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12 July 2006 by nathaniel

the storytellers @ the johannesburg art museum


the storytellers:
works from the non-aggressive narrative

So, more than a year and a half after the fact (and thanks to Sean Slemon, who insisted on lo-res versions of all my prints before deciding on a trade for his sculpture), I finally uploaded a photoset of my first major solo show to flickr. Check out images of the space, peops and work in the storytellers photoset (with thanks to Christo Doherty, Abrie Fourie and Franci Cronje for the pics. Also a thanks to the late and great Andrew Meintjes, for all his help and support). You can also read about the exhibition via my site here, or from a review in Art South Africa here.

Posted in art, art and tech, flickr, me, poetry, re-blog tidbits, sean slemon, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

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08 July 2006 by nathaniel

Artthrob and a New Look

I think it’s safe to say that, over the last few months, Artthrob has taken a distinctive turn toward the critically engaged; and the site is better for it. Between relative newbies Michael Smith and Linda Stupart, their influence and writing, and the influence of the upcoming international plugs for Cape Town on the older staples ("not a Biennale" and the BBC special, for example), The Throb has started to change shape from a mostly Cape Town scene Advertisement, to a mostly Cape Town scene Arts Magazine – certainly a step in the right direction. And it is not without irony that I recognize my own blog is, as Linda puts it, "usually glowing" about Johannesburg artsters. Admittedly, I’m a little jealous of The Throb’s recently energized chutzpah, and may take a leaf.

That being said, Linda’s thinly veiled "art blogs review" in this month’s issue is little more than a defense and appraisal of Art Heat, the most recent addition to online arts engagement in SA, and at the heart of the UCT scene (of which she is a part; she did not mention her own relationship with the site, which seems to be relatively tight….).  Her "disproportionate" (see article to know why I use this term), dismissal of other sites as high-brow (Africa South Art Initiative – not sure I agree about this), nepotistic (SAarts – partially true, but this assumes we have power we do not, and ignores our open call policy), or in the case of this site having far too many pictures of my daughter (Linda: 4 out of 1133 posts have pix of Sid – you utterly misrepresent me) culminates in a kind of whiney "just misunderstood" and "please wade through the crap" for the aforementioned. I agree that Art Heat adds value to the SA art scene on several levels (stricken – this not true "disproportionate" amounts of boring, local gossip and too many posts about Ed Young notwithstanding); but I think most of this comes not from their irreverence, self-promotion, in jokes, or even the occasionally smart arts review that Linda is quick to point out. It’s, rather, from their not taking themselves too seriously. Perhaps we could all (this means you and me, too, Linda) take a leaf from this. (And I may take them up on their offer of guest blogging now and again for practice in the near future….)

Admittedly, some of Linda’s other comments about this site particularly – biting or not – ring too true for me to ignore, as alluded to by my looking for chutzpah, above. Read her words here.

Also worth noting in this issue: interesting feedback for a change, an artbio on Cecil Skotnes, a Zaayman bit on M. MacGarry, this, this and not least this (go mikey!).

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

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25 June 2006 by nathaniel

more songs for the

Yes, Colin, maybe I have caught the ccMixter bug. Just uploaded another poetry slam styled vocal track, this time from a video art piece specifically produced for the Netherlands Film Festival, at Aryan Kaganof’s request. a song for the now available for re-mix. Now I wish I had my saxophone with….

Description: a video art / slam poetry piece about the complexities of listening, paternalism and being, framed in a father/son relationship.
Tags: acappella, media, non_commercial, audio, mp3, 44k, mono, CBR, father, patriarchy, singin, spoken_word, poetry_slam, male_volcals, hamlet, to_be, poetry, rap, melody, bassline, bass

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

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23 June 2006 by nathaniel

iCommons iSummit first session

gilberto gil, larry lessig, joi itoSo this is the opening talk I gave as part of a panel of speakers at the iCommons iSummit, alongside the likes of Gilberto Gil, Minister of Culture, Brazil, Paulina Urrutia, Minister of Culture, Chile, Larry Lessig, Chairman, Creative Commonsm Jimmy Wales, Founder, Wikipedia. WOW! Between being a bit rushed, and just standard performance issues, I cut a lot of this on the fly, but here’s what I had written before the start….

Thanks everybody. First, I just want to thank Heather, Daniela, Kerryn, and the iCommons and African Digital Commons teams in general for taking me seriously when I jokingly said, “hey you guys should get an artist and fly them to Rio so they can re-mix the conference.” And it has been pleasure so far, to volunteer for this aduous task. A bunch of visionaries you guys are, really. The whole “CC” thing; it works for me. Double thumbs, Larry.

Next, I should mention that, in addition to a net.art site of video poetry I turned CC last week, I’m re-releasing the interactive installation you see outside under a CC / GPL license. The latest version of it, which as of last night is surprisingly easy to use, will be online for download in an hour or so.

As an artist, I work mostly in new media, broadly understood, cutting across digital and traditional photography and printmaking, video, interactive, multimedia performance, poetry and storytelling, net.art, etc – but I think the media I work in take a back seat to my approach more generally, which tends to be a kind of “questions that take me places.”

More or less, I’m an art geek, and I see myself as kind of snowballing in and around a projectile of questions and failures, inconsistencies, some good crit from others, the occasional new computer gadget, and the ball is like (woot, woot – wee! Over trees, bashing into things), occasionally (shwoomp!) sucking in a dog here and there (wooof!), getting bigger and bigger, too big in fact – and, once in a while, through my dizziness of failure, I manage to look over my shoulder and I’m like “Hey! That was curious!” and that’s really where most of my art comes from, and then somebody, usually my wife, says, “Yeh it was! That WAS curious! Let’s take a closer look, shall we?” – and then mostly it’s crap but sometimes the huge, dirty, kinda lopsided American-South African snowball I’m embedded in, picks up something that may be kind of alright. Ya know, like, it doesn’t bother me. And despite the odd, anarchic freefalling process that is my arts production, occasionally, others find something to the work, too.

And I firmly believe that it’s the inherently collaborative nature, the postmodern referencing, the interdisciplinary and cross-theoretical borrowing, my mistakes and others’ mistakes – and I guess occasional successes, too – that we can build on across one huge snowball fight, etc, etc,- these things make CC, and more generally what it stands for, an important part of my own work, and the arts community at large.

I, flatter, artists I’d like to work with by re-mixing their stuff – in hopes of collaborating more directly with them one day. I give away content and art in order to direct more traffic to my site, more attention to my work, and also to make the pieces that I am NOT giving away more valuable. I, borrow, big ideas, and make them more intimate. Follow through on smaller ideas and make them bigger. Sometimes, I just dialogue with the artworks that are already “working,” in order to remind myself and viewers that they’re there, all moving along in their own li’l snowmen.

And, given my stance as an activist, I will occasionally make very conscious choices to actually take calculated risks and ignore copyright, in order to make a statement about all of the above – or something else.

I believe that this dialogue, these dialogues, these varying production modes, are not only wonderful catalysts towards carrying on many amazing discourses, but actually ever-present and vital to all academic, corporate and creative industries – be them in the public or private interest.

I was chatting to Rebecca Kahn yesterday and Nhlanhla Mabaso this morning, both fellow South Africans at the conference, and we couldn’t help, when speaking of our favorite artists, but to note how different the role of the artist has become over the last century. There’s no more of this “solo genius in isolation,” no more Renaissance Men who produce work in their lifetimes only to be discovered hundreds of years later. Our role is as public figures. We collaborate with and nurture younger artists, we give lectures and public talks, we teach and attempt to hold a standard of cultural and personal generosity in our day to day lives – all of this, and more, is a kind of non-traditional method of production that matches the spirit of the art we make, and essence of the Commons.

So, all that being said, I’m here, at the iCommons iSummit to “make stuff”. To re-mix and "do".

Making stuff is good. As I’ve alluded to already, I think making stuff is good even if the stuff you make isn’t that good.

(Although good stuff is usually better.)

I’ll be moving between rooms and workshops over the next couple of days, please don’t be insulted if I skip about – with my laptop, scanner, phone camera, dv camera, imaging and video applications, big mouth, excitability, large hand gestures, and whatever other mediation tools I have at my disposal or threw into my bag before hopping on the plane in Johannesburg.

I’ll try to set up installations or project images or sound when things allow, blog, podcast, flickr or collaborate on whatever I can’t, re-work old pieces and put them into the ether, drink and be merry, move between conceptual and investigative spaces, juxtaposing and playing just to see where meaning can happen, and who likes what.

I’ll be doing one of the things that CC encourages: I’m just going to be experimenting with your content as a kind of means, rather than towards a particular end, but aware of the fact that “no product” does NOT mean unproductive.

It’s gonna be good. Thanks.

Now is it up to me to introduce the “next act”? My good buddies:

Gilberto Gil, Minister of Culture, Brazil
Paulina Urrutia, Minister of Culture, Chile
Larry Lessig, Chairman, Creative Commons
Jimmy Wales, Founder, Wikipedia

Don’t be too hard on them, OK? They might not all be artists, but not everyone can be, and they care about art, so maybe they can be honorary art-helpers or something, y’know? Be nice to them, they’re good peoples….

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

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23 June 2006 by nathaniel

[odys]elicit now CC / GPL and ready for download!

odys elicitFriday 23 June 2006, live from the iCommons iSummit:

[odys] elicit – a full-body, interactive art installation circa 2001 – is now available under a Creative Commons By Attribution Non-Commercial Share-Alike license, and the source code is available under GPL. It works with almost any standard webcam (requiring a few drivers on PC)!

[odys]elicit is a large scale, interactive installation where every movement of the viewer, small or sweeping, births stuttering text onscreen. The viewer’s motion elicits, character by character, passages from odys’ text. The piece responds to small movements, writing the text onscreen slowly for the viewer to read, or to rapid passersby, whose full bodies birth hundreds of flying characters, impossible to decode.

In odys’ work, viewers are forced to look at the spaces between language and meaning, the luxuries of stuttering and silence as communication, and the effects of accelerated and decelerated time. [odys]elicit physically places viewers at the center of co-invented noise, forced to perform – willingly or not. odys’ text has been reduced down to where it no longer has meaning and is re-birthed, with possibly infinite meanings, or none at all.

Click here to see videos of the piece in action.

Dowloading:
Please first check out the read_me file – the PC application requires some extra (free) installs, and you can very easily change video settings or sources, input new text, toggle between birthing letters or full words, adjust the motion tracking tolerance levels given different lighting, or change the direction the text will go on the fly!Send me error messages if you encounter any bugs, or have much success! I am yet to fully test the OS 9 or PC versions. Oh, and about any parties or exhibitions that this thing is a hit at, too ;)

read_me.rtf
OS X Application
OS 9 Application
PC Application (still testing)
Source Code (in Director/Lingo + TTC-Pro; demo versions of these will work)

@ Rio iSummit

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

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16 June 2006 by nathaniel

SAartsEmerging » Ismail Farouk

SAartsEmerging » Ismail Farouk

SAarts has an awesome write-up on the artist’s work (by Rat Western). Sampling:

Whether it be a film on a continuous animated loop, a structured video installation, a performance work or a still image; there is a dynamism which occurs between Farouk’s geographer’s observations of the unfair logic of exchanges which characterizes urban living in the developing world today and his artist’s eye for rhythm, framing and irony.

read on…

Posted in art, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, theory, uncategorical ·
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nathaniel’s books

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

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Buy Interactive Art for $30 directly from the publisher

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

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