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23 December 2008 by nathaniel

NO, REALLY. SUPPORT TURBULENCE. SERIOUSLY.

Tis the season to be giving. Remember: net.art and digital art and interactive art would not be where they are today without turbulence.org. They don’t offer memberships, don’t have a community list-serv, don’t have comments on their site. But every other major community -with memberships or not- is constantly and consistently talking about what they do, and who they support. They have several amazing, ad-free blogs, have commissioned hundreds of international projects, and are all-around ongoing supporters of the arts in ways that have touched all of us in some way.

I gave $25 before I did my holiday shopping. Please, if you have not spent all your money for the year yet, you should, too. Every dollar counts.

Contribute to turbulence here.

Posted in art, art and tech, inbox, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, technology ·

Archives

23 December 2008 by nathaniel

Support Art Fag City (UPDATED)

From AFC:

• My goal is to raise $6,000 by January 1, 2009.

• Momenta Art has generously offered to umbrella Art Fag City under their 501-C3 status so readers can write off their donations. They process all on and offline contributions, and ensure the funds are not used for profit purposes.

• By contributing to this fundraiser, donors are not only supporting the efforts of one blogger, but staking a claim for the value of independent blogs in a climate of mainstream media arts cutbacks.

Read more and find the PayPal link here!

Update 1: I’m a turd and forgot to say that this comes via MTAA’s blog. Sorry, dudes.

Update 2: You can also donate – and in a smaller increment than via Paddy’s site, if things are tight – via the support AFC facebook page. I just gave $10

Posted in art, art and tech, inbox, re-blog tidbits, uncategorical ·

Archives

13 December 2008 by nathaniel

DIVAS LIVE

DIVAS LIVE
experience the magic…
UWM DIVAS Junior/Senior Project
Peck School of the Arts

WED, DEC 17th 6-9 PM
Kenilworth Square East
1925 E. Kenilworth Pl. @ 4th floor
use west entrance
FREE ADMISSION

DIVAS LIVE is a multimedia exhibition that showcases student work from the DIVAS Junior/Senior Projects class along with work from the Film Department’s Sound As Art and Sound Recording and Digital Audio classes. The show will feature interactive installation, animation, photography, audio and video. The event is free and open to the public.

For more information contact
Contact Person: Brent Coughenour
Title: Course Instructor
E-mail: cokenrc@aol.com

Posted in art, art and tech, inbox, milwaukee art, re-blog tidbits ·

Archives

09 December 2008 by nathaniel

‘material’ at the Kunzelmann-Esser Gallery, Milwaukee

'material' at the Kunzelmann-Esser Gallery

one night only at the Kunzelmann-Esser Gallery

Friday, December 12th 6-10pm
Kunzelmann-Esser Gallery
710 West Historic Mitchell Street, Second Floor
Milwaukee

material is a one night exhibition of audio and video installation including interactive, experimental, formalistic, and political work.

Artists Include Jesse Egan, Sean Kafer, Kim Ziegler, Kris Martinez, Nicholas Teeple, Matthew Dunlop and Garrett Gharibeh

organized by Nathaniel Stern and Ashley Morgan

with support from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee,
Peck School of the Arts, Visual Arts Department and
ArtSite

Posted in art, art and tech, me, milwaukee art, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·

Archives

08 December 2008 by nathaniel

Jessica Meuninck-Ganger

So I’ve been in Milwaukee for three months now, nearly four, and things are finally starting to settle. My first semester of classes is over, I’m finishing up my dissertation, am all unpacked, and even have a one-night show with one of my art classes opening this Friday (more on that tomorrow). It’s time to really start making again, I’ve decided, and part of that, for my current practice at least, means finding a great collaborator. Enter Jessica Meuninck-Ganger. Jessica, the head of “Printmaking and Narrative Forms” at UWM, and I will be working together on a large-scale installation, print and video project/series over the next year or so (which will also involve some Internet and socially participatory activities), and much of the work will hopefully be shown here in the Midwest, as well as with my South African gallery, Gallery AOP, in the near future.

More on Jessica via her web site and below.

Jessica’s Statement:

My artwork is a mix of personal journal, documentary, and impressionistic narrative. Its content develops out my research and involvement with individuals dealing with brain trauma, dementia, and Alzheimer’s disease. I produce prints, collages, and participatory installations that reference the inherent time-based elements of story telling and memoir, but imply the deterioration (decline) of sensible narrative progressions. I often use book structures as a way of mediating a story by tapping viewers’ expectations; and I am interested in presenting challenges or discontinuous shifts from that norm. I am not an “edition” printer, but create one-of-a-kind assemblages, artist books, and printed props that function within the context of performances or relational works.

I recently discovered/invented a new process that allows me to print etchings on the surfaces of three-dimensional forms using a vacuum former, photo-printmaking films, PVC, and plaster. This presents an exciting opportunity for “pages” to further exceed their conventional two-dimensional limits and physically fall onto the floor. A good friend and colleague, Nathaniel Stern, is also introducing me to new technologies that I intend to incorporate in a new collaborative body of work. I’m excited about investigating how to further manipulate spatial and time-based elements, traditional and new.

Bio:

Jessica Meuninck-Ganger’s prints, artist’s books, and mixed media works have been exhibited regionally, nationally and internationally and her prints and books are included in several private collections as well as in portfolios owned by the Weisman Museum of Art and the Target Corporation. She’s received numerous residencies and fellowships, and has instructed various printmaking courses and workshops at the South Bend Regional Museum of Art, Charles Martin Youth Center, Highpoint Center for Printmaking, Minnesota Center for Book Arts, Minneapolis College of Art and Design, and the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design.

“Teaching is a privilege that offers me the unique opportunity to exercise my commitment to emerging artists and further explore and share my studio disciplines.” Jessica is the Printmaking Area Head and an Adjunct Assistant Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She taught Fine Arts courses at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design; and both, Fine and Liberal Arts courses at the Minneapolis College of Art & Design.

She began her professional career teaching in the Elkhart Memorial High School art department where she received the Sallie Mae Outstanding Beginning Teacher award. While teaching in Indiana, she co-chaired the Scholastic Art Awards for the Indiana/Michigan region and taught summer courses through the Elkhart School Corporation’s Gifted and Talented Program. She received her MFA in Studio Arts from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design in 2004 and a BS degree in Visual Arts Education from Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana in 1995.

Posted in art, art and tech, me, milwaukee art, reviews, south african art, stimulus ·

Archives

26 November 2008 by nathaniel

small worlds: anthea buys reviews christo doherty

…

Small Worlds is an exhibition of photographs and a video installation that track constructions of a fantasy South Africa through representations of the landscape by railway modellers. The thesis of the exhibition is two-fold, and very neatly reasoned. First, Doherty, who is Head of Digital Art at the Wits School of Arts, reminds us that, although the internet has made virtual worlds like Second Life ubiquitous, it did not invent them. He observes that these virtual worlds in many cases take their cues from pre-existing analogue versions of alternative “small worlds”. Following new media theorist Lev Manovich, Doherty asks in his exhibition catalogue, “Shouldn’t we try to understand the psycho-geography of the new virtual worlds through exploring earlier analogue precedents?”

…

read more

Posted in art, art and tech, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus ·
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nathaniel’s books

Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

from Amazon.com

Buy Interactive Art for $30 directly from the publisher

Ecological Aesthetics book cover
Ecological Aesthetics: artful tactics for humans, nature, and politics

from Amazon.com

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