Ties van de Werff_STRP on Wed, 20 Oct 2010 12:06:18 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[Nettime-nl] eSphere Living in the Cloud - STRP Conference November 26th, Eindhoven (NL) |
What if everything is connected to everything? What if trees, lighting and shop windows become social media? What does art look like in a 'cloud culture'? STRP Conference, November 26th, 2010 E-SPHERE: LIVING IN THE CLOUD KEYNOTES: Aaron Koblin (US) Kevin Warwick (UK) Semir Zeki (UK) SPEAKERS: Warren Neidich (UK), Matthew Fuller (UK), Paolo Cirio (IT), Marlena Novak & Jay Alan Yim (US), Lorna Goulden (NL), Christian van 't Hof (NL), Gordan Savicic (AT) and Geert Lovink (NL). As we are well underway in the 21th century, our culture is evolving into a new direction. Since the 1990s, the internet changed our lives fundamentally and fueled globalization processes in ways we couldn't imagine. Mobile digital technologies allow us to connect anytime and anywhere to 'the cloud' that the internet has become. Recent developments in converging technologies such as RFID and near-field communication (NFC) promise to extend this web even more by adding a seamless yet pervasive augmented layer into our daily lives. The world has become the web. In a parallel development, scientists are unraveling the workings of the machine we call human. Through groundbreaking research, such as the Genome Project and the Blue Brain Project, the inner bits of our bodies are made visible with technologies such as fRMI and EEG. Cognitive enhancements, nanobots and body-machine integrations are no longer futurists' dreams. Bits and atoms connect, boundaries between humans and machines and online and offline become blurred. A transformation of our culture is likely to be brought about by the evolving nature of the world we live in and a growing understanding of what it means to be human in this networked reality. The developments that spark this transformation - notably, information technologies such as RFID and NFC, biotechnologies and cognitive- and neuroscience -inspire many artists, scientists, philosophers and creative thinkers. 'Cloud culture', 'web 4.0' , 'synaptic reality', and 'the internet of things' are only just a few of the labels that are used to come to grips with an altering sense of reality. STRP Conference 'eSphere: Living in the Cloud' reflects on this cultural transformation and explores the meaning of the new technological culture. What if all our operations can be instantly performed somewhere in the web? What are the cultural implications of this technological restructuring of our society? Have we perhaps already been caught in the net, having contributed ourselves to creating a sophisticated control and surveillance-society? Or is this the new beginning of a kind of freedom, the one envisioned by companies like Philips in its vision of 'Ambient Intelligence'? How do artists envision these technological developments and how do these technologies change our experience of art? With inspirational keynotes and two sidetracks with in-depth discussions, STRP Conference 'eSphere: Living in the Cloud' maps the promises and pitfalls of our world as the web. It takes place in parallel with the STRP field trial of the eSphere, an exploration of a realm in which virtual and physical reality seamlessly blend. Attend the Conference, share your thinking and experience with the eSphere at STRP Festival! SIDETRACK I THE ARTFUL BRAIN: ARTISTS AS NEUROSCIENTISTS Since the heated debate in the nineties among neuroscientists and 'traditional' art theorists on the meaning of the neurological causes for our experience of art, the so called 'cognitive turn' has definitely reached the arts. But what exactly can neuroscience tell us about art? And what, in turn, do artists tell us about our brain? Are 'all artists neuroscientists', as prof. Zeki states? Or are these newly scientific insights rather sources of inspiration for the artist's mind? In this sidetrack, the artistic interpretations of the 'cognitive turn' will be discussed in three exciting presentations, featuring Warren Neidich (UK), Matthew Fuller (UK), Paolo Cirio (IT) and Marlena Novak & Jay Alan Yim (US). SIDETRACK II THE WORLD IS THE WEB: RFID AND BLURRING REALITIES The rapid spread of RFID and NFC-technologies will have profound consequences for our direct environment, our sense of place , and the construction of identities and communities. The tiny chips will change every object into an information carrier, thereby blurring the boundaries between the physical and the virtual, between online and offline. What if the world really would be clickable? What if lighting, trees and shop windows become social media? Are we heading towards a new control and surveillance society, without any critical resistance? Or do these technologies actually give us with new exciting experiences, and the freedom to choose different identities for different contexts? In this sidetrack, the possibilities and pitfalls of RFID and 'the internet of things' are put to the fore by acclaimed speakers such as Lorna Goulden (NL), Christian van 't Hof (NL), Gordan Savicic (AT) and Geert Lovink (NL). Moderators: Koert van Mensvoort & Slava Kozlov Where: STRP Festival, Klokgebouw in Eindhoven When: November 26th Tickets: 45 euro / 25 students (incl. lunch & drinks) http://www.strp.nl/strp/content/switchDay/26/11#content ______________________________________________________ * Verspreid via nettime-nl. Commercieel gebruik niet * toegestaan zonder toestemming. <nettime-nl> is een * open en ongemodereerde mailinglist over net-kritiek. * Meer info, archief & anderstalige edities: * http://www.nettime.org/. * Contact: Menno Grootveld (rabotnik@xs4all.nl).