announcer on Tue, 30 Dec 1997 20:46:33 +0100 (MET) |
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* .......best wishes for 98...... *
NETTIME'S WEEKLY ANNOUNCER - every friday - net.culture.events
calls-prices-symposia-netcastings-websites-books-lectures
send your PR to [email protected] in time!
0.......1........2........3........4........5........6........7
1...Heather Elliott................SIGGRAPH 98 ART SHOW
Deadline Approaching
2...MediaFilter....................http://acronym.soup
3...Andreas Broeckmann.............new V2_publications
4...Valery Grancher
5...Guggenheim Web Site News.......Launch of CyberAtlas
........1...............................................................
X-Sender: [email protected]
Mime-Version: 1.0
Date: Fri, 19 Dec 1997 20:07:21 +0100
To: [email protected]
From: [email protected] (Heather Elliott) (by way of [email protected] (Diana
McCarty))
Subject: SIGGRAPH 98 ART SHOW Deadline Approaching!!!
Status: RO
CALL FOR ELECTRONIC ART SUBMISSIONS
Touchware
SIGGRAPH 98 Art Show, July 1998
Submission Deadline: January 14, 1998
This exhibit will probe the physical, conceptual, and psychological issues
of
touch -- the tactility of the image, the responsiveness of an artwork
through
the sense of touch, or the ephemeral sensation of touch and connection
through
the Internet, VR or telecommuni-cations. This exhibition will focus on
rematerializations of digitized experiences. Artists are challenged to
explore
the tactility of materials in the electronic or printed page, touch-based
responsive processes in the interface, or the extension of physicality to
the
ephemeral emotion of being in-touch via the internet. This exhibition
will
highlight the contemporary aesthetics of the electronic image: as visual
image,
interactive image, animated image, virtual image, Web image. This
exhibition
will include 2D prints, drawings, photographs, mixed media and artists'
books,
3D sculpture and kinetics, interactive installations, ARTSITE Web
projects,
live telecommunication events, and performances. A catalog will be
published.
Joan Truckenbrod
SIGGRAPH 98 Art Gallery Chair
The School of the Art Institute of Chicago
[email protected]
For submission information:
www.siggraph.org/s98/cfp/art/
Or contact:
SIGGRAPH 98
Conference Management
Smith, Bucklin and Associates
401 North Michigan Avenue
Chicago, IL 60611
+1.312.321.6830
+1.312.321.6876 fax
[email protected]
.................2......................................................
Mime-Version: 1.0
Date: Fri, 19 Dec 1997 22:19:34 -0500
To: announcer <[email protected]>
From: [email protected] (MediaFilter)
Subject: http://acronym.soup
Status: RO
come in from the cold and get some
nice, hot acronym soup (with vegetables)....
_______http://acronym.soup
-------soup prepared by
cati laporte and dave byman
-------acronyms andreas troeger and paul garrin
-------plate erik drooker
_______http://acronym.soup
(soup uses "layers" --requires netscape 4.x)
switch to name.space to use the above url--
download switcher: http://name.space.xs2.net/download
(or go to http://www.databass.com/acronymsoup)
enjoy
..........................3.............................................
X-Authentication-Warning: web.aec.at: mdomo set sender to owner-syndicate
using -f
X-Sender: [email protected]
Mime-Version: 1.0
Date: Sun, 21 Dec 1997 12:08:24 +0100
To: [email protected]
From: Andreas Broeckmann <[email protected]>
Subject: Syndicate: new V2_ publications
Sender: [email protected]
Precedence: bulk
We would like to bring to your attention two books the V2_Organisation
just
published: INTERFACING REALITIES and TECHNOMORPHICA.
For more information about the books and how to order them, please, check
http://www.v2.nl/publicaties/, or contact us on mailto:[email protected].
Greetings,
-a
V2_Publication: Interfacing Realities
Are computer networks a virtual world, parallel to a 'real' world? Can a
superhighway be digital? Can a city be digital? Is the Internet nothing
but
a huge collective mental projection, constructed with the aid of a large
number of (architectural) metaphors? If the answer to these questions is
affirmative, we - together with these authors - will have to address a
number of essential issues. What does this mean to the cities we inhabit
now? And if this technological extension of the urban space has so much,
'reality effect', are we willing to throw ourselves on the Net for
shopping, education and even to search for money and happiness? In the
end,
will we have to metaphorize ourselves, with our bodies becoming nothing
but
a protrusion of the screen?
The five authors Knowbotic Research, William J. Mitchell, Stephen
Perrella,
Stacey Spiegel and Siegfried Zielinski wrote their texts in a procedure
proposed by the V2_Organisatie. The authors could read and comment on each
other's material via the Net in three consecutive rounds. Stefan Mnker
moderated the proceedings and wrote the introduction.
The book is not a metaphor, but a machine that has caught a virus from the
Net. When used intensively the shape changes.
This publication is an initiative of V2_ resulting from DEAF95 (Dutch
Electronic Art Festival) that V2_ organized with Interfacing Realities as
its theme.
17x24cm, 72 pages, full color, bilingual (Dutch-English), retail price
about 17 dollars
ISBN 90 6617 183 9
V2_Publication: TechnoMorphica
Will technomorphization, the reorganization of the organic based on the
intelligent machine model, become the dominant model of our age? Has
evolution entered a technological-scientific phase where humans no longer
develop themselves in natural processes, but where the human body adapts
itself to the parameters of this technological era?
In this book fourteen authors give their views on this blurring of borders
and the fusion of the biological with the technological. Ideas about
angels
and robots, about viruses and mad cows. A world where machines are
anthromorphized and where humans are technomorphized. And if only the
glare
of our monitors is left to illuminate us, isn't it time to build a museum
for the sun?
The authors are:
Stelarc (AUS) artist
Manuel De Landa (USA) writer
Knowbotic Research (D) artists
Gerburg Treusch-Dieter (D) sociologist
Wim Nijenhuis (NL) urban developer
Mark Dery (USA) cultural critic
Lars Spuybroek/NOX (NL) architect
Humbert Maturana (RCH) biologist
Kerstin Dautenhahn (D) Artificial Life researcher
Detlef Linke (D) neurosurgeon
Stefaan Decostere (B) television producer
Louis Bec (F) fabulatoire Artificial Life
researcher
Jozef Keulartz (NL) environmentalist
Paul Virilio (F) urban developer
16x23cm, 386 pages, illustrations in full color (192 pages) , bilingual
(Dutch-English), retail price about 23 dollars
ISBN 90 6617 190 1
to order, contact:
V2_Archief
mailaddress: Postbus 19049 shopaddress: Eendrachtsstraat 10
3001 BA Rotterdam 3012 XL Rotterdam
The Netherlands The Netherlands
T: +31.10.404 6427
F: +31.10.412 8562
e-mail: [email protected]
URL: http://www.v2.nl/Archief
VAT: NL 96.89.102.B.01
...................................4....................................
>From [email protected] Sun Dec 21 19:46:39 1997
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From: "=?iso-8859-1?Q?val=E9ry_grancher?=" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, 21 Dec 1997 19:25:22 +0100
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Hello,
Come to visit:
http://www.imaginet.fr/nomemory
http://neoart.simplenet.com
http://www.citeweb.net/valery/index.html
http://wintermute.aec.at/nomemory
I thank you for your attention and I'm waiting for hearing you soon.
Best regards,
Valery Grancher
[email protected]
............................................5...........................
Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 19:07:49 -0500
From: Guggenheim Web Site News <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Launch of CyberAtlas
Mime-Version: 1.0
Sender: [email protected]
Visitors to the Guggenheim this month should have an easier time orienting
themselveseven if they arrive from cyberspace. CyberAtlas, a new
interactive feature of the Guggenheim's Web site, offers a series of maps
of cyberspace made at different times from different perspectives.
A visitor who clicks on a location in one of the maps will jump directly
to the corresponding site on the World Wide Web. Instead of disappearing
>from view, the map is designed to follow along in the background as the
visitor jumps from site to site, ready to be "unfolded" whenever it is
needed.
The online debut of CyberAtlas features Electric Sky, a geographic map by
Guggenheim Exhibition Coordinator Jon Ippolito, as well as Intelligent
Life, a thematic map by independent curator Laura Trippi. Electric Sky
charts cyberspace as a celestial firmament whose constellations are
electronic networks. Intelligent Life charts cyberspace as a neural
network that connects recent scientific developments to art, theory, and
popular culture. New maps will appear periodically as part of this
ongoing effort to visualize the ever-changing space of electronic culture.
The CyberAtlas project is designed and curated by Jon Ippolito. The
Guggenheim Museum wishes to thank Mia Hurley for her assistance with the
project.
CyberAtlas can be accessed from the Guggenheim's home page at
http://www.guggenheim.org.
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