Wednesday, November 28, 2007

SPJ Apple and Adobe Media Workshop

The UWM student chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists is providing an opportunity for interested students to learn the basic skills of Adobe Photoshop , Adobe Indesign, Apple GarageBand and Apple Final Cut Pro. The workshop will be held on Monday, Dec. 3 from 7-8pm in Johnston Hall JMC computer labs (lower level).

Space is limited. Sign up sheets are located on the SPJ bulletin board across from the Journalism and Mass Communication department office (Johnston Hall, Room 117). Students can also e-mail rebeccakontowicz[at]gmail.com to make a reservation.

Colloquium: Power in the Informational State

Power in the Informational State:
The Social Effects of Information Policy

Sandra Braman
Dec. 7, 3 pm, 244 Merrill Hall


There has been a phase change—a change of state—in the extent to which governments exercise power by deliberately, explicitly, and consistently controlling information creation, processing, flows, and use. Informational power exerts its influence by altering the materials, rules, institutions, ideas, and symbols that are the means by which instrumental, structural, and symbolic forms of power are exercised. Three types of knowledge must be brought together to understand just how this change of state has come about and what it means for the exercise of power domestically and globally: In addition to knowledge of the law itself, research on the empirical world provides evidence about the policy subject (the world for which policy is made) and social theory provides an analytical foundation. Bringing these types of knowledge together makes visible the social effects of information policy as they affect identities of the state and of its citizens; the nature of social, technological, and communicative structures; the borders of those structures; and how those structures change. This talk will look at ways in which legal trends in information policy – wherever they come from across the traditional silos of the law – interact to affect society in each of these dimensions. Legal issues discussed include not only familiar topics such as intellectual property rights and privacy, but also lesser-known issues such as hybrid citizenship, the use of “functionally equivalent” borders to allow exceptions to U.S. law, research funding, census methods, and network interconnection. Such trends in information policy both manifest and trigger changes in the nature of governance itself.

Friday, November 16, 2007

RADICAL REJECT

RADICAL REJECT

“Paint the White House Black” (George Clinton)
Wanted: rejected, denied, suppressed, repressed, uncontainable ideas. This is a call for ideas that are too big, bountiful and bold. Have you ever had a project/proposal/application turned down? Received a thanks-but-no-thanks letter from an arts institution/grant dispenser/curator? This is not a show about rejection, it is a show about RADICALS who REJECT rejection, and refuse to be beat down, lie down, denied, go unheard or unseen or away. Submit your proposal, text, images, application, rejection letter, runner-up certificate or project that has been deemed too radical by the petty bougie jury/committee/overseer out there. Previous receipt of awards, grants and opportunities does not prevent you from participating. RADICAL REJECT will eventually take a printed form, so keep this in mind. Sound, video, film, etc. are welcome, but several hundred will be printed, and CD/DVD inserts may be supplied by the artist. Scripts, notes, diary entries, deleted emails, voice mail messages, torn up letters and trashed documents also welcome. Please pass this along to all who may be interested.

Submit by:
January 1, 2008
nicecookies[at]sbcglobal.net
or
RADICAL REJECT
c/o Kim Miller
2121 N. 52nd St.
Milwaukee, WI 53208
USA

Friday, October 19, 2007

AIGA UWM Driven Design Conference

2nd Bi-annual Design Conference
Saturday, November 3
UW-Milwaukee Student Union
Wisconsin Room Third Level
Registration begins at 8:30 am
Breakfast at 9:00 am
Concluding Reception at Twisted Fork, 6:00 pm

On November 3rd, the design students in the AIGA UWM chapter on campus will hold a design conference. It will feature a range of topics from screen-printing to fashion design to owning a design business and putting on a successful marketing campaign.

See conference and registration information at the AIGA UWM website, http://aigauwm.org

For further information contact Kyle Strash, AIGA UWM Event Coordinator
uwmdrivendesign07[at]yahoo[dot]com

Friday, October 12, 2007

Artist Proposes New Flag


Marc Tasman has spent much of the past year on a campaign to officially
change the design of the American flag to better reflect post-9/11 realities. On Friday October 12, 2007, he will unveil his work,
“Proposal for The New American Flag: Representing a New Constellation” at the Institute of Visual Arts (Inova/Vogel, 3253 N. Downer Ave), as part of an exhibition of work by seven artists who received Greater Milwaukee Foundation’s Mary L. Nohl Fund Fellowships for Individual Artists in 2006. The opening reception, which is free and open to the public, will take place at Inova/Vogel on Friday, October 12, from 6-9 pm and will commence with a flag raising ceremony and parade which features Tasman's three and a half year old son singing The Star-Spangled Banner. Gallery hours are Wednesday-Sunday, noon to 5 pm. The Gallery will also be open on Gallery Night and Day, October 19 and 20.

Tasman’s didactic installation includes videos, posters, maps, letters to government officials, and hundreds of the new American flags ranging in scale from four inches to nine feet. Catalogue essayist Sarah Kanouse writes: “At a cursory glance, Tasman’s flag looks the same as the familiar Old Glory, but subtle changes—nineteen stripes to
reflect the naïveté of September 10, ninety-nine stars on the blue field—clue the viewer that the state of the Union has shifted. Tasman’s flag does more than materialize the supposed historical turning point of September 11, 2001. It makes visible in iconic form the beliefs that justify profound changes in far more significant pillars of our democracy: those civil liberties established in the bill of rights and human rights standards set by international law… Tasman offers it as an
opportunity to reconsider the complex relationship between the nation, its symbols, and its future.”


Pieces of the exhibition are documented at:
http://99starflag.com

A condensed version of the Post story.

Mary Louise Schumacher's Journal Sentinel blog.

JS Online- Prized Possessions.


A Scathing/Glowing Review in the Shepherd Express.

Frontpage Milwaukee post.


The Nation.


UWM Pathervision YouTube-Tasman Flag.


Susceptible to Images.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Yo Gabba Gabba - Behind The Scenes

Inexplicably delightful and hip, Yo Gabba Gabba, began airing a few weeks ago at the end of August on Nick Jr. It's trippy and smart, with its brightly colored furry finger on pulse of the independent and DIY spirit. It was imagined by Chirstian Jacobs and Scott Schultz with the intent of hooking parents and children--it worked. Mike Newman hooked me up with their production blog, Yo Blogga Blogga.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

ExxonMobil: Vivoleum is made of People


The Yes Men have presented ExxonMobil's (XOM) new plan to deal with the impending energy crisis at a development conference in Calgary: Vivoleum. By converting human remains of the victims of climate change into fuel, the survivors could live comfortably for years to come. From Pete Sands:
http://www.bittertonic.com/bitter-irene/442/exxon-will-burn-people-for-fuel

McCAW/BUDSBERG at The Soap Factory


Shana McCaw and Brent Budsberg working on the BROKEN DOWN installation in their Milwaukee studio.

McCAW/BUDSBERG COLLABORATIONS
present
BROKEN DOWN
at The Soap Factory, Minneapolis, MN
Opening: June 30, 2007 at 7:00PM

Using theatrical lighting, carefully choreographed fog machines, LEDs and 1:32 scale models, "Broken Down" transforms the decaying boiler room of the Soap Factory into a murky industrial landscape. The focal point of the installation is a small-scale semi truck stopped in the middle of a bridge spanning the space. Viewed from only two portals into the space, "Broken Down" creates an unsettling vignette, set against the hulking silhouettes of defunct industry.

More like, Too Bad about Phil Leotardo



Though I personally found the choice of Journey's Don't Stop Believin' enthralling, and the cut to black inevitable, pragmatic and pregnant with the narrative that Tony Soprano survives, but as a paranoid adrenaliniac, our colleague, Mike Newman differs. He was quoted via his blog, zigzigger on Slate earlier this month about the HBO series finale. Nice work.
At Zigzigger, media studies professor Michael Z. Newman is among the let down, writing it was "[a]n end but hardly an ending. Not artful but arty, and totally unlike the classic novels to which snooty critics would so often compare the show. The show's comedy is typically darker than black, but now it's at our expense."

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Memory Palaces


Memory Palaces
an installation of digital prints on found paper
new work by Lane Hall

Exhibition runs June 10 - July 29
Opening Reception on Friday, June 15, 5-7pm

Memory Palaces is a convergence of Homer, Joyce, and Google, along with decades of personal journal entries that artist/writer Lane Hall has mined with the intention of telling stories about memory and forgetting. Memory Palaces interconnects cognitive theory and historically derived memory models. Senility, narcotics, psychotropic drugs and the spirit-world are invoked as meditations upon oblivion, while writing itself is posed as a means for fixing memory to imperfect maps.

The Memory Palace is a mnemonic model which consists of interconnected rooms subtitled Lotus Eaters, Telemachiad, From A Moon With No Planets, Lost Wax, Ars Narcotica, and A Snake Men Fear To Touch.

Queer Zine Art Show

From Milo Miller:
The Queer Zine Archive Project (QZAP) in conjunction with the Milwaukee LGBT Film Festival and Rhizome Space celebrates QZAP's third year with a film screening and Queer Zine Art Show on Friday, June 22nd in Milwaukee, WI. The 7pm film screening at Woodland Pattern Book Center (720 E Locust St) features queer zine pioneer Bruce La Bruce's "No Skin off My Ass" (16mm on DVD, b&w/sound, 73 min., 1991). Tickets are $2. This seminal and sweet queer punk romance features a Karen Carpenter-loving gay hairdresser who falls helplessly in love with a stray skinhead who he invites into his home. Kicking off after the screening at 8:30pm, the gallery show at Rhizome Space (3172 Bremen St) lifts art from the pages of phenomenal queer zines by artists Miss Schnookum, Lane McKiernan, Cookie Tuff, Sina Shamsavari, Rachael House, Larry Bob, and more.

Monday, June 04, 2007

Excellent Political Art: RUNNING THE NUMBERS

AN AMERICAN SELF-PORTRAIT (2006-2007)
Cell Phones, 2007
60x100"

Depicts 426,000 cell phones, equal to the number of cell phones retired in the US every day. Detail at actual size:

From Nicolas Lampert:
Nicole Schulman sent out this email recommending a show by Chris Jordan-pretty amazing digital images about consumption in the US-the series will be exhibited at the Von Lintel Gallery in New York from June 14th to the end of July.

Thursday, May 03, 2007

FUSE


On May 3rd from 10am to 4pm at the UWM Student Union Concourse FUSE will have its 2nd appearance!

FUSE is an annual event that show cases the design abilities of the students in the Graphic Design Program at the Peck School of the Arts, Department of Visual Art by bringing to market innovative products for the residents and visitors of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee campus community.

We look forward to seeing you!

You can check out all FUSE products at:
http://www.aigauwm.org/Pages/Events/uwmevents.html#


Website designed by Mike Mueller
Email blasts and postcards designed by: Kelly Rippl,
Dan Hagar, Andrew Whitcomb

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Throwies in Milwaukee

From Lane Hall and the Evan Roth Throwies Workshop at UWM last Friday.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Mat Rappaport Awarded Howard Foundation Fellowship


Nice work, Mat Rappaport, DAC Faculty

HOWARD FOUNDATION NEWS RELEASE APRIL, 2007

Providence, RI -- The George A. and Eliza Gardner Howard Foundation, administered by Brown University for the Board of Administration of the Howard Foundation, announced twelve fellowships of $25,000 each for the 2007-2008 academic year. The twelve recipients, representing the fields of Visual Arts, Media Studies and the History of Art and Architecture, were selected from among 237 artists and scholars nominated by administrative officers of colleges, universities, and cultural institutions throughout the country. The 2007-2008 fellows and their projects are:

Visual Arts and Media Studies:

Yizhak Elyashiv, Independent Artist, Adjunct Faculty: Rhode Island College and
Rhode Island School of Design, Landscape – Memory.

Paul Ramirez Jonas, Assistant Professor of Studio Art, Bard College, Clay Library: To be Spoken out Loud.

Pam Lins, Independent Artist and Adjunct Instructor at the Cooper Union School of Art, Please Bear with Us.

Hillary Mushkin, Associate Professor of Digital Media Art & Design, Orange Coast College, As We Go On: A Drawing Series.

Paul Myoda, Assistant Professor, Visual Arts Department, Brown University, 21st Century Architectural Ornamentation.

Carol Prusa, Associate Professor, Department of Visual Art and Art History, Florida Atlantic University, Innies and Outies Unification Series: An Investigation of “Wonderfully Strange Ideas” (Expressed in Domes and Quantum Foam).

Mat Rappaport, Assistant Professor Digital Media, Department of Visual Art, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Office, A Multichannel Video Installation and Performance.

Rigo 23, Independent Artist, Criminal/Victim.

History of Art and Architecture:

Alexander Alberro, Associate Professor, School of Art and Architecture, University of Florida, Periodizing Contemporary Art.

William Gleason, Associate Professor, Department of English, Princeton University, Sites Unseen: Architecture, Race, and American Literature.

Robin Greeley, Associate Professor of Art History, University of Connecticut, Between Campesino and State: the Mexican Avant-garde and Images of the Nation, 1920-1952.

Max Page, Associate Professor of Architecture and History, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Priceless: The History and Politics of Historic Preservation.

The Board of Administration announced that fellowships in 2008-2009 will be awarded in the fields of Music, Playwriting and Theatre Studies. See the Howard Foundation website for more information.

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Graffiti Research Lab in Milwaukee


From Lane Hall:
Folks,

You don't want to miss Layton Lecture and Visiting Artist Evan Roth on
Thursday, April 19th, 7:30 p.m. at UWM's Curtin 175. (free and open to
the public).

Evan Roth is a media maker interested in uses of technology in popular
culture and the urban environment. He is currently doing some of the most compelling public art projects in the world. He is a founding member of Graffiti Research Lab and a developer of multiple technology hacker applications, including
“throwies.” He is also a senior fellow at the Eyebeam OpenLab, an
open source creative technology research and development lab for the public
domain. (Where, by the way, Intermedia grad alum Paul Amitai also
works.)

You can view his amazing output and viral interventions at the
following sites (but be sure to spend some time at Graffiti Research
Lab!)

http://ni9e.com/

http://graffitiresearchlab.com/
http://research.eyebeam.org/people/evan-roth

++++++++++++++++++++++
Join us on Friday, April 20th at 3:00 in the 3rd floor of Kenilworth for a hands-on "Throwies" workshop! Learn this simple hack that is rocking the internet and engage in thinking about electronic palettes and new forms of interaction within contested public spaces. This event is free, but space is limited, so please sign up at the Grad Office (A255) in the Art Building on UWM campus.

Please contact Lane Hall with any questions.

Therese Quinn and Daniel Tucker

From Nicolas Lampert:

Upcoming Presentation at UWM by Therese Quinn and Daniel Tucker. This event is during Nicolas Lampert's ART 309 class and is open to all. Please inform your
students!

Therese Quinn will present on teaching art education within a social justice framework and Daniel Tucker will present on activist art projects within Chicago.

Wednesday, April 18th 4:00-6:40
MIT 191
EVERYONE WELCOME!

Therese Quinn is an assistant professor of art education at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she directs an undergraduate teacher education program. She also works with the Multicultural Arts School, one of four new public high schools built to serve the Little Village/North Lawndale neighborhoods, and serves on the coordinating committee of the Chicago Teachers for Social Justice.
She is a co-editor of the book "Teaching for Social Justice: A Democracy and Education Reader."

Daniel Tucker is the editor of AREA Chicago - a biannual publication dedicated to researching and networking the art, education, and activist practices within the city of Chicago. AREA Chicago focuses on grassroots projects and has explored the themes of Privatization/Welfare Cuts, Local Food Systems, and social movements that connects local practice with the rest of the globe.

Additionally, AREA Chicago sponsors three related projects: “Infrastructure Lecture Series” dealing with organizational/sustainability issues of activist and
cultural groups and the “Peoples Atlas of Chicago: Sites of Relevance” mapping project which takes the form of workshops designed to create subjective and nontraditional maps of the city about different topics, and "AREA Books Imprint" - our most recent side project launching next year.

Googlization


Saturday, May 12, 2007

The School of Information Studies invites you to the 2007 Ted Samore Lecture featuring Siva Vaidhyanathan.


Siva Vaidhyanathan, a cultural historian and media scholar, is the author of Copyrights and Copywrongs: The Rise of Intellectual Property and How it Threatens Creativity (New York University Press, 2001) and The Anarchist in the Library: How the Clash between Freedom and Control is Hacking the Real World and Crashing the System (Basic Books, 2004). Vaidhyanathan has written for many periodicals, including American Scholar, The Chronicle of Higher Education, The New York Times Magazine, MSNBC.COM, Salon.com, openDemocracy.net, and The Nation. After five years as a professional journalist, Vaidhyanathan earned a Ph.D. in American Studies from the University of Texas at Austin. He has taught at Wesleyan University, the University of Wisconsin at Madison, Columbia University, and is currently an associate professor of Culture and Communication at New York University and a fellow at the New York Institute for the Humanities.

Hide House

2625 S. Greeley St.
Bay View, WI 53207

Cocktails 5:00
Buffet Dinner 5:30-6:30
Presentation 7:00

Please RSVP by May 1, 2007

Registration Fee: $20.00 ($10/student)
Registration Form

Contact: UWM - School of Information Studies

Bolton Hall Rm: 510
3210 N Maryland Ave
Milwaukee, WI 53211

Ph: 414-229-4707
Fax: 414-229-6699

Sunday, March 18, 2007

International Visual Literacy Association (IVLA) Annual Conference | 2007

From Bendtio Petronio:

International Visual Literacy Association (IVLA) Annual Conference | 2007
Curitiba , Brazil | Oct 10th - 13th


We are pleased to announce IVLA 2007 a forum for addressing and discussing Visual Literacy issues and perspectives from the lenses of theory, research, and practice. This is a partially joint event with the 3rd Information Design International Conference. There will be one overlapping day between the two conferences (October 10). Participants will be eligible to attend both conferences, fully or partially.

The IVLA Conference will take place for the first time in Latin America, in the city of Curitiba , Brazil . Brazil is a country of cultural diversity, visual experiences and colorful beauty, but also a country that faces challenges to build up a socially responsible future in the information era. So, we understand Visual Literacy as a field extending itself beyond frontiers of experience, embracing information, considering culture of human dimension, and celebrating diversity.

Proposals regarding the conference theme Visual Literacy beyond frontiers: information, culture and diversity are especially welcome. However, we will also welcome proposals concerning other visual literacy topics such as:

• Artistic Expressions (topics may include new media)
• Design and Communication
• Cultural Influences, Impacts, and Considerations
• Historic Uses and Approaches
• Ethical, Social, and Philosophical Concerns
• Research, Theories, and Definitions
• Transformative Functions
• Education, Teaching, and Learning
• Societal and Community Issues
• Future Trends and Directions

Friday, March 16, 2007

Marc Tasman at Ann Arbor Film Festival


Thanks to David Dinnell, and apologies for the shameless self promo:

Marc Tasman's video piece, "Who Is Stealing My Signs?" has been programmed into the schedule of films selected for competition at the 45th Ann Arbor Film Festival. The Ann Arbor Film Festival screenings and events take place in the historic Michigan Theater, a restored 1920s movie house in downtown Ann Arbor. Tasman's work will be screened in the Main Theatre, the 1,700-seat auditorium on Saturday night, traditionally the most attended night of the Festival,
March 24th.

This year the Festival received 2000 submissions from more than 25 countries. From these, less than 5% were selected for competition.

The Ann Arbor Film Festival showcases independent and experimental film and video. Established in 1963, this internationally-renowned festival is the oldest of its kind in North America. Each year the festival attracts entries from moving image artists worldwide and screens more than 100 films before audiences during
six days in March.

See the list of the 45th Ann Arbor Film Festival's
Competition Films
.

DIGITAL CULTURAL STUDIES POSITION

From Nicholas Mirzoeff:

DIGITAL CULTURAL STUDIES POSITION

Stony Brook University, as part of a major, multi-departmental initiative in Digital Arts, Culture, and Technology, seeks scholars whose focus is digital cultural studies. Desirable areas of specialties include visual culture; new media arts; participatory digital culture; diasporic cultures, globalization and cross-culturally in the digital era; history/philosophy of digital media/art/music/technology; digital narrative, games and gaming.
Responsibilities will include undergraduate and graduate instruction, supervision of student research and writing, dissertation direction, advising, and departmental and University service. The successful candidate will be based in Comparative Literary and Cultural Studies but may also teach in Art or Music as appropriate. We anticipate hiring at the rank of assistant professor. Exceptional candidates may be considered at higher rank. Ph.D. and a record of scholarship and teaching at levels
appropriate to rank are expected. Application review to begin March 20 and
will continue until the position is filled. Send letter of application,
C.V., at least three letters of reference, statement of teaching interests/philosophy, and a representative writing sample to:
Digital Media Search,
Office of the Provost,
407 Administration Building,
Stony Brook University,
Stony Brook, NY 11794-1401.

See also this New Media Art Faculty Position.

Friday, March 02, 2007

Call for Art

From Charles Vestal,
Director of Development
Hunger Task Force, Inc.


Holiday Art Needed for Cards

Calling All Artists


Whether you're a professional or an amateur, an art school graduate or a self-taught genius, Hunger Task Force needs your art for our 2007 holiday cards!

Each year, Hunger Task Force prints three different holiday greeting cards featuring original artwork by local artists. Proceeds from the sale of the cards benefit Hunger Task Force's anti-hunger work. It's a great way to see your artwork mass produced and to help feed hungry families during the holidays. Deadline April 10, 2007. More details at Hunger Task Force

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Call for Applications: Residency


The Institute of Quotidian Arts and Letters at Milwaukee (IQALM) is now accepting applications for the Cultural Crisis Studio Program for Individual Artists. This residency was established to bring artists that produce challenging work to Milwaukee to engage with its vibrant arts community. There are no medium restrictions; all work will be considered as long as the form is provocative, engaging and provides a meaningful critique of contemporary culture. The two month long residency will provide the resident artist with a studio and living space as well as opportunities to collaborate with artists and curators working in Milwaukee. Please see http://quotidianarts.tk for more information and application instructions. Preference will be given to applicants form outside the Milwaukee, Wisconsin and Upper-Midwest region of the United States. Deadline for the first residency cycle is March 15.

Friday, February 23, 2007

leisurearts


leisurearts, originally uploaded by marctasman.

"Is the new" is the new next big thing.
Randall wants you to tag this to your del.icio.us account.
http://thediagram.com/6_3/leisurearts.html

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Call for Papers, Net(works): Art and Pre-Existing Web Platforms



Call for papers - SECAC 07
Net(works): Art and Pre-Existing Web Platforms


Beyond using the internet as a way to show representations of visual and performance work, artists have been using pre-existing dynamic content web sites as the actual site of the work. One of the first projects of this nature included Keith Obadike selling his blackness on eBay. More recently, Cary Peppermint’s Department of Networked Performance, an educational situation, uses MySpace as its host. The
Gif Show also used MySpace, appropriately, as a parallel site for a curatorial project in real space about the aesthetics of low-bit production. A public art competition and gallery shows have suddenly been popping up in Second Life, a virtual world created by users and inhabited by their avatars, which interact with each other in real-time.
How are artists currently using these and similar spaces? Are these projects considered interventions, or otherwise? Are these spaces appropriate for undergraduate education projects? How do real curatorial spaces intersect with these virtual spaces? What do these spaces, with or without the art world, mean within visual culture contexts? Please propose your presentation as it pertains to any
field - practice, history/theory/criticism, museum studies, and/or education.

Patrick Holbrook, Georgia College & State University

Email: patrick.holbrook[at]gcsu.edu

Proposals are due May 1st, 2007. Conference is October 17-20, 2007 in
Charleston, West Virginia.
http://www.unc.edu/~rfrew/SECAC/annual_conference.html

88Nine Radio Milwaukee


From Jenny Plevin:

Hello wonderful people,

I hope you're well and warm.

As some of you may know, I work (in addition to docUWM) at at 88Nine Radio Milwaukee and we are finally getting ready to launch the station!

As a part of our launch, we've created a survey that will allow us to find out what residents think about our community and the Milwaukee area. This Research will allow us to quickly capture how area residents see the Milwaukee area as a whole. It will be used by Radio Milwaukee in making programming decisions and in its larger objective of community building.

I would like to get our survey in front of as many people as possible, so please take it and pass it along. Surveys are fun!

Here's the page to link to our survey:
http://www.radioformilwaukee.org/spherestudy.html

Thanks!
Jenny

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

FADO February 2007 posting



From Paul Couillard:

The Fado elist posts approximately once a month with news and information of interest to performance artists and their audiences. Postings include information on current Fado projects and activities, current calls for submission from around the world, and other important information.

FADO E-LIST (February 2007)

INDEX

1. FADO NEWS
2. EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY: Assistant Professor, Interdisciplinary Fine Arts (Toronto)
Deadline:February 15, 2007; Source: Akimbo
3. CALL FOR PROJECTS: AgenceTOPO.qc.ca (Montréal)
Deadline: February 15, 2007; Source: Agence TOPO
4. CALL FOR PROPOSALS: "ANTI Festival" (Finland)
Deadline:February 28, 2007; Source: ANTI Festival
5. CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS {PUBLICATION): "Nature and Technology" Locus Suspectus Magazine (Montréal)
Deadline: February 28, 2007; Source: Locus Suspectus
6. CALL FOR PROPOSALS (PUBLICATION): "Canular" la revue esse arts + opinions (Montréal)
Deadline: March 1, 2007; Source: esse
7. CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: "International MFA in New Media" Transart Institute (Austria)
Deadline: March 15, 2007; Source: ARTSERVIS
8. RESIDENCY: "Lower East Side Rotating Studio Program" (USA)
Deadline:March 15, 2007; Source: Artists Alliance Inc.
9. REQUEST FOR COLLABORATORS: "Mehora" Performance art / political campaign (Philippines)
Deadline: mid-March, 2007; Source: Bobby Nuestro
10. CALL FOR PROPOSALS: "Accumulation" The Present Tense (USA)
Deadline: March 21, 2007; Source: The Present Tense
11. CALL FOR PROPOSALS: "Re·Use " New Forms Festival 2007 (Vancouver)
Deadline: April 1, 2007; Source: New Forms Festival
12. RESIDENCY: Klondike Institute of Art & Culture (Dawson City)
Deadline: April 1, 2007; Source: Klondike Institute of Art & Culture
13. CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: Galerie Sans Nom (Moncton)
Deadline: April 15, 2007; Source: Galerie Sans Nom
14. CALL FOR PAPERS (PUBLICATION): "La Peur" esse arts + opinions numéro 61 (Montréal)
Deadline: April 15, 2007; Source: esse arts + opinions
15. CONGRESS: "Corralling Art - Aboriginal Curatorial Practice in the Prairies and Beyond" (Saskatoon)
Event date: May 17- 18, 2007; Source: TRIBE Inc.
16. RESIDENCY: Elsewhere Artist Collaborative (USA)
Deadline: not given; Source: Instant Coffee
17. CALL FOR PARTICIPANTS: PERFURBANCE #3 (Indonesia)
Deadline: not given; Source: performance_art_network
18. REQUEST FOR MATERIALS: Cultural Center of Ministry of Culture (Uruguay)
Deadline: not given; Source: Clemente Padín
19. NEWS: Conservative government cuts international arts promotion budget (Canada)
Source: The Globe and Mail

Sunday, January 28, 2007

Invitation to Participate: The Future of Learning Institutions in a Digital Age

From Nan Kim-Paik:

Invitation to Participate

First Draft Posted for Your Feedback, Commentary, Additions, and Examples
http://www.futureofthebook.org/HASTAC/learningreport

"The Future of Learning Institutions in a Digital Age"
Cathy N. Davidson and David Theo Goldberg
A HASTAC Project

Digital Media and Learning Occasional Series
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

We invite your participation in a collaborative project to envision the future of learning institutions. We have posted a first draft of "The Future of Learning Institutions in a Digital Age" on a collaborative editing and feedback tool (
http://www.futureofthebook.org/HASTAC/learningreport). The tool is developed and hosted by the Institute for the Future of the Book (http://www.futureofthebook.org).

We welcome comments, feedback, additions, challenges, and counter-examples. We are especially interested in showcasing current experiments and practices (at your institution or across institutions) that model collaborative, interdisciplinary, and inter-institutional forms of learning. Ideas that enhance, capitalize upon, critique, or incorporate peer-to-peer learning styles that extend the usual boundaries of the
classroom are particularly welcome.

We intend to document innovative practices and to inspire institutional innovation in conception and action-for administrators, policy makers, researchers, teachers, and students (of any age).

In this first, working draft, we lay out premises of "The Future of Learning Institutions". Even at this early stage, we have referenced sources from many fields. We invite you to inform us about other materials-articles, books, websites, blogs, wikis, games-that you find relevant to and compelling for this project.

A progress report will be presented at the first international conference
of HASTAC (pronounced "haystack," an acronym for Humanities, Arts, Science, and Technology Advanced Collaboratory). This conference, "Electronic Techtonics: Thinking at the Interface", will be held in Durham, North Carolina, April 19-21, 2007. For information about this conference, see www.hastac.org.

All contributions to this project will be acknowledged on a "Collaborators" section of the final report. We thank you in advance for joining us in imaging the future of learning institutions.

Friday, January 19, 2007

Ivy Film Festival, Brown University


Ivy Film Festival, Film + Screenplay Submission Deadlines

Early Deadline: January 24th
Final Deadline: January 31st
www.ivyfilmfestival.com/submit

The Ivy Film Festival’s submissions period is coming to a close!
Submit your film or screenplay online to be considered in the 2007 Ivy
Film Festival. Submissions are accepted early until January 24th, 2007,
with a final deadline of January 31st, 2007. Visit
www.ivyfilmfestival.com/submit to submit your work. This year’s festival takes place April 11-15th at Brown University in Providence, RI.

The Ivy Film Festival encourages the creative efforts of undergraduate
and graduate filmmakers by acting as a quality venue for their work and
by creating opportunities for these filmmakers to learn from one
another and from talented professionals. The festival strives to garner
recognition for student filmmakers by means of a panel of celebrity judges
including: directors, producers, writers, and agents who will view the
top films from the festival.

This year, the festival has partnered with Variety to bring its
visibility to a global level. Each year, awards are sponsored by major
corporations, offering prizes to winners to aid them in their continuous
pursuit of the filmmaking dream. In 2006, the Best Director and Best
Screenplay awards were sponsored by Open Student Television Network (OSTN),
which provided the winners of the respective awards with a new Canon
GL2 digital video camera and a new Apple laptop.

Visit www.ivyfilmfestival.com for submission information, updates and
new information about the festival.

If you have any questions about submissions or the festival, feel free
to email me, Meg Boudreau, at Meghan_Boudreau[at]Brown.edu.

We look forward to receiving your films and screenplays!

Kindly,

Meg Boudreau – Brown ‘08
2007 Ivy Film Festival
Publicity Coordinator
www.ivyfilmfestival.com

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Sling presents: "Lantern"



From David J. White aka Agent LeBlanc, Cloudboy:

Sling presents: "Lantern"

Speaker Dust presents: "Noir Condo"

Artasia Gallery and Museum
181 N. Broadway
Historic Third Ward

Take the elevator with the red door to the third floor.

David J. White and Jason Nanna have been working as Sling since January 2006. They have a mutual admiration for psychogeography, experimental film, and indie rock.
This has lead to a busy year of installations, performances and a Mary Nohl fellowship from UW-Milwaukee's venerable Peck School of the Arts for their work with
the time based media collective Done Best Done.
Friday they will present: "Lantern"


Speaker Dust is very private and issues the following statement:
"'Noir Condo' may throw you for a loop.
Expect cream city brick and yellow melting light."

Have a wonderful Gallery Night.
It is going to be frosty.


xtra info:
map

http://myspace.com/slingrecords
http://www.donebestdone.com/
http://www.artasiagallery.com/