The ARTLAW archive. > Artquest has also commissioned 15 new introductions for the archive. > > This is a significant historical document and research tool for artists, > craftspeople, curators and other visual arts professionals. The Artlaw > archive adds value to Artquest’s programme in many ways, not least providing > visual artists and craftspeople the opportunity to research and develop > their practice and professional standing in the UK and beyond through a > significant and comprehensive archival source. > > This project is financially supported by The Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation > and Arts Council England. The project is also supported by Art Monthly > magazine. > > Biography > Barrister Henry Lydiate is a recognised and respected legal expert in the > contemporary art world. He continues to give pro bono advice to artists and > lectures on art law issues worldwide in addition to continuing his work in > the judiciary. Henry was also a founding member of Artlaw Services, a not > for profit company established in 1978. It provided specialist legal advice > and help on artlaw matters, an educational programme and a publications > programme until 1983. A small team of full-time legal staff were supported > by around 30 lawyers who gave their services pro bono through the Artlaw > Clinic of Volunteer Lawyers. This service emerged out of the Artlaw Research > Project, chiefly funded by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation and partly by > the Arts Council of Great Britain (now ACE), the current funding partners > for the new archive. > > > 2. Critical Directions 4 > Following a period of review, Artquest is pleased to announce the > continuation of our Critical Directions programme. Critical Directions is a > professional development and one to one opportunity for London-based visual > artists and craftspeople, now offered over a three-month period. The > programme includes a group seminar, followed by two one to one studio visits > with an artists advisor and curator. > > The aims of this programme include enabling artists to: > > Explore, discuss and gain feedback on their practice with their peers > Analyse personal and professional skills and identify their needs and > resources Create a strategic plan of action appropriate to achieving their > objectives > > Following our previous round, for recent graduates, this opportunity is open > to emerging artists (3-10 years practising) and mid career artists (10 years > + practising) only. Seminars will be taking place in May and June > respectively. > > Application deadlines: > Emerging artists - Wednesday 30th April > Mid – Career artists - Friday 30th May > For information and an application form please visit > http://www.artquest.org.uk/onetoone.html > > > 3. Curator / Practitioner Seminar > With Andrew Bick and Gordon Cheung, chaired by Kathy Dalwood Monday 19th May > 2003, 7 - 9:30 pm > > Following our recent gallery talk with Fred Mann from Rhodes + Mann gallery, > Artquest is pleased to announce a forthcoming seminar, as part of a series, > with two of Britain's emerging artists/curators. > > Artists are increasingly finding new ways of creating opportunities for > themselves, and are taking on multiple roles. The combination of practising > as an artist and working as a curator presents an opportunity to discuss the > nature of artistic practise, the gallery sector and the use of artists > skills and services. Andrew Bick and Gordon Cheung are two artists/curators > who will shed some light on their modes of operation and discuss their own > practices, methods and career histories. For Biographies of Andrew, Gordon > and Kathy, go to http://www.artquest.org.uk/training.html > > There are 40 spaces for this event, available on a first-come, first-served > basis. To apply, please complete the online booking form at > http://www.artquest.org.uk/training.html by Friday 25th April 2003. > > > 4. Making Successful Applications > A new article, 'Successful Applications', has been put in the 'funding' > section. This article has lots of valuable advice, tips and do's and dont's > about how you can make a successful application for funding, residencies, > exhibitions or any other art opportunities. View it at > http://www.artquest.org.uk/successfulapplications.html > > > 5. Media Contacts > Artquest has recently acquired a list of media contacts for national and > local TV, radio and print publications, including arts journals, ethnic > press, gay and lesbian magazines, regional arts guides - even in-flight > magazines! You can access this information when you book a session to use > the Artquest computer, either to use the FunderFinder software (to assist > you in finding charities that might fund your work) or for free internet > access. You can also see the Global Arts Information Directory, in PDF, when > you book an appointment to visit. Email Sonya Dyer at sonya@artquest.org.uk > to book or for more information. > > > 6. What's New @ Artquest > To quickly find out what's new on the Artquest website simply go to > http://www.artquest.org.uk and click on 'What's New' > > ========================================================================= > Q-TIP: The Enterprise Centre, a programme of the London Institute at London > College of Printing is widening its remit (in partnership with Business Link > for London) to encompass non-London Institute artists, craftspeople and > designers. Creative practitioners can now contact The Enterprise Centre to > receive free business advice and support. To access the website and to book > a free 1 hour session with a Creative Business Advisor, or for more > information call 020 7514 7985 (10am-5pm,Mon-Fri) or email > enterprise@lcp.linst.ac.uk > ========================================================================= > > 7. Other Artquest services....... > > Website Updates > Since the last Artquest e-bulletin went out in February, we have added 45 > new deadlines, 23 fairs, 16 new residencies, 9 new talks, 4 new sources for > email newsletters, 16 new internet based research sources for artists, 1 new > studio space and new training information, as well as further information in > our 'overseas' and 'international' sections for craftspeople, artists, > photographers and filmmakers. > > Top Ten Searches > Check out our new search options, including a quick list menu of our top ten > searches - maybe what you're looking for, everyone else wants too! > 1) Materials - including painting canvas, sculptural materials, neon > signage, websites and domain names and new media materials. > 2) Studios - listings of virtually all the studio complexes in London, > listed by medium specialism. > 3) Funding - look at the main funding page and decide what kind of funding > you are looking for. > 4) Residencies and Commissions - see a huge list of residencies, both UK and > overseas, listed by specialism. This page also contains some links to > residency-specific funding strands. > 5) Insurance - look for either lists of insurance companies or how to insure > your intellectual copyright > 6) Galleries (Venues section) - listings of virtually all the galleries and > artist's run spaces in London, for you to approach with suitable exhibition > proposals > 7) Copyright - cheat sheet of what copyright is, and how to protect yourself > legally > 8) Our seminars and events - see the 'how artquest works' section for > details of our forthcoming and past events. > 9) Submissions and deadlines dates - huge listing (the only centralised list > in the UK) for artists to cross-check deadlines for residencies, > commissions, funding opportunities, gallery submissions, conferences, art > and craft fairs, training opportunities and fellowships. > 10) finally - check our sitemap, which has a full listing of all the > individual pages of information held on the Artquest site. > > New page - 'other sources and subscriptions' - at > http://www.artquest.org.uk/almanac.html > > ========================================================================= > Q-TIP: The FunderFinder website provides free downloadable (PC only) > software to help you apply for and budget for grant applications. Apply > Yourselves is a Windows only software program that helps to write a grant > application, whereas Budget Yourselves helps to write a budget for a grant > application. Download them from the FunderFinder website at > http://www.funderfinder.org.uk/freesoft.html > > Apply Yourselves - http://www.funderfinder.org.uk/applyyou.html > Budget Yourselves - http://www.funderfinder.org.uk/budgeyou.html > ========================================================================= > > In February, the Artquest site had 31,807 successful page requests, our > highest ever monthly total. In March, we had 31,661 hits. This takes our > total page request count to 312,329 to the end of March. > > Artquest Legal Advice Online > Artquest has just completed a 3-month pilot project to provide London-based > artists and craftspeople with a free online legal advice service. Following > assessment of the uptake and complexity of the legal queries received during > this period, a decision will be made whether or not to make the service a > permanent feature of Artquest's services. > > The UK ArtsMap > A map of how public funding bodies interconnect, has been added to the > 'funding' section of the Artquest site. See > http://www.artquest.org.uk/funding.html and click on 'UK ArtsMap'. > > Global Arts Directory > Artquest has purchased a PDF copy of the Global Arts Information Directory, > a 340-page publication six years in the making, which aims to list every art > competition, internationally, with deadlines, applications information and > background. This is available to artists booking computer sessions either to > use FunderFinder (to assist in narrowing down possible charities to apply > for funding) or free internet access. Sessions on the public access computer > are available on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, either 10-12pm or 2-4pm. > Contact Sonya Dyer at sonya@artquest.org.uk to book. > > Event Archive > Visit the 'training & seminar' page by clicking on > http://www.artquest.org.uk/howartquestworks.html to view photographs from > past Artquest events such as the artists>>art conference, held in > partnership with Engage and Artquest's stand at this summer's Fresh Art > Fair. > > 7 Steps to Self-Employment & Business Start-Up > In response to user feedback, Artquest has recently commissioned a > step-by-step guide to artists' self-employment and business start-up. This > useful 7 step plan, compiled by art consultant Alison Branagan is now > available on the website at http://www.artquest.org.uk/ manage.html then > click on 'new business'. > > Free Internet Access Computer at Artquest > A computer terminal and printer is available for use (for free) by London's > artists and craftspeople wishing to undertake creative, professional and > funding research. The computer, which includes FunderFinder software, can be > booked for a maximum of 2 hours per session. For more details go to our > website at http://www.artquest.org.uk/event.html and click on 'artquest > resources'. > > FunderFinder > Artists and craftspeople can also book a session on Artquest's public access > computer to utilise FunderFinder, a software package for UK grant seekers > which assists individuals and groups (through a diagnostic analysis) to > prioritise relevant trusts and foundations for the user. Copies of the > 'Directory of Grant Making Trusts 2001-02', 'A Guide to Grants for > Individuals in Need 2000-01', 'A Guide to the Major Trusts 2001-02', 'UK > Company Giving' and the 'Sponsorship & Donations Yearbook 2001' are also > available for use by artists when booked onto the Artquest computer terminal > > ========================================================================= > Q-Tip: have you checked the latest deadlines on the London Almanac? Artquest > is the only general calendar site for deadlines, etc, and we list deadlines > currently up to October 2003... > > Click on http://www.artquest.org.uk/lon.html to get the latest dates for > submissions, residencies, funding, and to find out what conferences and > symposia are coming up. Also, why not visit the artupdate website at > http://www.artupdate.com. By subscribing to artupdate you will receive a > fortnightly national and international exhibition listings service, direct > to your email in-box. > ========================================================================= > > DISCLAIMER > Artquest's mission is to provide a comprehensive advice and information > service to London's visual arts professionals at all stages of their > careers. > > Artquest makes every effort to provide information which is relevant and as > complete, up-to-date and accurate as possible. Any information and material > provided is for informative purposes only and should not diminish the > individual's obligation to seek appropriate professional advice where such > is required or necessary. Neither Artquest nor any of its employees, agents > or subcontractors can be held responsible or liable to users of the > information or any other person for any errors or omissions, or for any > losses, costs or claims which arise as a result of relying on such > information or advice. Please contact us if you find any material on the > site which is inaccurate or misleading. Artquest is not responsible for the > content of external internet sites. > > This email and its contents (with all advice, information, and relevant > notes) are held in the strictest confidence. Artquest takes all precautions > to protect the confidentiality of enquirers. If you have received this email > in error, please delete it immediately and contact info@artquest.org.uk to > let us know. > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > For further information on the contents of this email please contact the > relevant organisation directly. To unsubscribe from this e-group please > reply to this email with "no thanks" in the Subject line. > > For further information about CreativeCapital, please visit the website > http://www.creative-capital.org.uk or email creativecapital@platform-3.co.uk > > If you are an arts organisation interested in joining CreativeCapital, > please contact Christina Christou at Arts Council England - London on 020 > 7608 6115 or email christina.christou@artscouncil.org.uk > Lachlan Brown Toronto (416) 666 1452 - -- __________________________________________________________ Sign-up for your own FREE Personalized E-mail at Mail.com http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2003 14:55:34 +1000 From: dr.woooo@.SYNTAX-ERROR Subject: en) Baxter2003 protest camp coverage & information msg forwarded from folx involved in No one is illegal - Melbourne. Alot of groups and individuals are participating in this project, a number of these are anti-authoritarian. Baxter2003 protest camp coverage & information - ---- This Easter will see the Baxter 2003 border camp come into being. Three thousand people are expected to converge on the detention centre located near the small South Australian town of Port Augusta. As a part of this years camp there will be a radio project called Radio Free Baxter. This project will be broadcasting a programin the immediate area of the detention centre. It will also be taking in-coming calls from the centre - the aim is to establish two-way communication with the people imprisoned in the detention centre. Indymedia will be out at the border camp this year as well, providing self- publishing facilities for the camp. The Radio Free Baxter website will be maintained with audio transcripts from the broadcasts, and indymedia will be providing coverage of the news and action from the camp as well as posting stories from detinees, Port Augusta locals and protesters. You can find the projects at the URL's below, as well as more information about the camp and the Baxter detention centre. Radio Free Baxter: http://antimedia.net/radiobaxter Indymedia: http://melbourne.indymedia.org Camp site: http://baxter2003.baxterwatch.net No One Is Illegal: http://antimedia.net/nooneisillegal ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2003 11:52:02 +0400 From: Tania Goryucheva <tangor@redline.ru> Subject: "debates&Credits. Meda Art in the Public Domain": web journal of the project Dear friends and colleagues, We've just launched bilingual web journal of the Dutch-Russian art project "debates & Credits. Media Art in the Public Domain" . Please find the announcement below. Greetings, Tania Goryucheva - --------------------------- debates & Credits Media Art in the Public Domain A Dutch Russian Media/Art/Project OFFICIAL LAUNCH OF WEB JOURNAL / ARCHIVE In the period September - October 2002 a series of artist interventions into urban space and the space of the media were executed in Amsterdam, Moscow and Ekaterinburg, as part of the art project "debates & Credits - Media Art in the Public Domain". Four Russian artists or art collectives and four artists / collectives from The Netherlands were invited to design various kinds of interventionist media art projects for the public urban space as well as the public media spaces within these cities. The aim was to question the conditions of public communication and the politics of urban and media space. The results of these often unannounced actions were carefully documented. The first part of this documentation, the web journal or archive, is now finished and can be found on-line at: http://www.debates.nl The journal contains curatorial statements, reports, extensive photographic documentation and a series of video impressions linked to the individual reports. The journal also contains a number of essays and related documents that provide further background information to the ideas behind the project, as well as the work of the artists involved. We are currently preparing a book and a DVD about the project, which will be presented publicly at De Balie, Centre for Culture and Politics in Amsterdam on Friday June 7, 2003. The book and DVD will then be available from De Balie. Please feel free send us your questions or comments about the project. Curators: Tania Goryucheva (Moscow) tangor@redline.ru Eric Kluitenberg (Amsterdam) epk@xs4all.nl ____________ Debits : "debates & Credits" was organised by De Balie - Centre for Culture and Politics in Amsterdam, in collaboration with Tania Goryucheva, the Ekaterinburg Branch of the National Center for Contemporary Arts (NCCA), the Zverev Center for Contemporary Art, the Agency for Social Information, the Macros Center, Moscow. The project was financially supported by the Mondriaan Foundation (NL), the Amsterdam Fund for the Arts, the HGIS program for international Cultural Co-operation of The Netherlands Ministries of Foreign Affairs and Education, Culture and Science, and the Royal Netherlands Embassy in Moscow. De Balie Kleine Gartmanplantsoen 10 1017 RR Amsterdam The Netherlands http://www.balie.nl ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 14 Apr 2003 08:11:24 +0200 From: "Melody Parker Carter" <agricola-w@netcologne.de> Subject: Never wake up? Monday special on the net! ************************** ........war over???.................. everything's fine????......... ...................all heritage of mankind exterminated???.. are we finally happy now????............... ...........did anyone survive?......... ..............yes!!.....??????.................... ...................lost identity?? ...........won nightmare???............. ....will anybody ever wake up??....................................... Never wake up http://www.nmartproject.net/agricola/mpc/never/never.html .................... now streaming on the net! Flash 6! MPC mpc@nmartproject.net 14 April 2003 ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2003 14:28:27 +0100 From: "Obembe, A.O." <aoo5@leicester.ac.uk> Subject: ephemera vol 3, no 1 (feb2003) APOLOGIES FOR CROSS-POSTING Issue 3(1) of 'ephemera: critical dialogues on organization' has just been published at: http://www.ephemeraweb.org We are late, but not too late for demonstrating, that is, exhibiting! Yours, the ephemera editors P.S. The main PDF file now contains bookmarks as well as clickable links to footnotes and websites! ============================= CONTENTS volume 3, number 1 (february 2003) exhibits Exhibiting Steffen Bohm and Campbell Jones Translating Silence/Traversing Death Marie-Thérèse Abdel-Messih Archives and Power Dag Petersson Gilles Deleuze and the Intensification of Social Theory Bent Meier Sorensen Mobile Mutations Sadie Plant and Chris Land Frontline(s) Sian Sullivan ============================= (You will need Acrobat Reader to access the full-text version of these papers.) If you would like to be regularly notified about new ephemera issues and other ephemera happenings, please register with ephemera|news by sending an email to: ephemera-news-subscribe@yahoogroups.com If you would like to participate in the discussion of the above articles and other issues related to critical perspectives on organization, please register with ephemera|discussion by sending an email to: ephemeraweb-subscribe@yahoogroups.com ------------------------------ # 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