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NETTIME'S WEEKLY ANNOUNCER - every friday into your inbox calls-symposia-websites-campaigns-books-lectures-meetings send your PR to sandra.fauconnier@rug.ac.be in time! 0.......1........2........3........4........5........6 1...komninos zervos.......the adventures of i - poetic cybersoapie 2...shu lea cheang........launching BRANDON 3..."ana".................stanza 4...Inke Arns.............body of the message - invitation 5...Ron Wakkary...........Stadium: New Projects | Lawler | Goldsmith and Paulsen | Wisniewski 6...info@pfom.org.........PRIVACY FOR OPEN MARKETS - Press Release 7...strike@gn.apc.org.....sTALk 8 8...rtmark.WORKSERV.......DATED! NY action request ........1.............................................. Date: Sat, 20 Jun 1998 14:11:01 +1000 (GMT+1000) From: s271502@student.uq.edu.au (komninos zervos) Subject: the adventures of i - poetic cybersoapie i have just posted the first ten animated gifs of a series which i am putting up at my site as a continuous narrative about the letter/character i. this piece is a narrative cyberpoem which i first began working on in 1995 for my cyberpoetry cd-rom. that version, called "reality is a construct" was created in logo-motion in 3D and ran for seven minutes. this version, because of different connection speeds, different browsers, different hosts, etc., has to be restricted to animated gifs and whatever comes packaged with netscape 3. it is my intention to post five new webisodes of this poetic cybersoapie each week, keeping it moving in a fairly linear way into the future. it is also my wish for participation and collaboration with others on the internet who wish to add tangential journeys from my linear narrative.(http://student.uq.edu.au/~s271502/iwb/info.html) the linear story of i that i will maintain is only one possible path for i, there is opportunity for diversion right from the very second webisode. so please contribute(all contributions will be acknowledged). eventually i hope a story will evolve which is purely told by words moving in time and space, their colour, weight, action and speed adding to the narrative. check out the first webisode at http://student.uq.edu.au/~s271502/iwb/intro.html regards, komninos. ********************************************************************** komninos's cyberpoetry site http://student.uq.edu.au/~s271502 poetry jukebox http://student.uq.edu.au/~s271502/jukebox.html cyberpoetry site:finalist:most creative/innovative website:atom awards:1997. honourable mention:.net category:prix ars electronica:austria:1997. ********************************************************************** .................2..................................... Date: Wed, 24 Jun 1998 00:45:44 +0200 From: shu lea cheang <shulea@earthlink.net> Subject: launching BRANDON MUSEUM INAUGURATES ARTISTS' PROJECTS ON THE WEB WITH SHU LEA CHEANG'S BRANDON, 1998-1999 One-Year Project, to be Launched in June 1998, is Part of Major Initiative For Guggenheim's Expanded On-line Presence http://brandon.guggenheim.org In association with Society for Old and New Media, DeWaag, Amsterdam Join us ON-LINE for an Amsterdam-New York netlink launch on June 30. 13:00-15:00, videowall public and press preview, Guggenheim Museum SoHo 20:00-22:00, a bloody merry party, Theatrum Anatomicum, Amsterdam On June 30, 1998, the Guggenheim Museum will launch its first artist's project commissioned for the World Wide Web. Conceived by filmmaker and media artist Shu Lea Cheang, BRANDON: A One-Year Narrative Project in Installments explores issues of gender fusion and techno-body in both public space and cyberspace. BRANDON derives its title from Brandon/Teena Brandon of Nebraska, USA, a gender-crossing individual who was raped and murdered in 1993 after his female anatomy was revealed. Cheang's project deploy's Brandon into cyberspace through multi-layered narratives and images whose trajectory leads to issues of crime and punishment in the cross-section between real space and virtual space. The project, a multi-artist/multi-author/multi-institutional collaboration, will unfold over the course of the coming year, with interface developed (1996-1997) for artist collaboration and public intervention: bigdoll interface, roadtrip interface (Jordy Jones, Susan Stryker, Cherise Fong); Mooplay interface (Francesca Da Rimini, Pat Cadigan, Lawrence Chua) and panopticon interface (Beth Stryker and Auriea Harvey). System programming by Linda Tauscher. During 1998-1999, we would invite guest curators to institute multi-author upload for each interface. In development with Society for Old and New Media, DeWaag, two netlink forum/installation are also scheduled for Theatrum Anatomicum interface (with Mieke Gerritzen, Roos Eisma, Yariv Alterfin, Atelier Van Lieshout): The first, "Digi Gender Social Body: Under the Knife, Under the Spell of Anesthesia," to be held in fall 1998, will bring together noted cultural critics, genderists, surgeons, and bio-technologists to reconsider binary codes of male-female and the mapping of the digital body. The second forum, held in May 1999 in conjunction with the Institute on Arts and Civic Dialogue at Harvard University, is entitled "Would the Jurors Please Stand Up? Crime and Punishment as Net Spectacle." The event, which will incorporate avatar performance and the deployment of a virtual court system, will convene a panel of legal scholars and provocateurs to preside a net public trial of sexual assaults in RL (real life) and cyberspace. BRANDON is curated by Matthew Drutt, Associate Curator for Research, Guggenheim Museum (http://www.guggenheim.org) and produced in association with Society for Old and New Media, Amsterdam (http://www.waag.org) Caroline Nevejan and Suzanne Oxenaar/curators; Institute on the Arts and Civic Dialogue, Harvard University (http://www.arts-civic.org) Anna Deavere Smith and Andrea Taylor/directors; Banff Center for the Arts, Alberta (http://www-nmr.banffcentre.ab.ca) Sara Diamond/director of media arts. BRANDON is part of a broader program in the media arts being led by John G. Hanhardt, Senior Curator of Film and Media Arts at the Guggenheim Museum. Funding for BRANDON has been made possible by grants from The Bohen Foundation, a Moving Image Installation and Interactive Media Fellowship from The Rockefeller Foundation, a Computer Arts Fellowship from the New York Foundation for the Arts, and in Holland, grants from The Mondriaan Foundation and the Ministry for Cultural Affairs. This project is supported, in part, with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs Cultural Challenge Program. The project is being hosted by USWeb Los Angeles. Artist in residency (New York): Woo Art International . Artist-in-residency (Amsterdam): Amsterdams Fonds voor de Kunst. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: Scott L. Gutterman Director of Public Affairs Guggenheim Museum SoHo Tel (212) 423-3840 Fax (212) 941-8410 E-mail: sgutterman@guggenheim.org ..........................3............................ From: "ana" <ana@proarte.com> To: <nettime-l@Desk.nl> Date: Tue, 23 Jun 1998 11:41:29 +0100 Hello I thought my site may be of interest and below is some information . Maybe you could review it or put a link in? http://www.sublime.net/stanza Stanza 92 Lilford Road. London. SE5 9HR. If you are interested in digital only works. www.sublime.net/stanza/subcity which is internet art specific then maybe you could review this work. The Central City area an interactive city experience. Towers, maps, the sounds of the city, an audio visual experience. A piece of internet art, pushing the limits of internet technology. Embedded shockwave movies in frames and specially composed backgrounds sounds forming a collage with texts and computer works. www.sublime.net/stanza This is the main site of Steve Tanza; please visit. The site contains multimedia work and electronic music; cd players are built into the site so that you can listen to STANZA music as you browse. Further work which specifically addresses the internet as a medium is also online, for example the project The Central City. The main feature is the integration of various media elements within one page of a web site. From each of the cells on the STANZA home page you can go to to various areas of the site. These areas can be identified easily if you are in NETSCAPE. You can also read the javascript title guides at the bottom of the page.The site also contains fine art paintings, videos and conceptual pieces. The intention is to make an interesting interactive multimedia website with sounds pictures and artworks. To help guide you......The areas in the STANZA site include:- PLAY area with embedded shockwave animations with sound. Cells that mutate and grow move around the screen and birth new objects. These are 'electronic paintings' that continually change. THE STATE area with information about the my electronic music releases, video releases, and a streaming audio cd player which plays my lastest 30 mins of music, in a shockwave cd player I have built. Internet art specific project. THE CENTRAL CITY. www.sublime.net/stanza/subcity ART area, with painting, photographs and video work. Oil painting, including the "Control" series; large blacks and whites on canvas and the newer sublime series which is integrated into a javascript animation. A selection of fine art works I have made. SUBLIME. A link back to the main SUBLIME site and other sites: Including sites for Proarte, and Belladonna at the ICA,Check it out,Arte for everybody online shop. www.sublime.net The site acts as a forum for dynamic art and audio visual work. Art and entertainment as well as content and innovation are the prime focus of the site. As a working artist Stanza works in painting, installation, sound, the moving image, and computer technology. Stanza has exhibited paintings and made installations, directed videos, composed music for LPs and CDs. Themes or motifs that occur within the context of this work include: Networks of information technology contrasted with organic networks and city networks as grids. Cities as grids and computer chips as grids. Repetition of imagery. Symbols of the city situations and environments. Tower blocks, maps, streets, factories and housing estates. The juxtaposition of urban sounds and sights. These motifs find some form of representation in paintings, soundscapes, videos and interactive computer works. Underpinning all this work is an open experimentation with multi media focusing on aspects of environment, urbanisation, conceptual understanding of space, and a regard for the textures, colours sounds and experiences of the city. Technical points. You will need shockwave for some areas and will not be able to listen to my music unless you get shockwave. You must have downloaded and installed the shockwave plug-in available from the macromedia website. This plug in goes in the plug - ins folder within netscape. The audio has been compressed using the highest compression rates allowing for faster downloads over low bandwidth lines but does not compromise the sound quality. If your line drops below 1.7kb/sec you may experience dropouts or stalling in the audio stream. Please promote the site and if you are interested in the artworks get in touch........at Stanza@sublime.net TEL 0171 737 1524 Thanks stanza ...................................4................... X-Sender: inke@berlin.snafu.de Date: Tue, 23 Jun 1998 22:45:00 +0200 To: inke@berlin.snafu.de From: Inke Arns <inke@berlin.snafu.de> Subject: body of the message - invitation Mime-Version: 1.0 X-MIME-Autoconverted: from quoted-printable to 8bit by eduserv2.rug.ac.be id XAA27429 Status: RO X-Status: PRESS RELEASE Ortsbegehung 4 - body of the message Sandra Becker • Blank & Jeron • Daniel Pflumm curated by Inke Arns 4 July - 16 August 1998 check now the URL for body of the message: <http://www.snafu.de/~inke/NBK/body.html> The Neuer Berliner Kunstverein is now showing the fourth exhibition in the Ortsbegehung (‘site inspection’) series: an annual presentation of contemporary positions in new art featuring three representatives from Berlin. We place each of these projects in the hands of guest curators in order to guarantee the necessary pluralism of opinion, and do justice to the varying approaches possible in view of a diverse spectrum of artistic observation, experience and conclusions. After the first three ‘Site Inspections’ of the past years, the fourth presentation now organized by curator Inke Arns is titled body of the message, and features installations deploying new electronic media -- video, computer, Internet. The works to be premiered in the exhibition by Sandra Becker, Daniel Pflumm and Joachim Blank & Karl Heinz Jeron are linked by a common interest in the radical re-structuring/re-invention of public space currently in progress. Although invisible to the human eye, the process has far-reaching implications. The works are concerned with those new types of media structures that, as nomadic and ephemeral extensions, graft themselves onto our public spaces, and qualitatively change them -- in a political sense, too. The artists strive to make visible the unseen motion in these new urban spaces of transit, to visualize specific streams of signs, merchandise, bodies and information -- those elements, in other words, that are in transit through these new territories. The term ‘body of the message’ comes from the field of e-mail communications, where it desig-nates that part of an electronic message addressed to a human reader as opposed to the program code directed to the machine. Becker, Pflumm, and Blank & Jeron choose approaches which scrutinize various aspects of ‘message bodies’ in contemporary mediatized urban spaces: the movements by people in these spaces; the fluctuation of signifying bodies, as well as the increasing digitization (i.e. the radical reduction) of bodies that, until now analog, are caught up in a process of transition into the realm of information. The positions represented in body of the message are ones of a generation of artists that uses new media as part of its ‘natural’ environment, so to speak, and therefore does not need to explicitly labour the concept of ‘media art’, in part even rejects this notion. They work with a minimum of technical expenditure (consumer technology), and have no need of a large battery of machines -- in contrast to the spectacular works of media art meantime canonized in the museums. For her work metro scan (4 videos, combined with large format photographies, 1998) Sandra Becker uses recorded images of passers-by in the subways of New York, Berlin, Moscow and Tokyo. The ‘message bodies’ shown to us by Becker are obviously ‘real’: human bodies in motion, standing on escalators, rushing in their hundreds along subway passages. Although Sandra Becker is citing in her work the aesthetic of public surveillance cameras, she immediately subverts the normative distanced totality of this view by adopting a number of standpoints. It is de Certeau’s metaphorical or migrational city that one encounters in her works. In Daniel Pflumm’s ‘minimalist’ video (1998) the ‘message bodies’ are reduced to the ‘glossy veneer’ of pure surfaces: colourful logos, corporate identities and brandnames frenetically alternate with each other. These ‘message bodies’ point to supra-individual, multi-national corporations, geographically distributed enterprises making products sold worldwide in a globalized economy, and therefore requiring images that are globally recognizable. These control characters pass through the urban realm and collective global subconscious, indicating in passing the velocity of an almost instantaneous world-wide presence. At the same time, there is something especially fragile and transient about those logos the artist ‘censored’ or ‘de-cored’ -- stripped of all text and reduced to their minimal graphic form. Daniel Pflumm’s videos are archives recording the rapid transformations in advertising and media aesthetics. Scanner++ (12 scanners, computer, video projection, Internet, 1998) by Joachim Blank & Karl Heinz Jeron is a hybrid project that incorporates the Internet at the same time as it extends into ‘real’ space by means of an interactive installation. Via a ‘walk-on’ scanner, ‘real’ bodies enter the virtual realm, their physical mass becomes information, ‘traces of bodies’; compatible, globally retrievable and archivable <http://sero.org>. The principle of the search engine, actually an industrious, invisible software program scouring the Internet for information, is here lent almost obscenely material form as a symptomatic object now superimposed over real space, which it proceeds to systematically scan. Blank & Jeron ironically blur the narrow precipice separating information from disinformation, and with their contribution they question the ‘ "true" value of information in our society’. A bilingual catalogue (German / English) will be published (18 DM, 64 p., many illustrations, full colour; with texts by Inke Arns, Ralph Lindner, Gerrit Gohlke, Thilo Wermke). We would like to invite you for a press preview of the exhibition, which will take place at 11 a.m. on the day of the opening (3 July 1998). The artists and the curator of body of the message will be present between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. With kind support from Hitachi Business Systems Division, Duesseldorf and Jet-Foto, Berlin ORTSBEGEHUNG 4 - body of the message Sandra Becker • Blank & Jeron • Daniel Pflumm curated by Inke Arns 4 July - 16 August 1998 Opening: Friday, 3 July 1998, 7 p.m. Opening hours: Tuesday - Friday 12 - 6 p.m. Saturday + Sunday 12 - 4 p.m. Neuer Berliner Kunstverein Chausseestrasse 128/129 10115 Berlin (Mitte), Germany Tel ++49 - (0)30 - 280 70 20 Fax ++49 - (0)30 - 280 70 19 e-mail: <nbk@berlin.snafu.de> URL: <www.nbk.org> (soon to come) Inke Arns <inke@berlin.snafu.de> URL for body of the message: <www.snafu.de/~inke/NBK/body.html> ............................................5.......... Subject: Stadium: New Projects | Lawler | Goldsmith and Paulsen | Wisniewski Date: Wed, 24 Jun 98 00:49:38 -0000 From: Ron Wakkary <rwakkary@stadiumweb.com> To: <launch@stadiumweb.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 X-MIME-Autoconverted: from quoted-printable to 8bit by eduserv2.rug.ac.be id GAA16561 Status: RO X-Status: **Please reply with the message 'unsubscribe' to unsubscribe from this list** New Projects at STADIUM: http://stadiumweb.com Louise Lawler WITHOUT MOVING / WITHOUT STOPPING http://stadiumweb.com/without_moving/without_stopping Kenneth Goldsmith with Clem Paulsen FIDGET http://stadiumweb.com/fidget Maciej Wisniewski TURNSTILE PART II http://stadiumweb.com/turnstile Stadium is pleased to announce the launch of three new projects. Louise Lawler's Without Moving/Without Stopping is a series of QTVR (QuickTime Virtual Reality) movies of the Museum fur Abgüsse Klassischer Bildwerke in Munich and captions written by the artist. The many captions are not fixed to the specific movies. Each time a page is downloaded, new captions and new relations between captions and images will appear. The lack of fixed relations is intrinsic to Without Moving/Without Stopping where the viewer is engaged in a series of 'frameless' photographs. Each QTVR affords a 'total' picture of the scene, but because the viewer must constantly frame and reframe the image, the work goes beyond traditional still panoramic photographs, investigating the concepts of frames and boundaries. Without Moving / Without Stopping is an instance where a picture is worth a thousand pictures and a caption contextualizes only a moment. Fidget is a java applet programmed by Clem Paulsen based on Kenneth Goldsmith's Fidget, a transcription of recordings by Goldsmith in which he spoke every body movement he made for thirteen hours on June 16, 1997 (Bloomsday). Goldsmith and Paulsen's collaboration have reconfigured the text of Fidget to substitute the human body with the computer. The java applet reduces the text of Fidget into its constituent elements of words and phrases. The relationships between these elements is structured by a dynamic mapping system that is organized visually and spatially instead of grammatically. In addition, the java applet invokes duration and presence. The applet is divided into 'chapters' for each of thirteen hours. Each time the applet is downloaded it begins at the approximate time of day it is being viewed and every mouse click or drag that the user initiates is reflected in the visual mapping system. The sense of time is reinforced by differing font sizes, background colors and degree of "fidgetness" for each hour (these parameters may also be altered by the user) and the diminishing contrast and eventual fading away of each phrase as seconds pass. Fidget is a collaboration between Stadium, the Whitney Museum of American Art at Philip Morris, and Printed Matter. A collaboration with Goldsmith and vocalist Theo Bleckmann commissioned by the Whitney Museum of American Art, is made available online at Stadium via Real Audio. The text of Fidget is also available online. Turnstile Part II, by the artist Maciej Wisniewski is an XML (Extensible Markup Language) based server application and Java client applet that together cull live network 'objects' like lines of HTML code, text from web pages, chat and email and from Stadium itself, incoming and outgoing email, telephone calls, faxes and regular mail. In essence, virtual turnstiles are placed at various nodes within the internet, the Stadium network and its physical space. Turnstile Part II turns to the network as a source but the work dissolves into the 'space' of the network as defined by Turnstile Part II; a space where a telephone call to 411 from Stadium share proximity to rants in the "ALL FEMANAST SUCK!!" chat room. Turnstile Part II defines the network by searching objects based on keywords and various matching strings. In its first weeks the keywords are: 'love' and 'loneliness'. The ambient eavesdropping of Turnstile Part II extends the critical defining of the network as space. The fractured syntax and combination of languages express in a twitch manner the space of the network but it is one that can be disrupted further by 'clicking' on a line of text to reveal its network source, however, 'click' the same line again and another source will be revealed showing that although this is a shared space it is not a static one. Stadium is dedicated to exploring the possibilities of the network as a site for aesthetic production and distribution. Its focus is on collaborating with artists to produce site-specific art works that are best realized on the network, as well as documenting past works of ephemeral media. http://stadiumweb.com. Send e-mail to comments@stadiumweb.com. Send mail to 400 w13th Street, New York City, NY 10014. Telephone 212.691.4095 or fax 212.691.5734 ......................................................6 Date: Tue, 23 Jun 1998 23:05:14 +0100 From: Andreas Broeckmann <abroeck@v2.nl> Subject: (fwd) PRIVACY FOR OPEN MARKETS - Press Release Cc: infowar@aec.at PRESS RELEASE Global Privacy Association June 8, 1998 PRIVACY FOR OPEN MARKETS The Global Privacy Association is presently distributing the document, Privacy For Open Markets. It details an international structure with incentives to protect an Individual's sensitive and identifiable information from being distributed on the open market. "Privacy For Open Markets promotes methods of retaining fair treatment and distribution of an Individual's sensitive and identifiable information. Privacy For Open Markets regulates commercial sales of this data, and simultaneously compensates the appropriate Individual with a percentage of that transaction." The document outlines the international and national bodies needed to fulfill the technological support and administrative tasks for the creation of the system. It describes in detail the steps taken for an Individual and Proprietor to register and how transactions would clear. Increasingly, the consumer is being informed about the immense repercussions of the personal data trade. Even though "certain countries and continents have begun to exercise privacy practice, this is not enough. It is important that standards be met worldwide, since the information being exploited is of international concern." "The Global Privacy Association was initiated as an international coalition of qualified lawyers, government officials, libertarians, financiers, bankers, consumer rights activists, database industry leaders, and encryption specialists. Its goal is to understand the problems of international electronic commerce and trade, and conceive an alternative doctrine for the protection of an Individual's sensitive and identifiable data." The document is located at the Privacy For Open Markets web site. http://www.pfom.org For further detail and information please email info@pfom.org 7...................................................... From: strike@gn.apc.org Date: Thu, 25 Jun 1998 16:34:53 -0200 To: strike@stalk.net Subject: sTALk 8 sTALk 8 : pride sTALk: tactics of difference You are cordially invited to stalk with ANGELA MASON, director of Stonewall, PAUL CRAIG of PAF! [Pride Arts Festival] and the artist MICHAEL PETRY Live audio and video webcast at: http://www.stalk.net/stalklive _________________________________________________ Sunday 28th June1998 @ 4:00pm @ strike, 11-29 Fashion Street [top floor], London E1 _________________________________________________ Tactics of Difference What are the aims of Pride 98? How does gay politics today situate itself in a broader context of cultural contestations and how do gay artists define their tactics of representation in the climate of Tony Blair's cultural 'rebranding'? Can the theatre of the media marketing of identity help serve any radical agenda; how does the assimilation of representation of difference reflect the way difference is actually allowed to operate? .................stalk 8> _________________________________________________ sTALking Tickets £2.00 Contact Siraj Izhar at strike * email strike@gn.apc.org * tel +44 [0]171 375 3596 * fax +44 [0]171 366 4469 * @ strike, 11-29 Fashion Street [top floor], London E1 Nearest tube: Liverpool Street Station, Aldgate East _________________________________________________ sTALk > experimental curating for the nineties.........................>+ a forum to examine independent work> focus on work to project new ideas, ideas to project new work> experiment and collide curatorial agendas with science & technology> __________________________________________________ ........8.............................................. Date: Thu, 25 Jun 1998 18:30:48 -0700 (PDT) From: "rtmark.WORKSERV" <work@rtmark.com> Subject: DATED! NY action request For those in NY--this Saturday, an action request from RTMARK. Conveying an action request from Black Books, Camel, and Smirnoff. Full details at end of this e-mail. They desire "saboteurs" to attend their event, at which they will be promoting some useful products, including two known to the state of New York to cause debilitating and permanent illnesses--these products especially are quite useful. RTMARK conveys this request and interprets it. "Saboteurs" might traditionally, at such an event, do one of many things, including but certainly not limited to: taking many free cigarettes and disguising them as canapes; creating new dishes with liberal admixtures of Smirnoff vodka; creating new corporate hairstyles with liberal admixtures of Smirnoff vodka; spreading ALL the free items on the ground, together, simultaneously, by manual, explosive, or other traditional sabotage means, so that they might be inspected more easily; creating commodity museums utilizing the free goods--and what better location than the hosts' clothing for such museums? disturbing fixtures of the hosting residence by means of liberal admixture of Smirnoff vodka, Camel cigarettes, Revlon hair-care products, etc.; disturbing fixtures of the hosting residence's yard in a similar way, if you are ejected by your suddenly humorless hosts; causing damage as lasting as possible to the residence, the yard, the magazine's image--this part's the hardest--and the psyches of the hosts. Please, use your imaginations. Bring as many and as large and as frightening friends as you can. Don't say that RTMARK sent you, because we'd like them to give us money. Thank you, rtmark.WORKSERV ----- Dearest artmark--if you have any sabatouers in the NYC area, please let them know about this... So if you've been keeping up, you know that when you mix Black Book magazine with a liquor sponsor and Don Hills, you have a party that is, hype aside, very, very cool. So join us once more. Saturday, June 27th 10 pm Don Hills 511 Greenwich Street at Spring Free Smirnoff until midnight, free smokes from Camel, free theatrical rock and roll from Psychotica, followed by DJ Tim on the wheels of steel, and, if you are in need, free styling products from L'Oreal. Drinking, smoking, hair gel, and rock and roll. If you need anymore reason to show up, then, seriously, we can't help you. Open bar goes from ten to midnight. Party goes until 4. If you show up before midnight, just say Black Book at the door. If not, you may have to finesse your way in. Hope to see you there. Really. Black Book "Are you about The Cause?" Black Book 116 Prince Street 2nd floor New York, NY 10012 tel: [212] 334-1800 fax: [212] 334-3364 --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl