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04 November 2005 by nathaniel

the goldberg strikes again

Had a fanfab dinner with Nicole’s dear old friend, Nancy, and her boyfriend, Glenn, last night. We only met him for the first time, but he gets major approval ratings. Afterwards, headed to Josh Goldberg’s of “don’t call me a VJ, I’m a live visualist” — first digital artist in residence in South Africa; he would hate how pretentious I am making him sound, which he is not; but he does not read my blog, so there — fame. Of course we geeked out over various patches, technologies and other oddities, and now that I don’t have a cap and have decent speed with his internet (like, 1MBPS or something), I’m finally getting a taste of Bittorrent. Wow. So cool. Not as fast as I expected, nor exactly ‘on demand,’ given how it works, but I love the idea of the technology in general, and not too bad. For those who don’t know, it’s kind of like a combo between peer-to-peer and http, and when you file share, you are rewarded for how much you can and do share with others, with your own increasing speed of the download. Melikes catching up on TV shows!!!!

Still up with a bit of the ole jet-lag, but getting better — nearly made it to 6:30 today. Gonna go to brunch later with Joshy and Rachel (his awesome wife), and maybe finally hit some galleries and/or museums.

w00+

Posted in music, pop culture, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·

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04 November 2005 by BradyDale

UNESCO and WTO

DISCLAIMER: I have a feeling that Nat is going to hate this post.

If you know me (and if you’re reading this then you probably don’t), you know I am no flag-waving patriot. That said, there is no debate that bores me more than the ongoing one about the cultural supremacy of the USA, like it’s some big freaking crisis that everyone loves our movies.

In the latest sortie by the cultural has-beens of Europe and the also-rans of everywhere else, UNESCO voted just shy of unanimously for an exception to international trade accords (“accord” – n. – def. we freaking agreed to this already!) in order to allow for protection of domestic cultural content against a preponderance of outside (read: U.S.) material. Naturally, the US strenuously objected on the grounds of free trade agreements of various forms the world over.

I am going to mock and deride the UNESCO decision on two fronts: economic and cultural.

First, Economic. Look, the US may be the biggest economy in the world and we may be gigantic slimeballs in a lot of ways, but the simple fact of the matter is that we keep the rest of the world in business. We are net importers of, well, just about everything. Industry planetwide (that is, jobs) gets paid for by the US hunger for… umm… everything. That said, one of the few areas in which we do export more than we import (and we export a lot more) is cultural content. Movies, TV shows, music and even a fair number of books. We make a lot of money around the world on our cultural works. Cut us some slack! We need to be a net exporter of

    something

for God’s sake!

Second, cultural. I’m sorry, but any culture that has to protect itself might as well just throw in the towel. It is the nature of history for cultures to rise and fall. For cultures to lead, to matter and for other cultures (that once led) to go gently into that good night, crying a little feebly as they disappear because people once cared – really. Well, they don’t any more. So sorry. Now hush.

Take heart! Someday, the US won’t make the movies everyone wants to see anymore, but, for now, we do. Deal with it. If people in your country like our stuff better than yours, its for a simple reason: our stuff is more interesting. Our artists are better.

And spare me the McCulture garbage, thank you very much. Yes, this is the home of movies with Queen Latifah and Keanu Reeves. But this is also the home of Tim Burton and Marin Scorcese. Yes, we gave you Danielle Steele, but we also gave you James Baldwin, Emerson and John Steinbeck. We may be the home of the Back Street Boys, but we’re also the home of Dylan.

Yeah, that’s right: Dylan. Take that.

We also happen to be the place that came up with great ideas like comic books, blues music, rock-n-roll, cartoons, cinema itself and a little gadget you might have heard of called the World Wide Web. The Moog Synthesizer? Oh yeah, the was us, too. Try to keep up, world. We’re cooking over here.

Look, it doesn’t even matter. The market will out on this even if the WTO doesn’t take UNESCO’s proposal and use it to smack the body like the impertinent little crybaby it is (the US pays for 25% of its budget, b t w ). People like American stuff and, say what you will, snobs of the world, that’s because a lot of it is really good. Some of it is good because it is super fun eye candy. Some of it is good because it is thought provoking and engaging. Either way, it’s good.

Deal.

Post-script: just so long as we’re clear, I mock cultural whiners at home, too. There’s nothing I like more than going to a show put on by a “Preservation Society,” trying to keep people interested in some artform, language or subject that no one has any interest in anymore. I find it really funny when compulsive people waste their time on futile little efforts like that. Hey, long live puppetry, right?

Posted in art, brady dale, news and politics, pop culture ·

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03 November 2005 by nathaniel

while in New York…

…do as the New Yorkers do.

Ironic that the city most affected by September 11th voted less than 15% for George W. Bush. For those of you don’t know (as I have a lot of readership in South Africa and Amsterdam), Democrats closed congress yesterday, seeing an opportunity (after the Libby indictment) to finally hold some people in this administration accountable for various, shall we call them, ‘inconsistencies’…. Here’s some more:

What Judy forgot: Your right to know – Los Angeles Times — if the indictment and research could have happened when it was supposed to, over a year ago (and was not obstructed by members of the White House and Republican party), George W Bush would not be president today.

Rove’s Future Role Is Debated — that in mind, what is up with this Rove character.?

CBS News | Poll: Approval Ratings Compared | November 2, 2005 22:00:08 — the polls say that Bush is way less popular than anyone ‘cept Nixon, and that way more people want him impeached than did want Clinton (who, tho people tend to forget, was impeached; I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: I prefer a president who gets BJs and lies, to one who goes to war based on lies….).

Here’s a closer look at the most important numbers from the above poll. When on earth will the mainstream media catch up? I understand that Fox news is fair and balanced and so I cannot expect them to say anything that would ever harm their candidate, but where is everyone else?

Carter on a morning show. President Carter once had an administration who lied – he asked his entire cabinet to resign. I guess Bush has trouble firing people loyal to him. Cover up + loyal to president = not so honest president?

I’m not sure why it is that, just because of the divisiveness of this nation, Dems and Reps think their candidate is always right; we have to follow blindly. No matter what world you live in, these guys committed treason, lied, went to war on lies, covered it up, and, as is becoming more clear to the general public, have the majority of the media in their pocket. My friend Jane says that I simply buy into too much liberal media, like CNN and the NY times — I just laughed and asked where this liberal media was, cuz I’d like to see it. Compared to her news station (Fox), George Bush is liberal media, so I guess I could see where she is confused about the other two.

I think I’m going to run for president in 2008. Even if it don’t work, might be a neat art project. The first thing I’d like to do is go to war with Fox. They are a much bigger threat to the American way of life than Iraq was.

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

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01 November 2005 by nathaniel

churchy

Is it just me, or are you guys also getting church ads and Christ links in the google adsense stuff at right (in my sidebar)? It probably has to do with Kaganof’s the son of man post, but it’s freakin me out. Clicky clicky.

Posted in pop culture, re-blog tidbits, stimulus, uncategorical ·

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28 October 2005 by nathaniel

durban downloaded

Just looking over the vast amounts of photos over the last few days, but have chosen to reminisce in text (remember: we’re in Africa; I like to keep file sizes down!)….

Wednesday morning began with a whole lot of gushing over Colleen Alborough’s amazing work. The production of Night Journey was a journey itself – Colleen has been working on the piece for about 3 years. But it is only with that time that the piece has come to be so amazingly well rendered, so obviously considered. The interactive elements are far superior to her last attempt (now moving to alarm motion sensors instead of motion tracking cameras), but rather than turning the piece into something playful, they push the piece towards an unrepeatable eeriness. Her felt (the material, not the action) walls and animated videos are a scary yet comfortable claustrophobia, and the lights and bodies in the space paradoxically make me feel safe, and make my skin crawl.

The next part of the morning was slightly different. We went to catch a rehearsal of Bombay Crush. You heard me right: Jay Pather, avant-garde choreographer extraordinaire, is producing a full-on Bollywood Musical. OMG it was super duper fun to watch its beginnings. Opens 1 Dec, and if time and money allow, I’m hoping to take my second-ever trip to Durban in order to see it.

Then we hit the Durban Art Gallery to see some of their permanent collection, some newly acquired works from the recent red-eye exhibition, and the positive: aids in 2005 show. The most interesting works for me were by Desmond Zeederberg, Clive van den Berg, Churchill Madikida and Wayne Barker.

Storm then took me for a bit of a tour – we hit ushaka for a walk on the pier, round the new and old architecture, through a few parks, and finally to the aquarium for a look at the fishies. There seems to be a new fascination with clown fish since the dawning of Finding Nemo, and I got to reference my / Josh Goldberg’s ‘clown joke’ far too frequently for the common man.

Day eased into night as I blogged a bit, did some personal admin online at the gallery, and prepped a small feast for our final night in Durbs. I’ll be back….

Posted in art, art and tech, music, pop culture, south african art, stimulus, technology ·

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24 October 2005 by kaganof

the man who mediated himself to a climax

Posted in art, art and tech, kaganof, poetry, pop culture, south african art, theory ·
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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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