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09 June 2006 by nathaniel

Memento @ Momo

memento @ momo
One hour performance, drinks served. 52 7th Ave, Parktown North, Johannesburg South Africa

the release:

On 16 June 2006, South Africa celebrates the 30th anniversary of Youth Day. The act of remembrance is shaped by a multitude of senses ranging from sight, sound, physical touch and smell. This year Gallery MOMO invites you to join us in commemorating Youth Day through the experience of sound. On 11 June 2006 a group of artists including Nathaniel Stern, João Orecchia, Shane de Lange, Johan Thom and Dinkies Sithole will work together to create a sound sculpture to commemorate Youth Day. The artists will draw from their own, particular experience of life in contemporary South Africa to formulate a personal, aural response to the celebration of Youth Day. For example, both Shane de Lange and Nathaniel Stern are best known as artists working with digital media to create art: de Lange creates experimental sound by appropriating and sampling sounds from various sources including music, the body and even the sounds of a paper bag; Stern is known as a new media artist who uses interactive digital technology, often drawing the viewer and the artwork together in a new interactive, symbiotic whole. Other participating artists like João Orecchia, Johan Thom and Dinkies Sithole work with media such as musical instruments, video, performance and even their bodies to create experimental works that more often than not, refuse easy classification as ‘visual art’. Nonetheless, all the artists share a playful, experimental approach towards the creation and presentation of their work. In this way, each artist will prepare a series of aural responses to the commemoration of Youth Day. At 16h00, Sunday 11 June 2006, they will come together at Gallery MOMO and enter into dialogue with each other, and the audience, by creating a monument to Youth day through sound.

Posted in art, art and tech, me, music, poetry, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·

Archives

06 June 2006 by nathaniel

NY Arts Magazine Feature: Between Text and Flesh

Nathaniel Stern, step inside, 2004. Interactive/immersive environment, inside 3x3x3 meters; outside variable.Well, that much delayed bio / feature on my work in NY Arts Magazine is finally out! It’s a great piece, and I’m really pleased with how it looks and reads on their site… It will appear in the July / August print edtiion of the magazine, and my folks will be bringing me a hard copy when they come to visit their granddaughter in July. Here’s a li’l snippet from what they have to say about my work:

Staged via various media, Nathaniel Stern’s work enacts the interstices of body, language and technology. It seeks to force us to look again at the relationships between the three, and invites us to experiment with their relation. His body of work can, perhaps, be described as an exploration of the interstitial itself–revisiting between technology and text the dangerous spaces of enfleshment, incipience, and process.

Read more…

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, me, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

Archives

06 June 2006 by nathaniel

The Last Braai

Via artheat:

You are cordially invited to THE LAST BRAAI

The launch of Ed Young and Christian Nerf’s NO PROBLEM IN AFRICA
In conjunction with ROUTES… REPORT FROM THE LAND OF DREAMS
Curated by Harm Lux
In partnership with TRIENAL DE LUANDA
Sponsored by ART HEAT
www.artheat.blogspot.com

Apologies to BAREND DE WET

L/B’s Lounge
222 Long Street (above Jo’burg bar)
16:00
Bring and Braai


 
Posted in art, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, uncategorical ·

Archives

04 June 2006 by nathaniel

latest ArtThrob

The latest issue of ArtThrob is live ("South Africa’s leading contemporary visual arts publication"), and I have to say how impressed I’ve been with the new Johannesburg editor, Michael Smith, over the last few months. We’ve never met, but his reviews are thoughtful, thorough, descriptive and critically engaged – what more could you ask for (especially when nathaniel can’t even provide snap judgments for a while, due to his daughter’s arrival)? Check out his reviews of Kentridge at JAG and Murray at Goodman this month to see what I mean (big apologies to Brett for missing that latter show! Forgive?). nathaniel also recommends the Johann van der Schijff review and Malcolm Payne’s picking a cat fight with Khwezi Gule – MEOW!

I picked up the new Art SA yesterday at Krut. Haven’t had a chance to read any of it yet, but rumour has it that our guest blogging Franci Cronje is named as having one of the KKNK’s most successful solo shows. Congrats Cronje!

Posted in art, art and tech, reviews, south african art, stimulus, theory, uncategorical ·

Archives

02 June 2006 by nathaniel

Compressionism WorldWide


Brenton Maart chatting with Stern about the show,
for a review in Art South Africa magazine

I was at Outlet yesterday, discussing my Time and Seeing exhibition of Compressionist prints with Brenton Maart. Maart normally does the Gauteng art listings for the Mail & Guardian, but we met about this show for a small review he’s doing in the next Art South Africa magazine. I never get over how happy it makes me when people respond very positively to my work… Also look out for Franci Cronje’s review of the show in Die Beeld next week.

This chat, and Cronje’s review, are timed really well, given that South Africa finally has the May issue of MacFormat magazine in stock, which has a full-color back page feature on me and the Compressionist series – click here, or on the thumbnail below, to read their take, see the images.

Don’t miss the Time and Seeing closing party at Outlet on 10 June (next Saturday), 16h00 – 24 du Toit Street, Building 10, Tshwane University of Technology, Pretoria.

Time and Seeing exhibits selections from nathaniel stern’s Compressionism – a "digital performance and analog archive.” Stern traverses bodies, spaces and objects with his scanner face, while the head is in motion. After being Compressed into digital images the size of a small sheet of paper, the files are then stretched, cropped and colored by hand. Compressionism is an exploration of media and perception, a transfiguration in Time and Seeing.

Compressionism in MacFormat magazine

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, flickr, franci cronje, me, pop culture, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·

Archives

26 May 2006 by nathaniel

DVblog feature » Passage to Ill

DVblog kicks it old school Stern by featuring the first ever hektor recording (1999) – hektor.net (2000) was recently archived by the Cornell Manuscripts library. Minor props for old school net.art?

Link: DVblog » Passage to Ill – Nathaniel Stern

“Passage to Ill was one of the first pieces I wrote as “hektor“, playing the cynical romantic and trying to get in bed with “Ill” (a punny nickname for a real person). After seeing me perform it at the Nuyorican poet’s café, fellow grad student Alisa Schwartz asked if I’d be keen to make a DV version (for one of our classes at ITP, 1999), and we storyboarded it out. It was thus the very first piece in a series that would later become hektor.net” – Nathaniel Stern.

Posted in art, art and tech, me, poetry, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, 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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