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NETTIME'S WEEKLY ANNOUNCER - every friday into your inbox calls-symposia-websites-campaigns-books-lectures-meetings send your PR to [email protected] in time! 0.......1........2........3........4........5........6 1...Le Monde Diplomatique..February 1998 2...Le Monde Diplomatique..How to subscribe to our Internet edition 3...Eric Nellen............Toaster Lineage 4...Vadim Epstein..........lady olialia saves your screen 5...V2_Organisation........V2_Book publication [email protected] landscape painting: 1995 7...Don Weightman..........Last call for reading group on technical standards 8...Paul Kneisel...........Anti-fascist news groups forming on the net 9...ARTSPACE Sydney........Launch of Digital Media Studio at Metro TV 10..Australian Network.....F O L D B A C K ........1.............................................. X-Sender: [email protected] (Unverified) Mime-Version: 1.0 Date: Thu, 12 Feb 1998 15:27:08 +0000 To: English edition <[email protected]> From: Le Monde diplomatique <[email protected]> Subject: February 1998. Precedence: Bulk List-Software: LetterRip Pro 3.0a1 by Fog City Software, Inc. List-Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]> List-Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]> X-Mime-Autoconverted: from quoted-printable to 8bit by maildrop.xs4all.nl id NAA16597 X-Pop-Info: 00009618 00000255 Sender: [email protected] X-Mime-Autoconverted: from 8bit to quoted-printable by smtp1.xs4all.nl id SAA27600 LE MONDE DIPLOMATIQUE _________________________________________________________________ Le Monde diplomatique english edition February 1998 edited by Wendy Kristianasen LEADER France divided by Ignacio Ramonet * The recent protests in France come as no surprise. For the Jospin government has focused on the convergence criteria for the euro and neglected the needs of the three million unemployed and millions more struggling to get by on the bare minimum. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/en/1998/02/01leader.html IN THE DARK SHADOW OF TERROR The Algerian army holds the levers of power by Lahouari Addi The month of Ramadan was marked by a further escalation of violence in Algeria, with serial massacres ravaging villages in the west of the country in the Islamist heartland. To try to understand what lies behind these dreadful events, we need first to examine the country's power structure. In this article, Lahouari Addi analyses the role of the army and its dominant role in the Algerian state. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/inside/1998/02/02algeria.html Translated by Francisca Garvie GLOBAL ECONOMY IN TURMOIL Heading for deflation? From overproduction to financial crisis and into recession by Fran�ois Chesnais It is more than seven months since the financial meltdown that began in Thailand with the collapse of the baht. Despite intervention by the IMF, the situation remains unstable. The much-vaunted Asian tiger economies, South Korea in particular, will be subject to structural adjustments which will almost certainly entail massive job losses, company closures and increased poverty. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/inside/1998/02/03deflation.html Translated by Julie Stoker Muddled measures by the IMF by Ibrahim Warde * The problems of Southeast Asia's economies were seen as glitches along the road -- that is, until last November when South Korea, on the verge of default, applied to the IMF for help. The IMF has responded by transposing the remedies it knows and has already used in Latin America to the vastly different Asian context. A heavy-handed reshaping of Southeast Asia is under way. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/en/1998/02/04imf.html Translated by Sally Blaxland On the web * Internet addresses and information on world economic organisations. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/en/1998/02/05websites.html Time for a change in the Indonesian leadership? by Fran�oise Cayrac-Blanchard The rice harvest has failed and, at the start of the year, the rupiah collapsed. This has led to a social and political crisis. General Suharto, standing for a seventh term as president, has had to agree to IMF reforms, but there have been riots in Java and the opposition is calling for him to go. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/inside/1998/02/06indonesia.html Translated by Barbara Wilson A dangerous new manifesto for global capitalism by Lori M. Wallach * The Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI) proposes to grant inalienable rights to multinational corporations at the expense of national governments, which would find themselves forced to defend their own laws in court and pay compensation for any infringement of the proposed treaty. Those negotiating it in the OECD have kept very quiet. But late in the day, the public and their representatives may be beginning to wake up to a new threat. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/en/1998/02/07mai.html Original text in English POLITICAL VIOLENCE AND DEMOCRACY IN SPAIN Basque nationalism undermined by ETA by Barbara Loyer On 12 January a fourth Basque local councillor was murdered by ETA. After hundreds of killings, ETA now seems to be targeting members of the People's Party, which is part of the Madrid government, as well as waging a campaign of violence against the governing party in the Basque Autonomous Community. Barbara Loyer explains the meaning of this, giving a rare insight into the little-known origins of Basque nationalism. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/inside/1998/02/08basque.html Translated by Barry Smerin PUTTING AN END TO ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM Americans fight for ecological justice by Eric Klinenberg Wherever industry buys up land as dumps for its waste, it is putting the most vulnerable at risk. In the United States, this has provoked an unexpected response. Different groups - Blacks, Indians, environmentalists and others - have got together in the name of "environmental justice" to fight for their right to live free of pollution. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/inside/1998/02/09ecojustice.html Original text in English CONFOUNDING THE CRITICS Uganda, nearly a miracle by G�rard Prunier Uganda is often cited as one of Africa's rare success stories. Yoweri Museveni may have seized power in 1986 in the traditional manner, but he has guided Uganda to an unusual degree of economic progress and political stability. The country also has a key role in the continent's new geopolitics, but the unrest that surrounds it does not make for domestic tranquillity. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/inside/1998/02/10uganda.html Read also: Facts and figures * http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/en/1998/02/11ugandaf.html Translated by Lorna Dale HARD, BUT NECESSARY Conflict resolution, the new challenge by Virginie Raisson The West is constantly torn between the need to intervene in fratricidal conflicts, like those in Algeria, Burundi or Afghanistan, and the real risks for its own soldiers. One of the new approaches being looked at is "conflict prevention". But serious questions have first to be addressed. How can we identify wars in the making? What are the criteria for intervention: likely success, numbers of victims or just visibility on the evening news? And should we try to stop "just" wars? http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/inside/1998/02/12conflicts.html Translated by Barry Smerin PEACE-KEEPING OR HIGH-TECH WARFARE Developing the weapons of the 21st century by Maurice Najman Space platforms, drones, hypersonic attack aircraft, cruise missiles, space-based action. This is not science fiction, but part of the United States' arms programme. The aim is to remain the sole superpower and to be capable of winning two conflicts - on a par with the Gulf war - simultaneously and without losses. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/inside/1998/02/13warfare.html From space platforms to electronic warfare (M. N.) * http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/en/1998/02/14weapons.html Translated by Malcolm Greenwood ISRAEL AT THE MERCY OF THE RELIGIOUS PARTIES The irresistible rise of the Orthodox establishment by Joseph Algazy As a result of his intransigence, Israel's prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu is having to rely more closely than ever on his coalition partners of the religious right, who are trying hard to increase their hold on the state. This is causing resentment among Israelis at large, most of whom fiercely resent the power of the Orthodox establishment and its control over their daily lives -- to the point where the divide between the secular majority and the religious minority is assuming the proportions of a "war of cultures". http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/inside/1998/02/15israel.html Who is who (J. A.) * http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/en/1998/02/17israelwho.html Glossary * http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/en/1998/02/16israelglo.html Translated by Wendy Kristianasen (*) Star-marked articles are available to every reader. Other articles ar available to paid subscribers only. ______________________________________________________________ For more information on our English edition, please visit http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/en/ To subscribe to our free "dispatch" mailing-list, send an (empty) e-mail to: [email protected] To unsubscribe from this list, send an (empty) e-mail to: [email protected] .................2..................................... X-Sender: [email protected] (Unverified) Mime-Version: 1.0 Date: Wed, 18 Feb 1998 11:55:27 +0000 To: English edition <[email protected]> From: Le Monde diplomatique <[email protected]> Subject: How to subscribe to our Internet edition Precedence: Bulk List-Software: LetterRip Pro 3.0a1 by Fog City Software, Inc. List-Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]> List-Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]> X-Pop-Info: 00001848 00000057 Sender: [email protected] Le Monde diplomatique in English Compulsory reading for French speakers everywhere Also for readers of German, Italian, Spanish, Greek and Arabic... and now English... Dear reader, You are on our mailing list, but you have not yet subscribed to our Internet edition. Are you worried about subscribing by the Internet? Rest assured. You can send us your credit card details with complete confidence through our agents, Kagi. We have selected Kagi to deal with our subscriptions service because it uses a totally secure system and maintains the highest business standards. Can you afford to miss out on * our first-hand accounts by leading specialists, journalists and academics? * the quality of our analysis of political, social and economic issues? * the critical spirit with which we address the affairs of our time? Half a million readers read Le Diplo in a variety of the world's major languages. Our English edition is at the start of its life. Subscribing to it on the Internet will help us towards our goal of providing you with a printed alternative as well. You may have seen Lori M. Wallach's article about the MAI this February which we made freely available to all. Or have you not yet looked? What else could you be missing? For 24 US dollars a year (institutions 48 dollars), you can have the whole English Internet edition of Le Monde diplomatique: just press the TO SUBSCRIBE sign on our Website at http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/en/ ..........................3............................ X-Sender: integrity\eduard\[email protected] Mime-Version: 1.0 Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 12:35:56 +0100 To: Marjan Alberda <[email protected]>, [email protected], Patrice Riemens <[email protected]>, [email protected] From: "Nellen, Eric" <[email protected]> (by way of Eduard de Jong) Subject: Toaster Lineage X-Pop-Info: 00003294 00000058 Sender: [email protected] Toaster Lineage If IBM made toasters... They would want one big toaster where people bring bread to be submitted for overnight toasting. IBM would claim a worldwide market for five, maybe six toasters. If Xerox made toasters... You could toast one-sided or double-sided. Successive slices would get lighter and lighter. The toaster would jam your bread for you. If Radio Shack made toasters... The staff would sell you a toaster, but not know anything about it. Or you could buy all the parts to build your own toaster. If Oracle made toasters... They'd claim their toaster was compatible with all brands and styles of bread, but when you got it home you'd discover the Bagel Engine was still in development, the Croissant Extension was three years away, and that indeed the whole appliance was just blowing smoke. If Sun made toasters... The toast would burn often, but you could get a really good cup of Java. Does DEC still make toasters?... They made good toasters in the '80s, didn't they? If Hewlett-Packard made toasters... They would market the Reverse Polish Toaster, which takes in toast and gives you regular bread. If Cray made toasters... They would cost $16 million but would be faster than any other single-slice toaster in the world. If the NSA made toasters... Your toaster would have a secret trap door that only the NSA could access in case they needed to get at your toast for reasons of national security. If Sony made toasters... The ToastMan, which would be barely larger than the single piece of bread it is meant to toast, can be conveniently attached to your belt. If Timex made toasters... They would be cheap and small quartz-crystal wrist toasters that take a roasting and keep on toasting. If Fisher Price made toasters... "Baby's First Toaster" would have a hand-crank that you turn to toast the bread that pops up like a Jack-in-the-box. If the Franklin Mint made toasters... Every month, you would receive another lovely hand-crafted piece of your authentic hand-crafted Civil War pewter toaster. If CostCo made toasters... They'd be really cheap, as long as you bought a six-pack of 'em. If Apple made toaster... They would be the easiest toasters in the world to use, but if you tried to use them in a room with other toasters they would refuse to share the loaf of bread and automatically file law suites against the other toaster manufacturers claiming Apple was the only company entitled to make toast. While doing this of course they would forget how to make good toast and end up being paper weights. And, of course: If Microsoft made toasters... Every time you bought a loaf of bread, you would have to buy a toaster. You wouldn't have to take the toaster, but you'd still have to pay for it anyway. Toaster '95 would weigh 15000 pounds (hence requiring a reinforced steel counter top), draw enough electricity to power a small city, take up 95% of the space in your kitchen, would claim to be the first toaster that lets you control how light or dark you want your toast to be, and would secretly interrogate your other appliances to find out who made them. Everyone would hate Microsoft toasters, but nonetheless would buy them since most of the good bread only works with their toasters. ...................................4................... Date: Sun, 15 Feb 1998 15:48:14 +0300 From: Vadim Epstein <[email protected]> Organization: here:// complex con-science To: [email protected] Subject: lady olialia saves your screen high there, we all need to be screened from the world. and our lovely screens needs care. therefore enjoy new ergonomic creature and save your screen now: http://here.ru/win/notes/safelife.htm eps ------------------------------------------------------------------ [email protected] http://here.ru ............................................5.......... Date: Mon, 16 Feb 1998 19:00:39 +0100 To: [email protected] From: [email protected] (V2_Organisation) Subject: V2_Book publication **************************************************************** We would like to bring to your attention the latest publication by V2_Organisation: TECHNOMORPHICA. **************************************************************** =46or more information about this book and how to order it, please, check http://www.v2.nl/publicaties/, or contact us by mail:[email protected]. **************************************************************** You can also order this book directly from your local bookstore using the ISBN number: 90 6617 190 1. **************************************************************** **************************************************************** =2E............. 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, 368 pages, illustrations in full color (184 pages) bilingual (Dutch-English), retail price approx. US$ 23.- ISBN 90 6617 190 1 **************************************************************** =2E......................ALSO STILL AVAILABLE..................... =2E.............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 M=B8nker 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_ organised with Interfacing Realities as its theme. **************************************************************** 17x24cm, 72 pages, full color, bilingual (Dutch-English), retail price approx. US$ 17.- ISBN 90 6617 183 9 **************************************************************** to order, contact: V2_Archief [email protected] snailmailaddress: Postbus 19049 3001 BA Rotterdam The Netherlands T: +31.10.404 6427 =46: +31.10.412 8562 e-mail: [email protected] URL: http://www.v2.nl/Archief VAT: NL 96.89.102.B.01 **************************************************************** ......................................................6 >From [email protected] Tue Feb 17 10:24:05 1998 Received: from sam.comms.unsw.EDU.AU (sam.comms.unsw.EDU.AU [149.171.96.20]) by basis.Desk.nl (8.8.5/8.6.9) with ESMTP id KAA07082 for <[email protected]>; Tue, 17 Feb 1998 10:24:01 +0100 From: [email protected] Received: from default ([203.61.218.152]) by sam.comms.unsw.EDU.AU (8.8.8/8.7.5.kenso-central) with SMTP id UAA18564 for <[email protected]>; Tue, 17 Feb 1998 20:28:42 +1100 (EST) Message-Id: <[email protected]> X-Sender: [email protected] X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Light Version 3.0.3 (32) Date: Tue, 17 Feb 1998 18:01:43 +1100 To: [email protected] Subject: australian landscape painting: 1995 Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" australian landscape painting: 1995 off my face on the inner swell of the valley: looking across at the land undulating and the plastic trees. folding: i wonder what hides in the troughs. built a control tower for twig radio - broadcasting out and down. can't catch any signals on my scanner see. it's easy here - it's nowhere but now here. there's no two levels through which to flux - the dry language verses a wet song. somewhere i'm a bridge builder but not here. here is now and the blue hills and the fire. i am turpentine snow-shoes and the earth is dry - the twigs are dry. it snaps - releases a fine spray of dust. snap_&_release and reverb as the dust and the moment beyond themselves and disperses into the field. volition? wind? two pieces of bark, one in each hand and two pieces of log, one in each hand and bragging across the paddock through the trees at an even pace to come home and play with the chainsaw. sure work up a sweat with those things. _____________________________________________ Anti-Destination Society PO Box 950, Darlinghurst NSW 2010, Australia. world.net/~laudanum/ world.net/~laudanum/walltalk/ world.net/~zina/ (wip) irational.org/zina/ (wip) 7...................................................... Date: Tue, 17 Feb 1998 11:26:18 -0500 (EST) To: [email protected] From: Don Weightman <[email protected]> Subject: Last call for reading group on technical standards This is a follow up to an earlier announcement of a reading group on legal/policy, economic and strategic dimensions of technical compatibility standards. Readings will include materials ranging from the economics of networks and the (antitrust) effects of standards on high tech markets -- viz US v. Microsoft -- to comparative and historical studies on technological change. The readings will come from Phil Agre's graduate seminar syllabus, from technical journals and scholarly anthologies, some of which are hard to come by. I have a complete set (1000 pages) in hard copy -- and hope to be able to help (costs to be reimbursed) people who have difficulty finding materials on their own. The syllabus is still available by email from me for anyone who wants it. There will be a "live" version, probably meeting in downtown Washington DC on weekend afternoons. Several people from all over have expressed interest in an on-line version, and offered resources. Looks like there will be an email list, or a Web bulletin board, or maybe both. Details to follow to interested people. Feel free to recirculate this message wherever there might be interest & to contact me at the phone number or email address in my .sig below. Apologies for the cross-posting (to: dccp, cybertelecom, cyberia, nettime). Don 202 544-1458 ............................................. Don Donald Weightman dweightman@ radix.net (day) [email protected] (evenings & recreation) ........8.............................................. Date: Sun, 15 Feb 1998 00:37:41 -0500 From: Paul Kneisel <[email protected]> Subject: Anti-fascist news groups forming on the net I wrote you a year ago about defending Shel Epstein at Northwestern University after Shel got in trouble challenging the notorious Holocaust Revisionist Arthur Butz. I am writing you now about three anti-fascist news groups several of us are trying to form on the net. The groups are really very "plain vanilla" anti-fascist ones, designed to be open to input from many different types of people with different backgrounds and politics. You can read the definition of the groups from the bureaucratically-worded document we had to submit. This is at <http://www.anti-fascism.org>. You can also see a partial list of our endorsers there. To create the groups we need to win a vote by a 2/3 majority. That means that we need two pro-tolerance votes for every bigot and cybernazi who votes against the groups. To get your ballot and a formal description of the groups you need to send e-mail to "[email protected]" saying "Please send soc.politics.anti-fascism CFV". The voting ends on 20 February so we hope you can write as soon as possible. The defeat of an earlier cybernazi organizing attempt to create the news group <rec.music.white-power> was a massive victory for the forces opposing bigotry and hate-speech on the net. The success of the anti-fascist news groups can be an even greater victory. But we need your support in this matter. We tried to anticipate questions and provide answers at our new web site <http://www.anti-fascism.org>. We also have more information stored there on the groups and the opposition to them. -- tallpaul PS: Should you want to read the 1000-post flamefest that's greeted us during the net discussion, almost all of it is up on my ftp site: <ftp://ftp.nyct.net/pub/users/tallpaul/discuss/spaf/> ................9...................................... Date: Wed, 18 Feb 1998 16:52:20 +1100 (EST) X-Sender: [email protected] Mime-Version: 1.0 To: "Recipient.List.Suppressed":;@xs4all.nl From: ARTSPACE Sydney <[email protected]> Subject: ANNOUNCEMENT: Launch of Digital Media Studio at Metro TV X-Mime-Autoconverted: from quoted-printable to 8bit by maildrop.xs4all.nl id HAA15780 X-Pop-Info: 00003417 00000090 Sender: [email protected] You are invited to the launch of Sydney's first open access Digital Media Studio at Metro Television on Friday 27 February at 10.30-11.30am. Sandra Nori, NSW Government Parliamentary Secretary for small business will speak at the launch which will also include screening of recent web projects created at the studio during the Digital Media Summer School. For the past 15 years, Metro Television has worked at the grass roots level to discover, train and develop talent in the screen arts. Our Digital Studio is dedicated to the development of next generation digital skills by new and emerging screen practitioners. Located in Paddington in central Sydney the Digital Media Studio is equipped with ten state of the art, high speed computers with the latest design and imaging software for video, multimedia and world wide web production. Projects already utilising the digital studio include the Metro/Australian Centre for Photography Summer School in Digital Media Production for the Web, the AFTRS/NIDA Byte Sized Theatre web initiative and the LOUD Youth Media Arts Festival. In February 1998 a conference for screenwriters on interactive storytelling hosted by the Australian Writers Guild will be held in the Studio. >From 1998 Metro is running accredited courses in Interactive Multimedia, Digital Video and Audio, 2D Animation and Digital Imaging. The studio will also host multimedia industry traineeships. The digital studio is located in Metro's current premises at the Sydney Film Centre in the Paddington Town Hall at the corner of Oatley Rd & Oxford St, Paddington. RSVP for launch by Wednesday 25 February to Fiona Weir on ph: 02 9361 5318 All press and media enquiries to Metro's New Media Manager Peter Giles: 0417 454 899 or email: [email protected] Metro's Digital Media Studio is supported by State and Regional Development NSW and the Australian Film Commission. Peter Giles Facilities/New Media ____________________________________________________ Metro promotes a strong, independent screen culture which is innovative, representative and diverse. Metro Television, Sydney Film Centre, Paddington Town Hall, PO Box 299, Paddington, NSW, 2021. Ph: 612 9361 5318, Fax: 612 9361 5320. On the web: http://www.home.aone.net.au/metro ___________________ Please contact Artspace: - If you wish to be removed from our mailing list or if you are receiving this message more than once - If you know of other people who would like to be advised about our upcoming events and exhibitions - If you would like announcements sent to an alternative address - To let us know about your programs, events and exhibitions - For further information Please forward this message to other interested people, organisations and mailing lists (it currently goes to acam-l and [email protected]). Many Thanks ______________________________ Artspace The Gunnery 43 - 51 Cowper Wharf Road Woolloomooloo NSW 2011 Australia tel +61 2 9368 1899 fax +61 2 9368 1705 e-mail [email protected] http://www.artspace.org.au/ http://203.35.148.178/ http://www.culture.com.au/scan/artspace/ Director: Nicholas Tsoutas Acting Administrator: Kristen Elsby Acting Curatorial Assistant: Helen Hyatt-Johnston ..........................10........................... Mime-Version: 1.0 Date: Wed, 18 Feb 1998 17:11:06 +0930 To: (Recipient list suppressed) From: [email protected] (Australian Network for Art & Technology) Subject: F O L D B A C K X-Mime-Autoconverted: from quoted-printable to 8bit by maildrop.xs4all.nl id IAA26155 X-Pop-Info: 00004910 00000095 Sender: [email protected] X-Mime-Autoconverted: from 8bit to quoted-printable by smtp1.xs4all.nl id JAA01226 The Australian Network for Art and Technology in association with the Telstra Adelaide Festival presents: ********************** F O L D B A C K ********************** http://www.anat.org.au/foldback f o r u m ** e x h i b i t i o n ** s a t e l l i t e s ** t o u r March 8 1998 Ngapartji Multimedia Centre, 211 Rundle Street, Adelaide 12pm - 8pm $10 / $15 This year's Adelaide Festival will be the site of a celebration of some of Australia's most dynamic new media artists. The Australian Network for Art and Technology (ANAT) in association with the Telstra Adelaide Festival will present a day long forum on media, sound and screen culture celebrating the tenth anniversary of ANAT's existence as Australia's peak network for artists working with technology. FOLDBACK is a transmedia event looping in upon the memories and histories of ANAT artists, featuring real-time performances by flesh and data bodies. Taking place on March 8, the FOLDBACK forum will form a bridge between the themes explored at Writers' Week and Artists' Week, drawing connections between the often divergent cultures of art, writing and sound. Forming a living biography of ANAT's past and present, all the participants of FOLDBACK work in cross disciplinary ways, dispelling the assumption that media art belongs only in a visual art context. Creating resonances and linkages across cultures and sub-cultures FOLDBACK uses real and virtual media to bring together contributors of some of ANAT's most successful projects of recent times. Keynote speaker, renowned cyberwriter and web publisher MARK AMERIKA (USA) <http://www.altx.com> will interweave electronic writers, JOSEPHINE WILSON (Perth) and LINDA CARROLI (Brisbane) <http://va.com.au/ensemble/water> into a presentation of where the digerati meets the literati. Also presenting at the exhibition and forum is artist and writer, LINDA DEMENT, who explores the notion of 'the monstrous feminine' through confronting and poignant multimedia pieces, and nervous_objects <http://no.va.com.au>, the artists collective born at the 1997 ANAT National Summer School, who utilise the internet as a performance forum, illustrating the idiosyncrasies of online collaboration. Cyberpoet KOMNINOS ZERVOS <http://student.uq.edu.au/~s271502/>, direct from Artec in the UK, will perform a selection of his underground cyberpoetry, and sound artist STEVIE WISHART, traversing the unlikely nexus between medieval and contemporary musics, will perform with her famous hurdy-gurdy. Electronic music collective, Z�NAR RECORDINGS <http://www.culture.com.au/zonar>will transform FOLDBACK into feedback with techno experimenta to close the day. An exhibition, on display at Ngapartji Multimedia Centre during the forum and throughout Artists' Week will provide an opportunity to delve deeper into some of the memorable work developed by artists through ANAT's programs of support. A specially commissioned exhibition interface by Adelaide based designers inSECT 22, will explore the grey area between art, technology, minds and machines. A number of satellite events, scanning the contemporary face of electrosonic culture will focus attention on the often marginalised medium of sound art. In a mini-festival of sound and technology, noise and signal, the FOLDBACK satellites ensure a holistic incorporation of soundculture into the milieu of the "festival city". This unique event also features a tour by Mark Amerika, placing FOLDBACK in a national context. Presenting at the Perth Institute for Contemporary Art (PICA) on March 18 with writers Josephine Wilson and Terri-ann White, Amerika will address the frictions between hard and soft publishing. On March 21 he will give a presentation at The Performance Space in Sydney, before joining writer Linda Carolli at the Institute for Modern Art in Brisbane on 24th March. For further information or interviews, please contact: Amanda McDonald Crowley or Honor Harger ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ >FROM THE DESK OF THE AUSTRALIAN NETWORK FOR ART AND TECHNOLOGY [email protected] postal address: PO Box 8029 Hindley Street, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia web address: http://www.anat.org.au/ telephone: +61 (0)8-8231-9037 fax: +61 (0)8-8211-7323 Director: Amanda McDonald Crowley (tel: 0419 829 313) Administration & Information Officer: Honor Harger Web & Technical Officer: Martin Thompson Memberships: $A10 (unwaged), $A20 (waged), $A40 (institutions) ANAT receives support from The Australia Council, the Federal Government's arts funding and advisory body ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: [email protected]