Thursday, February 23, 2006

How Little We Know of our Neighbours


From Carl Bogner, Thank you.

Friday, February 24, at 7pm
Woodland Pattern Book Center
720 E Locust St.

another chapter from the history of surveillance:

Rebecca Baron's
How Little We Know of our Neighbours

In London today an average person venturing out on the street can expect to be photographed 300 times. Within the last four years, the number of surveillance cameras in England has quadrupled. There are more surveillance cameras there than in any other country in the world.

In How Little We Know of our Neighbours, Rebecca Baron considers the roles that cameras have played in public space, in England's in particular. She offers a history of the seemingly unstoppable Mass Observation Movement, an eccentric 1930's social science enterprise, born from a marriage of purpose between anthropologists and surrealists, who wanted to document traces of the unconscious in the everyday as a way to create an "anthropology of ourselves."

Baron suggests how benevolent survey and even casual street photography can morph into something more pervasive and stealth: the Mass Observation Movement was later reincarnated as a domestic spying unit during WWII, and eventually emerged as a market research film in the 1950's.

"Mass Observation's history," Baron writes, " is echoed in a range of present-day phenomena from police surveillance to web cams to reality television that point to ways in which our notions of privacy and self-definition have changed."

Show starts at 7pm. Admission $2.

Monday, February 13, 2006

Eisner Museum College Lecture


From Becky Crowder:
Thursday Feb. 16 at 6 p.m. is the first in the 2006 Only At The Eisner college lecture series. Thursday's lecture is titled "So, you wanna be a grown up?" and features a panel of recent college grads talking about how they landed that first job and what's it is like to go to work instead of class. The panel features two Journalism and Mass Communication grads, Tiffany Weber and Brian Stefanik. The cost is $5 and includes pizza and soda.

More information is available at www.eisnermuseum.org.

Thursday, February 09, 2006

Call for Participation, Projects, Presentations, Provocations


See comments for more description.
Thank you Mat Rappaport:

Call for Participation // Projects // Presentations // Provocations

Version>06 :: Parallel Cities
April 20- May 6, 2006 Chicago U$A

DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS: FEB 28, 2005


Version is a hybrid festival focused on emerging discourses and practices evolving between art, technology and social and political activism. Version examines the activities of local configurations and external networks that use visual and conceptual art strategies, innovative social practices, creative uses of new technologies, organizing strategies, emerging activist/artist initiatives, campaigns, public interventions and DIY projects.

Please visit www.versionfest.org for more information or go to
adoptanamerican.com/version06 to use the online submission form.

Alternatively you may mail your proposals to:
Version>06
960 W 31st St
Chicago Il 60608
USA

contact ed(at)lumpen.com for help.

Thursday, February 02, 2006

Bad Subjects


From Carol Stabile. Thank you.
"There is a new issue of Bad Subjects up online entitled Intermedia.
For those of you who are unfamiliar with it, Bad Subjects is the
longest continuously-running publication on the internet, having been
online since 1992. This collective publishes accessible cultural
criticism for a monthly audience of over 100,000 readers from around
the world. The 'zine appears approximately 4-6 times a year, and the
website features political editorials, reviews, and links to other
Leftist resources on the net."

Linden Lab Fellowship for Visual and Performing Arts



Thomas Malaby of Anthropology here at UWM passed this on. He studies virtual worlds, and has been looking in particular at Second Life, produced by Linden Lab.
Linden Lab Fellowship for Visual and Performing Arts

I'm very excited to announce that Linden Lab is offering its first fellowship in visual and performing arts for creative innovation in Second Life.

This $4,000 fellowship will provide a young artist with a chance to be free for a semester or summer to explore the use of the digital world of Second Life as an artistic medium. In doing so, we hope that we will see Second Life used to even greater potential in the expressive arts to the benefit of both the Second Life culture and the broader world of art.

I hope that all of you will take the opportunity to visit www.secondlife.com/education for more information, and please let anyone at your university who might be interested know of the March 15, 2006 application deadline. Applications will be reviewed by a panel of distinguished academics, and the fellowship recipient will be announced in mid-April.

Also, please feel free to share this announcement with any colleagues who may have eligible students.

If you have any questions, please just let me know. You can email me at robin[at]lindenlab.com.

Cheers,
Robin