saul ostrow on Mon, 12 Nov 2001 21:09:02 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: OPEN SOURCE ARCHITECTURE: BUILDING EYEBEAM: FREE ONE DAY SYMPOSIUM |
Eyebeam with The Center for New Design at Parsons School of Design presents
OPEN SOURCE ARCHITECTURE: BUILDING EYEBEAM
A Free One Day Symposium
Saturday, December 1, 2001, 9-5 p.m.The New School's Tishman Auditorium, 66 West 12
Street, between 5th and 6th Avenues
As part of its architectural design competition process, Eyebeam, www.eyebeam.org, presents
this day-long symposium engaging members of the community and practitioners from the fields of art, architecture, museology, sociology, and philosophy in a dialogue around the themes of new media art and architecture. To view the online forum, Open Source Architecture: The Future Art Space, log onto www.eyebeam.org/opensourcearchitecture.Panelists Include:
David Alm - Critic
Andreas Angelidakis - Architect and Artist
Suzanne Anker - Artist, School of Visual Arts
Peter Awn - Professor of Comparative Religious and Islamic Studies, Columbia University
Florent Aziosmanoff - Multimedia Author and Editor
Dan Cameron - Curator, The New Museum of Contemporary Art
George Fifield - Curator of New Media, Decordova Museum
Jean-Marc Gauthier - Artist
Frank Gillette - Artist
Pablo Helguera - Artist, Educator, Guggenheim Museum
David Hotson - Principal, David Hotson Architect
Ron Jones - Art Center College of Design
Patrick Lichty - Curator
Greg Niemeyer - Artist, Professor, University of California-Berkeley
Craig Newick - Principal, Newick Architects
Marisa Olson - Curator
Saul Ostrow - Director, Center for Visual Art and Culture, University of Connecticut, Stamford and Storrs
Fred Ritchin - Associate Professor of Photography and Communications, Tisch School of the Arts, NYU
Cynthia Beth Rubin - Artist
Michael Rush - Director, Palm Beach Institute of Contemporary Art
Elizabeth Streb - Choreographer
Tucker Viemeister - Industrial Designer
Panels discussion topics include:
Redefining the Relationship between Curators & Artists
The Marriage of Real and Virtual Space
The Wired Museum in the Post-Religious Age
Building Eyebeam: A Look at 13 DesignsEyebeam is a not-for-profit organization established to provide access, education, and support
for artists, students and the general public in the field of art and technology. It was founded in 1996 by John S. Johnson with the purpose of introducing broad and diverse audiences to new technologies and media arts while simultaneously establishing new media art as a significant genre.For more information about Eyebeam please contact: [email protected]
Eyebeam
540-548 W. 21st Street
212-937-6581
www.eyebeam.org(Administrative Offices)
45 Main Street, 12th Floor
Brooklyn, NY 11201
718-222-3982