Ron Wakkary on Wed, 24 Jun 1998 10:15:32 +0100 |
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Syndicate: Stadium: New Projects | Lawler | Goldsmith and Paulsen | Wisniewski |
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