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[rohrpost] transmediale.01 newsletter #3b - Conference 9 Feb:Distribution &Participation |
transmediale.01 - international media art festival berlin DIY [ do it yourself ! ] 4 - 11 February 2001 The transmediale.01 includes a two-day conference about the DIY theme, focusing on Software (8 February) and Net-based Forms of Distribution and Participation (9 February). On both days, there will be simultaneous English-German translation in the hall, and a live-stream online. * New Forms of Distribution - Sharing and Dealing Artistic Products on the Net Friday, 9.2.2001, 14.30 - 18.00 h The Internet has opened up diverse possibilities of collaboratively making artistic products and presenting them to a global audience. The unrestricted access to free software on the net encourages process-oriented production and challenges users to conduct their own artistic experiments on their home computers. Growing individual skills in handling new media are a direct consequence of this development. At the same time, however, ever-more powerful computers, faster transmission rates and new data-compression techniques are increasingly transforming the net into an entertainment medium that, aside from the active procedures of searching for and downloading files, allows its users to be passive listeners and viewers. While the peer-to-peer swapping of digital data seems ideal from the viewpoint of the home computer, the 'old' distribution industry denounces the practice as one it would like to see criminalized. Autonomous Internet marketplaces and formats that might be able to replace the classical forms of trading are proving slow to emerge. Just as the e-book has so far failed to succeed, micropayment on the net remains a rarity. For artists, the ability to distribute a piece of work - whether music, video or a flash animation - over Internet platforms primarily means direct, fast access to a target group. To date, however, there is a lack of instruments and models that would enable artists to operate independently of the traditional value chains. The panel is made up of artists and net distributors who present their work and discuss the following questions: What does current Internet-based art production look like? What new artistic formats have emerged and which of these are appropriate for net distribution? Do niches or functioning models exist that make the production of artistic content profitable? Who are the actual 'users' or, more accurately, 'benificiaries' of such models - i.e. who earns money through the content produced by the creative workers? How significant are notions like 'author' and 'copyright' in the digital age? Do new distribution channels automatically stimulate cultural diversity? Featuring: Mark Amerika (US) Media artist and critic, columnist with 'Amerika Online', web-publishing expert, demands a more business-oriented attitude on the part of online artists. http://www.altx.com/who.is.mark.amerika.html Monika Halkort (A/D) Programme Manager of 'WebfreeTV' explains why the do-it-yourself channel 'My TV' failed, and presents alternatives. http://webfreetv.com Hugh Hancock (UK) Pioneer of 'Machinima' animated films that are made with hacked software distributed over the net. http://www.strangecompany.org http://www.machinima.com Laurent Kaestli (F/CH) Marketing and E-Commerce expert, presents the concept of "Streaming Art GmbH", a company for global exhibition and distribution of electronic art Oleg Nikulin and Victor Davydov (RUS) of Studio U-7TV, an Internet short-film production and distribution company, talk about the U7 distribution model and the special features of works produced for streaming over the net. http://www.u7tv.e-burg.ru Enno E. Peter (D) Key Account Manager and host of the award-winning online literature project 'tage-bau' and expert on the history of literature distribution over the net. http://www.tage-bau.de/ http://www.berlinerzimmer.de/ * Net-based Participation - Media Competence and Models of Interaction on the Net Friday, 9.2.2001, 20.30 - 22.30 h The Internet is increasingly viewed as a participatory medium in which interactivity is limited not only to 'click and buy' but also functions as a production system. On the one hand there is a constant growth in new platforms for actual interactive models, on the other hand the Net is also increasingly seen, particularly in connection with greater bandwidths, as a passive entertainment medium that offers highly compressed film streams. There are signs that in the future the functionality of the Internet will continue to split up and that an abundance of hybrid formats will develop. The concept of the Internet as a production system is in particular being pushed forward by creative people and artists who no longer use the Net just as a distribution medium but, in addition, employ internet technology to generate artistic products on the basis of collaboration, participation and global access. With many of these projects the basic idea is both the stimulation of the natural creativity of the individual and a political objective which relies on the idea of the Internet as a democratic medium. The call to DIY that these projects imply increasingly presupposes the user's engagement with the new technology, requires his involvement and fosters media competence in a very direct way. In this panel artistic projects and interaction models are presented that extend beyond the usual degree of production in virtual space and actually intervene in real structures such as the urban realm or social and economic processes. The following questions will be addressed: What does interactivity mean in contrast to the concepts interpassivity and participation? Is the idea of the Internet as a medium that promotes democracy an illusion or reality? To what extent can artistic interventions also be starting points for a longer-term change in the view of society? Featuring: Robert Pfaller (A) Media philosopher, coined the concept "interpassivity" for delegated medial consumption and passivity Rafael Lozano-Hemmer (MEX/CAN) Media artist and curator who is presenting the award-winning work "Vectorial Elevation" and his other Net-based projects www.alzado.net www.lozano-hemmer.com Superflex (DK) Group of artists who view the Net as an interaction platform and a democratic medium. Projects: "Superchannel" - Internet TV and "Wolfsburg 2" / "Karlskrona 2" - virtual city models www.superflex.dk Christian Hübler, Knowbotic Research (A/D/CH) Knowbotic Research developed, amongst others, the art project "connective force attack" that is based on collaboration between online users. http://h---h.de/ Daniel G. Andújar, Technologies To The People (E) Media artist who, with the project "Phoney " that is nominated for the award, confronts the user ith the thrills and dangers of Internet insecurity. www.irational.org/tttp English/German simultaneous translation. Tickets: 1 panel DM 20 (red. DM 15), both panels DM 35 (red. DM 25) Reservations at: info@transmediale.de The festival website is still under construction. However, an ACCREDITATION FORM is already available on http://www.transmediale.de PRESS: please, contact presse@transmediale.de The NEXT NEWSLETTER will be published on 12 January and will contain information about the transmediale.01 video screening programmes. Best regards, the transmediale team _______________________________________ transmediale.01 DIY [do it yourself!] 4 - 11 february 2001 international media art festival berlin klosterstr. 68-70 10179 berlin germany fon +49 30 2472 1907 fax +49 30 2472 1909 info@transmediale.de www.transmediale.de .......................................................................... Member of the European Coordination of Film Festivals E.E.I.G. .......................................................................... ---------------------------------------------------------- # rohrpost -- deutschsprachige Mailingliste fuer Medien- und Netzkultur # Info: majordomo@mikrolisten.de; msg: info rohrpost # kommerzielle Verwertung nur mit Erlaubnis der AutorInnen # Entsubskribieren: majordomo@mikrolisten.de, msg: unsubscribe rohrpost # Kontakt: owner-rohrpost@mikrolisten.de -- http://www.mikro.org/rohrpost