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25 April 2007 by nathaniel

Borders, Boundaries & Liminal States in Second Life

Thursday, Friday and Saturday will see the Borders, Boundaries & Liminal States conference in Second Life. Sponsored by Ars Virtua New Media Center, and the CADRE Laboratory for New Media, and hosted at the Amphitheater on Learning (NMC Virtual Worlds), this series of talks and panel discussions (followed by q&a), “will explore how borders are delineated and complicated within/between virtual environments.” Yours truly will be on a panel called “Body in Quotes” on the second day, following up on a discussion with some of the organizers. Full schedule – with a very impressive line-up – online here, how to get there is here, and instructions on participation are here.

Posted in art, art and tech, me, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, research, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

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23 April 2007 by nathaniel

Compressionism in Cork and on DVblog

This past weekend, Haydn Shaughnessy (blogger and regular columnist for the Irish Times) invited me out to the beautiful countryside of West Cork to make some of my site-specific Compressionist prints; we hit the local pubs, beaches, foliage and his garden in order to produce new images. This new series, which also includes some scans from Dublin excursions, will be exhibited at his new Cork-based gallery, opening at the end of next month (along with a few images from my last show in Johannesburg), as part of a duo show with Cork-based, Canadian printmaker Paul LaRocque — my first exhibition in Ireland. Plans are that it’ll travel to Dublin, Amsterdam, maybe elsewhere, too, so I’ll post more images and info as the details pan out over the next while.


sirens’ dillisk, 2007, 610 x 1200 mm lambda print on metallic paper, edition 5

beach-scan.jpg
scanning the cliffs and beaches at garrettstown strand, west cork
photo by Haydn Shaughnessy

Oh, and how serendipitous, my little documentary on Compressionist prints was featured on DVblog yesterday! Rock.

Compressionism is a “digital performance and analog archive,” where I traverse bodies, spaces and objects with my scanner face, while its head is in motion. After being Compressed into digital images the size of a small sheet of paper, the files are stretched, cropped and colored by hand, then printed as editioned, archival works. Compressionism is an exploration of media and perception, a transfiguration in time and seeing.

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, Ireland Art, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, uncategorical ·

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15 April 2007 by nathaniel

Karaoke Deathmatch 100

MTAA are funny…

karaoke.jpg

Artist collaborative M.River & T.Whid face off in the most brutal performance art smack down of the new millennium… Karaoke Deathmatch 100! This alcohol-fueled blood feud features 50 rounds of sing-along fury (taped live over an 8-hour period with hardly any pee breaks). No Carpenters hit too cheesy, no heavy metal lyric too trite for these teleprompter warriors to hurl in a battle to the end. Who will emerge victorious? Only YOU can decide.

GO THERE.

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

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15 April 2007 by sean slemon

Are Artists taking over Opera?

The Opera world, like any other stage-based area of creativity is constantly battling to reach contemporary audiences in addition to hardcore opera fanatics. It’s caught between whether it should remain true to itself and its original music and scripts, or if it should have the opportunity to adapt and change with the times.
It seems to be doing both, with the help of well-established contemporary artists.
We recently saw William Kentridge’s production of the Magic Flute- with scenery and direction by him, and the production provided by the Royal Opera House of Belgium. The Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York is currently staging four performances. We went with an entourage of South African supporters, currently in town. Kentridge successfully opens up the work to a wider audience. He reduces the need for usually literal clumsy scenery and replaces it with his films- a series of animated charcoal drawings specifically drawn for the opera.
I enjoyed the fact that he played on the imagery and ideas held in the Magic flute- of which there is plenty- allowing us to be drawn into the story by the images as well as what was happening on stage.
Kentridge has been working on this for sometime now and many of these images have already become well known, especially within the South African Art community. This is perhaps a bad thing, in that I found a lot of the images to be very familiar. However there were people there that I know were blown away- having seen these images for the first time. There were moments when I felt there could have been a deeper exploration into the work-for instance the four trials, which are seemingly the grand finale of the Opera, were very uneventful and unmemorable. Other devices of projection and its interaction with the cast were more successful- like that of the chalkboards and rear projection at the back of the stage-where most of the action took place in terms of Kentridges work.

This is the first of many opera’s to involve artists. Coming soon to the Lincoln Center is the Tristan Project- an adaptation of Tristan and Isolde, with video work by Bill Viola. In an interview I heard with him on NPR, he simply spoke about how he was able to fit existing ideas and work within the framework of the opera. I felt that this was somewhat missing the point, but it is difficult and expensive work to produce- and the act of lending his work and name to an Opera will already draw a far wider audience. I haven’t seen it yet so I can’t really provide an opinion.

Also on the way is a work by Philippe Parreno: “Parreno is also co-curating a group opera called Il Tempo del Postino with Hans Ulrich Obrist for the inaugural Manchester International Festival in July 2007. Showcasing international artists such as Matthew Barney, Olafur Eliasson and Carsten Höller, the opera is based around the idea of artists occupying a duration of time rather than an amount of space.” Parreno is currently showing at the Haunch of Venison Gallery in London.

In the meantime it’s back to work for me-with my Thesis exhibition coming up at Pratt Institute in about two weeks.

Posted in art, art and tech, Links, music, sean slemon ·

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11 April 2007 by nathaniel

inbox: MACHFELD @ Premises Gallery, Johannesburg

 machfeld.jpg

13 April 2007 6pm: MACHFELD  – Performance: VED vs JOBURG

This evening will consist of visual contributions in the form of text, image, video, and animation collages that will be transformed and subverted as they are fed through Machfeld’s interactive analogue performance in collaboration with The Trinity Session.

M18J92T aka MT from mtkidu will be  mixing live recordings made by Machfeld and students from CityVarsity and Wits School of Arts as an experimental precursor to mtkidu’s “a set, in abstraction” on the 21 April.

OPEN Video Environment Destroyer Session: Bring your own video, images and animation footage on DVD.

MACHFELD (Michael Mastrototaro & Sabine Maier) was founded 1999 in Vienna. Based on the identically named cyber-novel , they developed an art-label with the focal points: web-art, short- and experimental films, streaming-projects, interactive installations as well as works for the public space. Their projects, exhibitions and installations / screenings have been shown in Europe, Central-America and in the USA. http://www.machfeld.net/

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

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09 April 2007 by nathaniel

Sol LeWitt, Master of Conceptualism, Dies at 78

via NYT, Sol LeWitt, Master of Conceptualism, Dies at 78:

To the sculptor Eva Hesse, [Sol LeWitt] once wrote a letter while she was living in Germany and at a point when her work was at an impasse. “Stop it and just DO,” he advised her. “Try and tickle something inside you, your ‘weird humor.’ You belong in the most secret part of you. Don’t worry about cool, make your own uncool.” He added: “You are not responsible for the world – you are only responsible for your work, so do it. And don’t think that your work has to conform to any idea or flavor. It can be anything you want it to be.”

Nice article on how he moved in and out of fashion, between conceptualism and minimalism and beyond – and you can see traces of what led to how many generative artists think today.

Posted in art, art and tech, Links, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, stimulus, theory, uncategorical ·
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Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

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

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