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16 October 2008 by nathaniel

I feel your Hope

Via.

… in response to the Washington Post’s observation that Obama is uncomfortable with performing Clintonesque sentimentality of the “I feel your pain” variety, I thought, that’s right, Obama’s more like “I feel your hope.”  Does the difference matter?

I think so.  Obama is detaching from the liberal tradition of claiming that our wounds are what make us alike and what make us obligated to aid  each other. Obama’s saying that it’s hope that makes us alike, especially the hope for politics to advance the world toward deserving our optimism for it.

For many of his supporters, Obama produces something like the return of limbs to life that frostbite survivors feel first as pain and then as a thrill that the numbness has finally ended….

I only wish feelings of unity could dissolve fundamentally antagonistic interests, but I don’t think so. But making it ok to demand from politics a reason to maintain hope for the coming community made up of people who are already alive is important. I think it’s great that we have a major politician who loves politics and the political, who does not run as though above it but from within it, who takes pleasure in the language of organization and struggle, who sees movement politics not as a sentimental exception to ordinary life but as what ordinary life requires for entrenched structures of inequality, insecurity, and injustice to be forced to change.  Obama’s message about politics is much more radical (and hopeful) than are his actual neoliberal policies, a fact which I find infuriating and confusing.

Obama is challenging us in the best of ways.

h/t Nicole Ridgway

Posted in news and politics, re-blog tidbits, uncategorical ·

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15 October 2008 by nathaniel

Writing for Rhizome.org: Act/React at the Milwaukee Art Museum

A review I penned of the Act/React Milwaukee Art Musem exhibition is on the front page of Rhizome today, and will be in their DIGEST this weekend.

Teaser:

Action, Reaction, and Phenomenon

actReact5small.jpg
Image: Daniel Rozin, Snow Mirror, 2006. Computer, custom software,
video camera, projector, silk. Dimensions variable. Edition of 6. (Courtesy
of bitforms gallery, New York, and ITP, Tisch School of the Arts, New York.)

In his book, Parables for the Virtual, Brian Massumi calls for “movement, sensation, and qualities of experience” to be put back into our understandings of embodiment. He says that contemporary society comprehends bodies, and by extension the world, almost exclusively through linguistic and visual apprehension. They are defined by their images, their symbols, what they look like and how we write and talk about them. Massumi wants to instead “engage with continuity,” to encourage a processual and active approach to embodied experience. In essence, Massumi proposes that our theories “feel” again. “Act/React,” curator George Fifield’s “dream exhibition” that opened at the Milwaukee Art Museum on October 4th, picks up on these phenomenologist principles. He and his selected artists invite viewer-participants to physically explore their embodied and continuous relationships to each other, the screen, space, biology, art history and perhaps more.

Fifield is quick to point out that all the works on show are unhindered by traditional interface objects such as the mouse and keyboard. Most of them instead employ computer vision technologies, more commonly known as interactive video. Here, the combined use of digital video cameras and custom computer software allows each artwork to “see,” and respond to, bodies, colors and/or motion in the space of the museum. The few works not using cameras in this fashion employ similar technologies towards the same end. While this homogeneity means that the works might at first seem too similar in their interactions, their one-to-one responsiveness, and their lack of other new media-specific explorations — such as networked art or dynamic appropriation and re-mixing systems — it also accomplishes something most museum-based “state of the digital art” shows don’t. It uses just one avenue of interest by contemporary media artists in order to dig much deeper into what their practice means, and why it’s important. “Act/React” encourages an extremely varied and nuanced investigation of our embodied experiences in our own surroundings. As the curator himself notes in the Museum’s press release, “If in the last century the crisis of representation was resolved by new ways of seeing, then in the twenty-first century the challenge is for artists to suggest new ways of experiencing…This is contemporary art about contemporary existence.” This exhibition, in other words, implores us to look at action and reaction, at our embodied relationships, as critical experience. It is a contemporary investigation of phenomenology.

Near the entrance of the show, Scott Snibbe’s Boundary Functions (1998) begins by literalizing the fine line between publicly constructed and personally constituted space, between “you (plural)” and “me.”…. Continue reading

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

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15 October 2008 by nathaniel

Barack O’bama

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EADUQWKoVek]

h/t Seodin O’Sullivan

Posted in Ireland Art, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, uncategorical, youtube ·

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08 October 2008 by nathaniel

settled

Via Art Heat via M&G:

Last week BMW and its advertising agency, Ireland Davenport, offered Marx an out-of-court settlement and apology for copyright infringement.

In 2005 Marx held a solo exhibition at the Warren Siebrits gallery in Johannesburg, in which he showcased a technique he had developed of creating line illustrations from roads on map fragments.

Ireland Davenport used the idea in a 2006 newspaper campaign advertising the BMW Z4. According to sources close to the artist he claimed R1,5-million in damages.

On September 25 some of South Africa’s top artists, including William Kentridge and Penny Siopis, donated their works to an auction to raise funds for Marx’s legal fees. The auction, held at Newtown’s Bag Factory art studios, raised about R450 000.

Legal fees were estimated to be R300 000, the balance will be used to set up a David and Goliath Fund, which will help artists in future plagiarism claims.

In a statement this week attorney Owen Dean said Marx, Ireland Davenport and BMW SA had “amicably” settled the case.

The agency said it had no intention of associating its campaign with Marx’s work, adding that it “fully supports the arts and regrets if any impression to the contrary was given”.

The apology contradicts a report in The Star earlier this week in which BMW spokesperson Benedict Maaga said the company “contests the assertion that it has infringed the rights of the artist Gerhard Marx or plagiarised his work”.

Pretoria-based Owen, who represented the family of deceased composer Solomon Linda in a royalties claim against Disney Enterprises over The Lion Sleeps Tonight, said that copyright infringement is on the increase in South Africa.

“There is a cavalier attitude, one of the problems is that it is now so easy to reproduce works — like downloading them from the internet.” Dean said.

The David and Goliath fund, he said, could play an important role because the Copyright Act is expensive to enforce.

Posted in art, creative commons, re-blog tidbits, south african art ·

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05 October 2008 by nathaniel

Tina Fey is my hero

(Not working in IE? Use this.)

Posted in news and politics, re-blog tidbits, stimulus, youtube ·

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05 October 2008 by nathaniel

the child

New family photos online here.

Posted in flickr, me, re-blog tidbits, uncategorical ·
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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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