Art & Science Collaborations, Inc. (ASCI) on Tue, 20 Oct 1998 15:23:53 +0100 |
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Syndicate: "graz 2000" ..... a European city CALL FOR PROPOSALS ! |
"graz 2000"... is more than two exhibitions in a palace, a castle, & subterranean spaces! It is an ambitious cultural project (two permanent exhibitions) being organized by the Cultural Department of the city government of Graz, Austria, with a distinct future mission... to create a sustainable self-image for Graz as a center for modern art, high technology, education, and science. It will look back on the city's roots as a context for the presenting some of the most exciting art/sci/communications projects of our time. "graz 200" will play a seminal role in outfitting the city for new dynamism in the artistic, cultural, and information-technology realms, and lay a solid foundation for the year 2003, when Graz will have the distinction of being the European "Cultural Capital." For information on Graz http://www.iicm.edu/graz;sk=FF047D01/ ASCI Director, Cynthia Pannucci, will be setting up a meeting schedule ( in NYC, Nov.4 - 8th ) for artists, scientists, producers, etc. to meet with Richard Kriesch, the director of the "graz 2000" project. Seeking predominately interactive works (or those that could be) that express the two exhibition themes (below)... as well as panelists for public symposia, performance artists and ideas for public events & projects that will be presented in conjunction with the exhibitions and during the next 5 yrs. ***If you feel your current work fits this project and you would like to be involved (the works will be commissioned, travel, and expenses paid, etc.).... You may, of course, be proposing work that is a collaboration. ***SEND 200 WORDS (no more!) describing your work and a URL for reference to past projects and bio/resume(s). If they are interested in your work, you can bring more materials to the meeting. *** DEADLINE... October 31st. (Email with Subject: "graz 2000" proposal) 1. Title of the Exhibition: "Chip" Context of the Exhibition: "Art, Science, and Communication" Location: The Second Floor of the Eighteenth-Century Palace of SchloÃ? Eggenberg and Its Surrounding Park This exhibition will examine "The Impact and Consequences of Information Technology as Expressed in Art, Science and Communication." In this connection, the palace itself and its setting are of particular importance. They will not simply serve as a backdrop for the exhibition, but will be an integral part of it. In keeping with the goal of creating a sense of continuity between present and past, we will examine the historical origins of the palace and its grounds in order to expose the hidden mathematical and scientific principles upon which they were laid out. Eggenberg is an example of a world view given architectural expression--in this instance at the threshold between the premodern and modern ages. Eggenberg therefore presents at once a point of departure and an opportunity for reflection and discovery in an exhibition that will also take place at the watershed between two ages--in this case the modern age and the information age. And like its eighteenth-century predecessor, the new world view being ushered in by the information age also finds expression in a highly abstract, mathematically-determined architecture--that of the computer chip. 2. Title of the Exhibition: "Living, Dying, Thinking" Context of the Exhibition: "Art, Science, and Communication" The Exhibition in the City Museum/SchloÃ?berg The exhibition at Eggenberg deals with the great swiftness of recent scientific and technological innovation and the breathtaking pace with which knowledge is currently being accumulated and distributed. The exhibition on the SchloÃ?berg, a hill located at the city's center, stands in dialectic to that of Eggenberg. It deals by contrast with eternal questions. The themes, "Living, Dying, Thinking" were chosen specifically for their continuing importance at the turn of this new millennium. Today these questions have taken, among others, the following concrete form. The question, "When does death actually take place?" raises yet another, "What exactly is life?" Without doubt, this is connected with thinking, with the functioning of the brain. So we turn to the sciences that today deal with questions of communication, not just between people, but within individuals, with the transfer of information and messages, with their coding and decoding. "Science, Art and Communication" brings together disciplines that, each in its own way, deals with the bridge between life and death. The boundaries between science and art thereby dissolve. 2a. In the SchloÃ?berg To go into the SchloÃ?berg with a portion of the exhibition means to follow the pattern of information and technological revolutions in order to understand their cultural and social significance. The information revolution is inwardly oriented; one's environment becomes one's interior space; the exterior view becomes an interior one; sight becomes insight. In the same sense, we will not go to the mountain top, but rather into the mountain (i.e., into its tunnels) in keeping with the logic of modern information science. The use of these subterranean spaces will be the first step in ensuring an on-going impact of the exhibition, since they can then be utilized long after the year 2000 or 2003 as a foundation for a modern cultural information cluster in the center of the city. *** Tying the Exhibition Sites Together In order to bind these two sites--Eggenberg and the city center--together, we foresee a visible material link in appropriate signage, as well as a less materially tangible link in a communicative networking of the two. -------------------------------------------------------- ///// APOLOGIES for duplicate mailings.... please distribute to your colleagues! ///// Cynthia Pannucci Founder/Director Art & Science Collaborations, Inc. (ASCI) ****Celebrating its 10th Anniversary**** 718 816-9796; pannucci@asci.org PO Box 358, Staten Island, NY 10301 URL: http://www.asci.org