Robert Atkins on Wed, 26 Feb 2003 02:59:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Robert Atkins on AntiWar and AIDS Activism, Embodiment andElectronic Communication |
Eye/I Witness: AIDS and Digital Art Activism Robert Atkins, Writer, NYC The Art, Technology, and Culture Colloquium Mon, 3 Mar, 7:30-9:30pm: UC Berkeley, Location: 160 Kroeber Hall All ATC Lectures are free and open to the public. As the global, anti-war demonstrations of mid-February remind us, progressive political impulses are sometimes most effectively expressed by taking to the streets. This, of course, taps into a central, electronic-era issue; that is, the efficacy and desirability of embodied versus remote action. When it comes to political activism, where do artists fit in? New forms of electronic activism from pioneering groups including RTMark and Electronic Disturbance Theatres have proved both inspiring and problematic--and rarely contextualized within the overlapping realms of mass media, art and activism. This lecture will analalyze the remarkably effective role artists played in ameliorating the AIDS crisis in the US, while advancing innovative forms of art and strategies for distribution that included culture jamming, agitprop and institutional infiltration. The author asserts that a rare confluence of historical factors resulted in the production of the most influential body of public and "private" art in American history. What lessons might be learned from artists' practices of just 10-15 years ago that might be applied today? Or has the Internet so profoundly altered the nature of mass media that they are already irrelevant? The author intends to raise crucial cultural and artistic questions that have been ignored in the rift between discourses separating electronic and non-electronic art, and in the cultural responses to 9/11 at a moment when dissent has been demonized and civil liberties threatened. -- Robert Atkins <www.robertatkins.net> is a bi-coastal art art historian, activist and writer. The initiator of 911--The September 11 Project: Cultural Intervention in Civic Society, he is also a co-founder of Visual AIDS, the creators of Day Without Art and the Red Ribbon. He has taught at numerous universities and art schools; mosty recently at the Rhode Island School of Design and the University of Michigan. The award-winning author of books including ArtSpeak: A Guide to Contemporary Ideas, Movements and Buzzwords and From Media to Metaphor: Art About AIDS, he is a former columnist for the Village Voice, who has written for more than 100 publications throughout the world. An anthology of his work, Eye/I Witness: Art Writing as Activism, Criticism & Reportage, is forthcoming. Atkins is a Fellow at the STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University, former media-arts editor for The Media Channel <www.mediachannel.org>, and editor/producer of Artery: The AIDS-Arts Forum <www.artistswithaids.org/artery>. His interests in hybrid art, technology and mass media long predate the web and resulted in exhibitions at far-flung venues including Between Science and Fiction (which he organized for the Sao Paulo Biennial), Peter D'Agostino: Twenty Years of Intervention and Interactivity (for Lehman College Art Gallery in New York), and Fusion! Artists in a Research Setting (for Carnegie Mellon University). A pioneering chronicler of the online art world (his 1995 cover story for Art in America, "The Art World (& I) Go On Line," was the first of its kind), he founded, in 1995, the City University of New York-sponsored TalkBack! A Forum for Critical Discourse <http://talkback.lehman.cuny.edu/tb>, among the first online journals about online art and cyber-culture anywhere. From 1996-98, he served as vice president and editor-in-chief of the Arts Technology Entertainment Network, a New York Times start-up company producing convergence arts programming for the Internet and cable TV. ********************************************************************** The ATC Colloquium continues our partnership with the Berkeley Art Museum and the Walker Art Center to present online video of ATC talks, available both in QuickTime (highlights) or MP3 audio. For links and the full 2002-2003 series schedule, please see: www.ieor.berkeley.edu/~goldberg/lecs/ ********************************************************************** _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold