Friday, December 12, 2008

Internet Research 10.0 -- Internet: Critical



Internet Research 10.0 - Internet: Critical

The 10th Annual International and Interdisciplinary Conference of the Association of Internet Researchers (AoIR)

October 7-11, 2009
Hilton Milwaukee City Center
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA

As the Internet has become an increasingly ubiquitous and mundane medium, the analytical shortcomings of the division between the online and the offline have become evident. Shifting the focus to the fundamental intermeshing of online and offline spaces, networks, economies, politics, locations, agencies, and ethics, Internet: Critical invites scholars to consider material frameworks, infrastructures, and exchanges as enabling constraints in terms of online phenomena.

Furthermore, the conference invites considerations of Internet research as a critical practice and theory, its intellectual histories, investments, and social reverberations. How do we, as Internet researchers, connect our work to social concerns or cultural developments both local and global, and what kinds of agency may we exercise in the process? What kinds of redefinitions of the political (in terms of networks, micropolitics, participation, lifestyles, resistant or critical practices) are necessary when conceptualizing Internet cultures within the current geopolitical and geotechnological climate?

To this end, we call for papers, panel proposals, and presentations from any discipline, methodology, and community, and from conjunctions of multiple disciplines, methodologies and academic communities that address the conference themes, including papers that intersect and/or interconnect the following:

* critical moments, elements, practices
* critical theories, methods, constructs
* critical voices, histories, texts
* critical networks, junctures, spaces
* critical technologies, artifacts, failures
* critical ethics, interventions, alternatives.

Sessions at the conference will be established that specifically address the conference themes, and we welcome innovative, exciting, and unexpected takes on those themes. We also welcome submissions on topics that address social, cultural, political, legal, aesthetic, economic, and/or philosophical aspects of the Internet beyond the conference themes. In all cases, we welcome disciplinary and interdisciplinary submissions as well as international collaborations from both AoIR and non-AoIR members.

SUBMISSIONS
We seek proposals for several different kinds of contributions. We welcome proposals for traditional academic conference PAPERS and we also welcome proposals for ROUNDTABLE SESSIONS that will focus on discussion and interaction among conference delegates, as well as organized PANEL PROPOSALS that present a coherent group of papers on a single theme.

DEADLINES
Call for Papers Released: 17 November 2008
Submissions Due: 1 February 2009
Notification: 15 March 2009
For more, see http://ir10.aoir.org/

New Course in Art History

Look at this course description for the Spring for 2009 taught by Jennifer Johung:

ARTHIST 499: The History and Theory of New Media Art
TR 11-12:15
This course introduces students to the history and critical theory of new media artworks, focusing on artists who utilize interactive technologies. The course will outline the history of telecommunications and basic networking technologies as well as the forms and concepts of interaction and participation related to them. We will examine the aesthetic and technological possibilities for artists working within networked environments, exploring a range of projects such as Internet art and immersive installations, hyper-linked environments, telepresence and telerobotics, artificial life and intelligence, mapping and locative media projects using mobile devices such as PDAs, cell-phones, and GPS systems, social networking sites, net activism, and bio and nanotechnology.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Street With A View

Street With A View

View Larger Map
From Lane Hall, purveyor of fine DAC websites.
Note Milwaukee's own genius and hero, Nicolas Lampert wih his Attention! Chicken on the street.
Artists Robin Hewlett and Ben Kinsley invited the Google Inc. Street View team and residents of Pittsburgh’s Northside to collaborate on a series of tableaux along Sampsonia Way. Neighbors, and other participants from around the city, staged scenes ranging from a parade and a marathon, to a garage band practice, a seventeenth century sword fight, a heroic rescue and much more...

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Blogger Arrested for Leaking Songs from Unreleased Guns N' Roses Album


From Citizen Media Law Project:
Kevin Cogill, a blogger on Antiquiet, a site that provides "uncensored music reviews and interviews," was arrested August 27, 2008 at his home near Los Angeles on suspicion of violating federal copyright law after he allegedly posted nine songs from the unreleased -- and highly-anticipated -- Guns N' Roses album "Chinese Democracy."

The original complaint charges charges that he "knowingly and willfully distributed a copyrighted work being prepared for commercial distribution, namely nine previously unreleased songs by the band Guns n' Roses, by making the songs available on a computer network accessible to members of the public."

Monday, May 12, 2008

Total Recut Remix Culture Contest


Thanks Elana Levine for the notice via Henry Jenkins' Blog:

Create a short video remix that explains what Remix Culture means to you. Using video footage from any source, including Public Domain and Creative Commons licensed work, we want you to produce a creative, educational and entertaining video remix that communicates a clear message to a wide audience. The video is to be no shorter than 30 seconds and no longer then 3 minutes in duration.

This contest is open to anyone of any age from any part of the world. The judges are Larry Lessig, Henry Jenkins, Pat Aufderheide, JD Lasica, Kembrew McLeod, Mark Hosler and Luminosity.

The contest will begin in May ’08 and will be open for 1 month. Public Voting will begin in June and will remain open for 2 weeks, after which the best 10 videos will be put forward into the final and the Judging Panel will vote on each one. The winner will be announced in July ’08.

Monday, May 05, 2008

Photosynth: Movable, zoomable spaces.

Isral DeBruin sent me this link. Also seen at the World Making Conference last month, presented by Anne Friedberg.
Blaise Aguera y Arcas is an architect at Microsoft Live Labs, architect of Seadragon, and the co-creator of Photosynth, a monumental piece of software capable of assembling static photos into a synergy of zoomable, navigatable spaces.
Too bad (but of course) it's not available for anything but Windows operating systems.

Monday, April 28, 2008

LOCALLY GROAN - You Have Homework To Do! Ta Da! at UWM Union Theater


On May 8, 2008, The Archaeology of the Recent Future Association presents Locally Groan, You Have Homework To Do! Ta Da! ‐ an evening of new films, videos, and live performance by over 25 local Milwaukee artists. “Locally Grown” screenings, held at the UWM Union Theater, are always free & open to the public. This year’s festival will be a little different in that local artists were asked to complete an “assignment”, and make a new piece especially for the show. So, instead of curating, the curators handed out some homework. Specifically, participants were asked to complete one of two assignments: Using only one 100-foot roll of 16mm film or three minutes of video, create a film and present it with a recorded or live soundtrack. Inspired by Dadaist exquisite corpses and madcap collaborations, the hope is that the assignment's "rules" will create a joyful challenge for the makers as well as inspire an unexpected new piece for us all to enjoy. The results will be revealed at a screening on MAY 8, 2008, in a celebration of our community's ingenuity, sweetness, humor, and talent.

Participating Artists:
Jesus Ali, Sam Augustine, Trevor Berman, Jeremy Bessoff, Anne Bisone, Robyn Braun, Ray Chi, Portia Cobb, Brent Coughenour, Jamal Currie, Allison Halter, Kati Katchever, Kelly Kirshtner, Laura Klein, Xav Leplae, Andrea Maio, A. Bill Miller, Erik Peterson, Kate Raney, Mat Rapaport, Joseph Reeves, Ryan Szarnowski, Marc Tasman, Chris Thompson, Renato Umali, Celeste Verhelst, Steve Wetzel

For more information, visit: citizenandneighbor.blogspot.com, or email: citizenandneighbor@gmail.com

Poetry Everywhere, on Transit TV, too



Sounds like a festival, with a bus showing videos, balloons, and free food from Cafe Hollander--fun for the entire family:

A launch party for Poetry Everywhere, a locally grown national project will be Tuesday April 29, 7pm, Downer Avenue - Harry W. Schwartz Bookshop (2559 N. Downer Ave).

Fifteen animated Poetry Everywhere films created by students working with docUWM, a documentary media center at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and the university's creative writing program, in association with the Poetry Foundation, will debut online and on Transit TV throughout the coming months. Aiming to focus a new generation of filmmakers on poetry as subject matter, the project encouraged film students to read widely from the canon of contemporary poetry and, working closely with poets and scholars, effectively translate poetry to the screen using an array of film and animation techniques. The docUWM films feature a wide range of contemporary poems and poets, including Lucille Clifton's "mulberry fields," Robert Creeley's "The Language," and Lyn Hejinian's "Eleven Eyes."

More info:

Journal Sentinel
PBS/WGBH
Poetry Foundation

iTunes

More info on the event is at Harry Schwartz's website.

Friday, April 11, 2008

World Making: Art and Politics in Global Media


From Lane Hall:
This next week we have some great speakers coming in for the Center for International Education conference, "World Making: Art and Politics in Global Media" that Patrice Petro and Lane Hall have organized. Students and faculty welcome and encouraged at the Friday and Saturday events.

Also, David Wilson (creative force behind the "Museum of Jurassic Technology" in Los Angeles) will give the keynote lecture for the conference. (wikipedia entry)

David's lecture is on Friday 18 April from 7:30-9:00 pm in Curtin 175. He
will be discussing his ongoing film project about the Russian Space
Program
, and will show his work in the special way that only David Wilson
can. This is a lecture not to be missed!

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Sound Effects: Gender, Race and the Cultural Work of NPR

Via Carol Stabile:


This Friday, April 4:
Jason Loviglio, Director of Media and Communications Studies at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County will speak in the History conference room, Holton 341, 3:30-5.

"Sound Effects: Gender, Race and the Cultural Work of NPR"

This talk is sponsored by: the History Department, Cultures and Communities, Journalism & Mass Communication, and Comparative Ethnic Studies. Light refreshments will be served.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Seeing Green: Art, Ecology, and Activism


Seeing Green: Art, Ecology, and Activism opens Saturday, April 12, 5:00-9:00pm at Woodland Pattern Book Center, 720 E. Locust St., Milwaukee, WI.

Seeing Green
encourages artists to leave the confines of the studio and take an active role with the community, to collaborate and address issues of the environment, and to open a dialog with the public. Guest curator Nicolas Lampert invited over 40 local artists to work on a project for the duration of eight months. During the month of April, 2008 the show will be exhibited at Woodland Pattern Book Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin where the gallery will serve as a hub space, informing the viewer and the public of the many environmental projects taking place throughout the city, exhibiting visual work and books, screening films and holding discussions and events based around the exhibition.

Calendar:
Seeing Green opens at Woodland Pattern Book Center (720 E. Locust St., Milwaukee, WI.) on Saturday, April 12, 2008, 5:00-9:00pm

Additional events:
Reading by California author Rebecca Solnit, Sunday, March 30th, 2:00pm

Curator talk by Nicolas Lampert 4:30-6:00 / Film Screening, Wednesday, April 16th, 7:00-9:00pm (Screening of 5 minute films and videos on urban ecology issues by: Lane Hall, Lisa Moline, Lindsay Holden, Brandon Bauer, Ray Chi, Laura Klein, Eddee Daniel, Suzanne Rosenblatt, Spencer Tepper, Zachary Nesgoda).

Artist/Scientist/Community Activist talk, Wednesday, April 23rd, 7:00-9:00pm

(presentations by Susan Simensky-Bietila, Chris Cornelius, RiverPulse)

Artist/Scientist/Community Activist talk, Wednesday, April 30th, 7:00-9:00pm
(presentations by Raoul Deal and Larry Adams; Mary Osmundsen, Andrea Fuentes, Jose’ Medina, Monica Gonzalez and Adolfo Garcia; Lane Hall, Lisa Moline and Dr. Rudi Strickler)

Seeing Green is co-sponsored by UWM Cultures and Communities/Institute for Service Learning Co-Sponsorship Award, the Milwaukee Arts Board, and the Windhover Foundation.

http://seeinggreenartshow.wordpress.com/

Friday, February 29, 2008

The Atlas Effect: Image Collection and Circulation in Contemporary Art



TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2008
Visiting artist Charles Green talks about The Atlas Effect: Image Collection and Circulation in Contemporary Art at 2:30 pm in the Golda Meir Library (4th floor Conference Center ). Green, associate professor of contemporary art at the University of Melbourne in Australia , will discuss the ways contemporary artists use archives and archival strategies in their work. FREE! More info: www.uwm.edu/Library/News/atlas.html

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

“Milwaukee Moments” Photo Contest


From Gloria Gappa-Grundman, Milwaukee Press Club:

“Milwaukee Moments” Photo Contest Calls for City’s Most Memorable Snapshots
- Winners to be Featured at 162nd City Birthday Party, January 29 -

The Milwaukee Press Club announces a photo contest for the 162nd City of Milwaukee Birthday Party to be held January 29, 2008 at The Pfister Hotel.
“No doubt many in our city will be prompted to pull out the shoe box or dust off the photo album to pick out photos that represent the fun times and memorable moments that they’ve had with family and friends in Milwaukee,” said Julie Pedretti, chair of the City Birthday Party committee for The Milwaukee Press Club. “The popularity of electronic photos makes this contest so easy to enter.”
Enter Photo Contest at www.MilwaukeeMoments.com
Residents and media can view contest rules and entry instructions on the contest Web site: www.MilwaukeeMoments.com. Submissions must be uploaded electronically. All FedEx/Kinko’s locations throughout Metro Milwaukee are available to scan photos and assist residents in submitting their snapshots.
“Images have always been a powerful storytelling tool and our modern-day version of the folk tale,” said Pedretti. “Photos shared by those who were there often play a role in defining key moments in Milwaukee’s history. This year, the Milwaukee Press Club would like its members and the community of Milwaukee to celebrate that role.”