Cornelia Sollfrank on Wed, 21 Nov 2001 10:51:53 +0100 (CET) |
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[oldboys] Kingdom of Piracy <KOP> - call for submissions |
Kingdom of Piracy <KOP> Online Exhibition http://kop.adac.com.tw Acer Digital Art Center, Taiwan Joint Curation: Shu Lea Cheang, Armin Medosch, Yukiko Shikata Pilot launch: december , 2001 Onsite exhibition: March, ArtFuture2002 Kingdom of Piracy <KOP> is an online, open work space which explores piracy as the net's ultimate art form. Hosted by the Acer Digital Art Center [ADAC] in Taiwan as part of ArtFuture 2002, [KOP] will include links, objects, ideas, software, commissioned artists' projects, critical writing and online streaming media events. The exhibition will launch a pilot website in December 2001, and during the following three months the project's curators will begin a process of commissioning projects and written work. While remaining an online exhibition, the totality of the workspace will be presented on site in ArtFuture 2002, to be held in Taiwan in March. An edition of all works commissioned will be kept on the ADAC server as an open-ended online exhibition, whilst artists and authors will remain sole copyright owners of their works. With the increasing shift towards an immaterial or 'weightless' economy, the concept of intellectual property rights has become one of the key battle lines of our times. IP is at the core of big industries from IT (including hardware and software) to entertainment (music, film and books) to pharmaceuticals and biotech. A handful of high profile cases such as Napster, DeCSS (DVD content encryption system), SDMI and the Russian eBook hacker recently arrested in the US have highlighted this battle. The idea that IP rights should be rigidly enforced around the world through patent and anti-piracy laws is hotly contested by a growing alliance of researchers, open source developers, crackers and hackers, artists and intellectuals. The patent law applied on plants, seeds and other natural resources is further contested as biopiracy by environmentalists. The purpose of Kingdom of Piracy <KOP> is to consider the law and order provisions surrounding intellectual property in the context of geographical and cultural borders, and to examine the changes and challenges presented by information technology. The concept of intellectual property rights has no history in Asia. The recent show destruction of millions of pirated CDs and DVDs in China, a preliminary to the country's entry into the WTO, does not change the fact that much of the Asian continent is still operating completely on its own terms. The burst bubble of dot-commerce in the early 21st century has plunged Taiwan and Asia's electronic supply industries into recession, keeping the divide between Western and Eastern economies as wide as ever. The Kingdom of Piracy will consider this digital divide, and its sustaining strategies, from a global perspective. Theorist Arthur Kroker speculated in 1994 about 'digital abundance', imagining Taiwan as a tetra-gigabyte data heaven, 'the largest data storage dump in the virtual world' (ctheory.net). <KOP> envisions a virtual free state outside of geography, time, corporate power and sovereignty; a decentralised, fragmented, immanent entity in which everyone can be an autonomous agent. The Kingdom of Piracy is everywhere: on the fringes and in the mainstream high-tech economies, from Asia to Eastern Europe to the data havens of Sealand and hackers' garages in Silicon Valley. The digital commons is bathing in millions of MP3s and an endless supply of warez. Codes for appropriation, cut-and-paste, replication, sampling and remixing have long been established as artistic practice. <KOP> challenges artists, writers and practitioners to use these techniques to question, contribute to, analyse and otherwise address this growing Kingdom. It also asks them to become intimately involved in the processes of the Kingdom itself, a place in which all productions are part of an innately collaborative, derivative and intimately interconnected environment of intellectual 'properties'. Sponsored by Taiwan's Acer Group and hosted by Acer's Digital Art Center server, Kingdom of Piracy invites allied crews of crackers and artists to plug into the supply lines of digital abundance. The <KOP>site will be an active public sphere for global data trafficking, descrambling and jamming. Commissioned works are encouraged to engage in acts of piracy for the causes of intellectual enhancement and poetic intervention. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::"A smart artist makes the machine do the work"::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::: [net.art generator]: http://www.obn.org/generator : :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :Cornelia Sollfrank | Rutschbahn 37 | 20146 Hamburg | Germany :::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::+49-(0)40-4104937:::mobile:+49-(0)173-6173348: ** distributed via <oldboys list>: no commercial use without permission ** <oldboys list> is an unmoderated mailing list for global cyberfeminism ** to remove your address from the list, send a message to: <[email protected]> ** more info: send mail to: [email protected] and/or <[email protected]> ** archive: http://www.nettime.org/oldboys ** contact: [email protected] ** www.obn.org