Pauline van Mourik Broekman on Mon, 12 Oct 1998 15:20:52 +0100 |
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Syndicate: Syndicate contribution for nettime book "neighbourhood" section... |
Dear Syndicate, I have been asked to edit a section on "neighbourhoods" for the nettime book which is currently being put together. This section intends to provide a picture of sorts of the various lists that nettime intersects and overlaps with and whose existence is important to the life of nettime itself. Others included are: XChange, Faces, Rhizome, 7-11, Amex, Rewired, ::recode:: and maybe RRE (Red Rock Eater News Service). Eric Kluitenberg offered to make a compilation of sorts for which he didn't have a huge amount of space so has had to be selective. I haven't changed his compilation hugely, but have made *minor* corrections to some mails, just spelling and stuff, that I wanted all the contributors involved to be able to have a look at and possibly mail me back about if they had any problems. Could you please read this and email me back at the address above if you have any questions/corrections? The title is just a working one until the editors decide on what they want to call the book (which'll probably happen over the next few days). If, for space reasons, I have to cut into the text any more, I will let whoever's mail that is know personally if that's ok. Thanks in advance and VERY best! Pauline. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ SYNDICATE CONTRIBUTION FOR ZKP5 ON 12.10.1998 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ --------------------------------- SYNDICATE: THE BIBLE MIX ( for nettime zkp5) --------------------------------- Date: Fri, 1 Mar 1996 From: abroeck@v2.nl (Andreas Broeckmann) Subject: V2_East / Syndicate Newsletter 96/02 * Introduction * This is the second Syndicate Newsletter. (..) In the first sections there is some information about how the list/network is taking shape. Some people have submitted information for distribution through this channel, and we want to invite everybody to do the same - either by posting stuff directly to <syndicate@aec.at>, or for inclusion in the next newsletter (no later than end March 96, but earlier if a lot of material comes in) to <abroeck@v2.nl>. Any information that is of interest to the media art community in East and West Europe, from the dates of your forthcoming events to strategies for winning sponsors and grants, is welcome. Also, the submission of your own FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions) would be useful. (cf below) The V2_EAST WEBSITE where all this and more information will be collected for reference is under construction. Please, invite other people who might be interested in the Syndicate to subscribe to the list. (subscription info below) Best wishes, and see you soon, Andreas Broeckmann (V2_East) * the Syndicate list * <syndicate@AEC.at> is the address of a mailing list which is dedicated to an exchange of information and ideas relating to the situation and future development of electronic and media art in Eastern Europe. The list members include artists, curators, networkers, writers, festival organisers, etc., from East as well as West European countries and beyond, who, through the 'Syndicate', are trying to improve the communication and cooperation between artists and organisations in East and West, and between East and East. The list was first installed following the initial meeting of the V2_East initiative at V2_Organisation in Rotterdam on January 21, 1996, at the end of the second Next 5 Minutes conference. * Syndicate / V2_East * Just for terminological clarification: the Syndicate is the group subscribed to this list, and people who are part of our growing network for East/West European electronic and media art. The Syndicate is a tool through which each of us can find information about and cooperation partners for future and past projects. At present, we don't want to turn the Syndicate into a legal body which could, for instance, attract and distribute funds - there is no administrative structure to do this, and it is really something that should be up to the individual projects that use the Syndicate as a spring-board. V2_East is the initiative of V2_Organisation Rotterdam which has initiated the formation of the Syndicate network, and which in the future will use the network, like other syndicalists, for developing projects with East European partners. * Syndicate meetings * The following three events have been earmarked for meetings of the Syndicate: - Ars Electronica, Linz/A, 2 - 7 September 1996 (general meeting) - DEAF/ISEA96, Rotterdam/NL, 16 - 20 September 1996 (special meeting about archives and documentation of electronic and media art in East Europe) - Medienbiennale Leipzig/D, June 1997. It is currently being discussed how these meetings should be prepared, and how we can attract some money for travel costs, etc.. Further suggestions are welcome. * Frequently Asked Questions * We have been getting requests for helping East European artists in setting up media studios, installing internet servers, creating websites, finding the right hardware, etc. We also all know the problem of finding the right funds for the projects we want to do. That's why we want to draw up an inventory of problems and questions that frequently arise, and pool these questions, so that we can find the best answers by exchanging ideas and experiences. Here are a few examples: - What are the basic technical and financial requirements for setting up an internet server? - Are there efficient ways of channelling 2nd hand hardware from the West into East Europe? - Where can one find (and use) extensive archives of catalogues, journals, books, reviews, etc., relating to media art? - What are the best ways of staying up-to-date with what happens in media art, both in terms of the artistic and the theoretical development? --------------------------------- Date: Tue, 5 Aug 1997 From: kitblake <kitblake@v2.nl> Subject: Syndicate: deep europe Visa Department deep europe Visa Department Intro: The Syndicate convened again at Documenta X in Kassel. Its members form a distributed community, initiated two years ago as a network of people who stay in touch through an Internet mailing list. They share a common interest in media cultural developments in Eastern Europe, and the loose goal of the Syndicate is to further cross-pollination and synergy/support between East and West. It's interesting when you meet somebody whose words you know but whose face you've never seen. In 'normal' encounters, you see someone, sense their personality, and perhaps probe their thinking. In a distributed community, you already know their thoughts, so when finally face to face you explore the person. It makes for a social scene. (....) Visa Department On Saturday we produced an event, the deep europe Visa Department. The name, deep europe, was invented for this workshop in the Hybrid WorkSpace at dX, and must be taken with a grain of salt. But most of the participants are from the East, and that is another Europe. It's across the BORDER, and residents on the other side are not EU citizens. They must apply for a visa to visit. For Germany, for instance, the application costs 50 DM, for England DM 100. And you may not get it. You have to wait. You have to answer questions. "Do you have any transmittable diseases?" "How much money are you bringing?" "What is this organisation that's inviting you?" It's a different world. When you're sitting at your dining table, and you hear the bra-a-a-t of a Kalishnikov on the other side of the wall, well, you 'sort of' get used to it. As Edi said, like you 'sort of' get used to a roller coaster ride. Obviously, living in an environment like that means your media addresses certain issues, and those projects are the focus of the Syndicate. Preparation for the deep europe Visa Department integrated with the other activities. Flyers were made and spread around Documenta. They invited everybody to a performance and party on Saturday night, and to come apply for a visa to deep europe between 2 and 6. A deep europe logo was created, taking a cue from the dX 'd', integrating it with an 'e', and adding an accent, an eastern inverted caret character. This was used in documents, stamps, signs and badges. Forms were created. They were written in Albanian only, with no translation, and asked the usual questions. Erasers and potatoes were carved into stamps, and various colored ticket books were found. From the dX participant name tags, badges for officials were made by overlaying a laser print with a window cut out so the photo would show thru. Of course the deep europe logo was on the badge, and in a techno-fascist typeface was the word "Absardze". This is Latvian, and it's a new, thus obscure word, which means guard, or control. Throughout the event, hardly anybody, even from the deep europe group, knew what it meant. Which means it was perfect. A soundtrack was put together. Rasa (http://ozone.parks.lv/Xchange) pulled a bunch of audio off the Net, including some military song from Edi Muka's video-performance project, a sort of Donnau anthem, and this became the basis for the mix. Analog noise was filtered in, to mimic a bad sound system. This manic march was played - loud - during the proceedings. At various intervals an announcement was woven in. This was usually in some unintelligible East European language. A series of barked commands in Albanian, or Serbian instructions that may or may not apply to you. Once in a while some English, "Please be patient," and eventually a longer one, "May we have your attention please. If your visa permits entrance for more than one day, you may be required to take a blood test." This one bit of understandable information then faded away, "Blood tests are conduc...." The manic march paraded on. Throughout Saturday afternoon it looped continuously (and will be available on the Net in a day or two - watch the Space). At the entrance to the event, Alexandar and Michiel set up a video surveillance camera. One of those CU-SeeMe eyeballs, it stared down the crowd. Also present was a microphone, to pick up the crowd's mutterings. The signal was displayed on a monitor near the door, with a distracted Absardze sitting there not watching it. Other material was shot with a HandyCam, and this will be combined with, naturally, the manic march for a soundtrack, into an event compilation. Again, watch the Space. The walls surrounding the entrance made a kind of banked curve the visitors had to follow, lined with tables, forms, and officials. One Absardze in super shades managed the door, letting people in two by two. The process applicants had to follow was typical mind-mushing bureaucracy. Little translation was provided, and forms had to be filled out correctly. Iliyana: "Oh, you have a yellow ticket? You have to go to that table over there and get a green one." And fill out a form. Marjan: "Green ticket? Here's the form." In a language few people can read. One Absardze was sitting at his desk looking bored, reading a magazine, a Closed sign in front of him. At another point Lisa brought in these giant Bratwursts, and the Absardzes stood around munching, ignoring the crowd. Forms were stamped and double stamped, sometimes with a coffee break in between. The march looped on. The amazing thing was the queue that formed. It started growing just before the opening, and in a short time went all the way down the block. Some people were in line for over half an hour. It started to rain, and they stood there under umbrellas. All this to get a worthless piece of paper with a potato stamp on it. For the most part, the audience liked it. They got it. They followed the procedures, and left with a visa to deep europe. Even distant foreigners, like Japanese with little English and nothing else, took it seriously and seriously enjoyed it. You may not know the language, but you recognize the bureaucracy. There were some negatives. One older German man, certainly around since the war, listened to chain-smoking Branka's explanation, and when he realized it was a visa application, threw it in her face. At five before six Absardze Andreas went out and announced to the crowd that the Visa Department would close in five minutes. At six the doors slammed shut, and twenty minutes later there were still a dozen people in a queue to nowhere. Entering deep europe That evening, Hybrid WorkSpace hosted a performance/party. Heading the bill were the Instituut voor Betaalbare Waanzin (Institute for Affordable Lunacy). Their performance merged into a visceral mastermix, blending Latino dance tracks into Rotterdam GabberHouse. "This is the music our children listen to!" Thump, thump, thump, thump.... Ongoing video flickered on the walls, and the bar was fully stocked. It was a good party. Visitors streamed in, clutching their visas. There were a few Absardze badges floating around, but no guards, no border, no control. Welcome to deep europe. People folded their visas, and put them in a pocket. --------------------------------- Date: Thu, 21 Aug 1997 From: Aleksandar & Branka Davic <spiridon@eunet.yu> Subject: Syndicate: BELGRADE / HAPPY BIRTHDAY MR PRESIDENT YESTERDAY, on august 20, belgrade students organized an action in order to give a "stafeta"* to president slobodan milosevic on his 56th birthday. of course, the action has been inspired by the same ritual from past decades, when on may 25 the whole country celebrated TITO's birthday. there was also one more "joke" - "stafeta" started at 15:05 (the official time of tito's death) POLICE forces stopped the students, violently as usual, and three students were beaten. "happy" birthday mr president!!!!!! branka *stafeta - usualy a small statue, like a stick, which has been carried every year by youth through the whole country in order to be given to Tito, like a symbol of love, on his birthday ceremony. --------------------------------- From: Vuk Cosic <vuk@kud-fp.si> Date: Wed, 12 Nov 1997 Subject: Syndicate: the cosic test ** Introduction ** In Dessau there was a Syndicate meeting, the tenth or so since N5M, and there was talk of practical things... Actually, there were two meetings, and near the end of the first Tapio mentioned a classical ambition - how about a Syndicate web.site (that would give useful info and pointers to further sources regarding euro funding, various art and media houses/meetings/conferences, plus a possible text zone to satisfy the need for theory and debate..., I presume)? Well, in homage to the immortal Turing test aimed at recognizing a specific kind of intelligence, I have decided to engage in a similar 'Cosic test' of activism. Here follows a short description of the test: **Cosic Test** The Cosic Test is aimed at deeper understanding of group motivation, and is structured in such a way as to enable a singular researcher to perform it alone, although assistance can ensure more accurate and fast measuring. This methodologically complex epistemological strategy consists of two main parts: a) I talk, and b) I wait. a) In the 'I talk' part, the task of the researcher is to offer a profiled collaborative project to a group of declared activists, with the invitation to meet outside of the conference hall after the given meeting and talk of direct action. It is important that the project offered contains maximum of usefulness to the goals declared at the meeting. b) In the 'I wait' part, the researcher has to go out after the meeting and stand there for about fifteen minutes until every meeting-participant has left not only the conference hall, but also the lobby. **Dessau Results** One person approached me in the hall and about seventy passed me by. After analysing the profile of the enlisted collaborator, it became clear that this person is the K.I.E.Z. technician and is not subscribed to the list. Therefore he was not acknowledged to be relevant to the analysis. **Bingo** v --------------------------------- Date: Mon, 27 Apr 1998 From: Tapio Makela <tapio@projekt.net> Subject: Syndicate: report fragment 1 from Stockholm Dear Syndicated, I am writing this brief and partial report from Stockholm, "The Shaking Hands & Making Conflicts" event; Andreas and others will continue. The event itself was very problematic, but I think it will prove to be very useful for thinking about the future of Syndicate... and how to react to neo-nationalist appropriations of specific cultural initiatives. (wow, that language sounds like a strategy of war almost). Most of the event felt like a national performance of Sweden's role in the post Cold War Baltic-Belarus-Ukraine as the generous uncle Dala. (Replace Uncle Sam with Uncle Dala, Dala as Dala horse, the national symbol for Swedish traditional culture). Instead of having had interesting thoughts in the main program, it was about shaking rhetorics. To put it simply: looking at the surface, the event was a stage for old fashioned politics and politicians to present rhetorics of change without any concrete notions of what they mean by "power needs culture", or "democracy", "diversity" etc. Whenever they were caught on their transparent and clumsy reasoning, they would say, like the Swedish Minister of Culture, Marita Ulvskog, that they said so to provoke, to make conflict. She used a quote from Machiavelli to reason cultural diversity... which was promptly criticized by Igor Markoviz. A recipe: use democracy to claim there exists a homogenous we, and encourage conflict to create a ready place for dissent, a place which is not discussed, but to which the dissent is dumped, sealed and packaged as a medal that the politicians can wear as signs of "tolerance". Backdrop of the event is perhaps not so much cultural as it is economical, and political. Sweden wants to launch Partnership in Culture in the Baltic region, Belarus and Ukraine. The event was to promote "freedom of expression, cultural diversity, democracy and common security in the Baltic region..." Why this combination of countries, this combination of goals? Does this event have anything to do with the fact that these countries are former Soviet areas that used to be "within the missile range"? Or with the fact that Swedish companies, especially telecom companies, are trying to gain big shares of markets in these countries? Isn't it a proven fact that social and cultural work paves way for favorable decisions in other fields? This critique does not mean that setting up programs that support cultural initiatives that rise from local needs and ideas, or collaboration across borders would not be a high priority. THAT was what I thought this event would promote. The "audience" or the "guests"... me included, were witnesses of this play, our names in the list of participants signs of our assumed agreement with the given agenda. This event will be one point in the curriculum vitae of the Swedish Nation. After WW II, the United States launched a program called the Marshall plan, which was to establish economical, educational and cultural activity into those areas that were "insecure" or under Communist influence. USIS (United States Information Service) centers in Sofia, Helsinki are examples, as well as the Fullbright programs (which btw have been decreased in areas that are these days concerned stable). My question would be, whether this kind of thinking is the basis for the Swedish Partnership of Culture? The other Nordic Countries (Finland, Denmark, Norway, [Iceland less]) have similar economical and political interests in the Baltic region. On the other hand... this is most likely recognized in the Baltic region, and perhaps it is a good moment to utilize the willingness of the Nordic countries to invest into the cultural sector as well. Partnership for Culture is like a Dala plan for culture, and at the same time a Trojan horse, a Dala horse, where a cultural carrier is not innocent but bears in its belly the geopolitical and economical interests of Sweden. The internet, the "IT", also acts as such a Trojan horse. The organisers of the conference are making the assumption that the Baltic region needs "A mailing list for intellectuals". Either they imagine that there are only a few people that qualify, or they do not know anything of mailing lists, how they are formed, and how they can become useless... But, I don't want to say that their initiative should not also be reacted to in a positive way. Ando and Sirje from Tallinn are crafting a conference as a follow up - and I think you can set different terms for the interaction. Igor was the best vocal critic and commentator during the event, and I look forward to reading his views of it. We witnessed terribly badly formulated speeches by the Swedish politicians, institutional self-praise by David Elliott from the Moderna Museet Stockholm, badly prepared sentences from the *former* *curator* of Documenta Catherine David, ... (Igor, others, please continue from here...) and - in my mind dictatorial - moderation by Swedish Journalist Mika Larsson. (btw, if she works on the future events in this series, I won't even want to get further e-mails about them!). It was not only Larsson's way of suppressing voices and differences of opinion, but the way the event was staged that got to me. I felt that it lacked respect for the visitors from Belarus and Ukraine and the Baltic countries: if they were the subject of discussion, why then weren't they placed centre-stage? In this, Fargfabriken bears responsibility for the curatorial discourse, and perhaps for the over-produced tv talk show style of the event. In order to establish a dialogic space, the first condition is to respect the partners in this dialogue as equals, as subjects with their own voice, and to provide the space for them to express it. I felt this was deeply lacking and as such, the event cannot be a starting point for forming a network based on trust or criss-crossing shared interests. My fingers & wrists are in poor shape for writing... and I need to take care of Polar Circuit applications (which have been really nice - thanks everyone who has sent one!), so I end my reporting here... The main entry point to understand Syndicate's role in the Stockholm event can be read from the manifesto that Andreas drafted based on the proposals of the whole family present in Stockholm. Melentie performed this text-in-action with brilliant style (he should be awarded with a viking helmet for fulfilling the role so well). It offers several proposals for any country that wants to reach cultural supremacy in the region of the Baltic-Belarus-Ukraine. The text is in the next mail, and I hope that other Stockholm visitors will take up from here and I will rest my case, or simply, fingers. (...) --------------------------------- Date: Wed, 1 Jul 1998 From: Andreas Broeckmann <abroeck@v2.nl> Subject: Syndicate: irrelevant statistics jan 96 - jun 98 30 months 300 subscribers from 39 countries of which 32 european countries 7 non-european countries as though it mattered... --------------------------------- [arbitrary selection and unwarranted editing by Eric Kluitenberg <epk@xs4all.nl>] --------------------------------- *Pauline van Mourik Broekman* *-*-Mute magazine-CRITICAL/INFORMATION/SERVICES-*-* *--*--2nd floor--135-139--Curtain Road--LONDON-EC2A-3BX--*--* *---*---T: +44-171-613-4743/ F: +44-171-613-4052---*---*---* *----*----ISSUE-11--OUT---NOW----PROUD----TO----BE----FLESH----*----*----*