the thing newsletter on Sat, 9 Mar 2002 18:31:57 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> thing.news _march 2002 |
thing.news contents 1_thing.review 2_thing.threads 3_thing.art 4_thing.rumors 5_thing.complaints 6_thing.recommends 7_thing.politics 8_thing.future ________________________________________________ 1_thing.review Loop - PS1 Contemporary Art Center by Brian Boucher - 02/22/2002 She: "Did you ever get déjà vu?" He: "Didn't you just ask me that?" In Harold Ramis' 1993 film Groundhog Day, Bill Murray plays a small-time weatherman with big dreams and a big chip on his shoulder who awakens each day to find himself stuck in small-town western Pennsylvania on Groundhog Day--a nightmare playing itself out again and again. Testifying to the film's success, its title has become a sort of shorthand for references to eternal repetition-- Bill Murray as the modern Sisyphus. Murray's character, though, finds he can take advantage of the situation by correcting his mistakes, improving his performance each day, gradually growing enough so that he is released from the loop. Like Murray's character, Klaus Biesenbach, PS1's Chief Curator, has found a way to make eternal repetition productive, varied, edifying, and in no way boring. The loop is everywhere today, the exhibition didactics suggested, along with the radically different conceptions of time and progress to which it gives rise. The loop appears in minimalist and electronic music in the form of looped samples; Biesenbach further suggests that constant media repetition as well as science's modification of aging and the mapping of the gene are part of the same broad phenomenon. Opening in Germany during the second week of September, when the media was endlessly repeating horrific images of destruction, an exhibition based in compulsive repetition had a particular currency. http://bbs.thing.net [review] _________________________________________________ 2_thing.thread [new_thing.thread ::undercurrents::] A forum about the interrelations of cyberfeminism, new technologies and globalization. Moderators: Irina Aristahrkova, Maria Fernandez, Coco Fusco and Faith Wilding. "I think you also do understand that no one here is trying to suggest that we should not acknowledge the importance of code to computerized culture, or that we should lapse into technophobia. The points that some, including myself are trying to make have to do with technocentrism, technodeterminism and technoformalism. By this I mean that alt.net culture on lists like nettime has defined its agenda as technocentric - open source code, ownership of domain names, on-line surveillance and so on. The battle for free expression is thus equated with a struggle against state and corporate control of the internet and software, and with the maintenance of the non-profit organizations that sustain the protagonists of these struggles. It creates a sense of alt.net culture as a dispersed tribe of freedom fighters pitted against big bad government and Microsoft which is quite romantic and heroic but not exactly accurate. There are good reasons to be engaged with these issues, but there are even better reasons to question why they are the ONLY ones that are allowed to come to the surface in debate after debate, and to reflect on how the framing of these issues presupposes that the digital commons is beyond race." _from a recent posting on ::undercurrents:: http://bbs.thing.net [threads] ______________________________________________ 3_thing.art SERVICE2000_7/29 by Nick Crowe was originally shown during June and July 2000 and consisted of 29 web sites built for a range of commercial and publicly funded London galleries. The work originated from a chance discovery that many galleries had either failed to register their own domain names, or had only registered on a single variant on their name - leaving a stock of other usable names readily available. What ensued was a brief period of not-for-profit cybersquatting during which times the SERVICE2000 sites functioned as the unofficial web presence of the London art world. http://galleries.thing.net/uk/s2k ______________________________________________ 4_thing.rumors An exhibition at the Whitney Independent Study Program bringing together artists working on the politics of globalization. Thus far works by Martha Rosler, Fatimah Tuggar, Alex Rivera, Wolfgang Staehle, Allan Sekula among others are under consideration. The show will take place at the CUNY Graduate Center. The [Next 5 Minutes 4] will not only take place in Amsterdam - but, become a distributed event across the globe. They are looking at host sites in North and South America, India and in the Middle East. http://www.n4m.org ______________________________________________ 5_thing.complaints Dear All, This is a little note to update our friends and colleagues about our recent happenings. Yesterday in a Zurich court etoy withdrew the complaint that demanded a preliminary injunction against the publication of our book 'Leaving Reality Behind: Inside the Battle for the soul of the Internet' which is due to published in the UK in May 2002. To us this litigation seemed absurd as etoy were once the defenders of freedom of expression and were now trying to gag us, the authors of a book which included their story and would take it to a wider audience. etoy had filed their complaint on January 16th claiming that the parts of the manuscript that etoy had read were full of 'massive defamations' against the etoy.VENTURE association and its members Zai, Gramazio and Kubli. They claimed that we had described etoy as a 'dark-ideas- embracing-sect' which deliberately uses allusions to Hitler. They even went so far as to pretend that we had made etoy out to be 'a poor imitation of a Taliban in Europe' by ascribing to the group elements such as 'totalitarian power', 'oppression of divergent behaviour', 'uniforms' and 'exclusion of joy of life, such as joy, sex etc.' Huh? At times the complaint verged on the comic as when etoy compared their fame amongst the Internet generation to that of the Beatles. For us the complaint was astonishing because etoy initially supported the project and had taken a substantial amount of money for interviews, access to their archive and rights to use their images. In the final stages of the book production they had failed to send us in a timely manner written comments about the manuscript in a process we had previously agreed upon, they had not attended a meeting that we had invited them to with our publisher, and Douglas Rushkoff one of their one-time supporters had described our depiction of them as 'fair'. Instead of an informal process we (and they) were forced to spend tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees and the costs of the court. Through the nine hour court hearing etoy took it all very seriously. This performance seemed to have no artistic intention, and lacked the irony and wit of some of their previous interventions. As an etoy shareholder and former member of the group Esposto who had come along to support us said: 'It seems like a waste of shareholder's money.' In the end they withdrew their complaint because it was obviously futile to go on. For us it seemed like a miserable coda to what had been at times a brilliant and insightful art project. Thanks for your continuous support Adam Wishart and Regula Bochsler [not from etoy.com] http://www.etoy.com ______________________________________________ 6_thing.recommends After two critically acclaimed NY performances, e-Xplo returns to the streets of the city with their latest bus project, Picnolepsy: Picnolepsy. (noun. from the Greek, picnos: frequent). For the picnoleptic, nothing has happened, the missing time never existed. Erin McGonigle and Heimo Lattner in collaboration with Rene Gabri will perform electroacoustic music live on a bus situating Manhattan as the backdrop for an investigation using attenuated adaptations of sound and text. This tour will be one weekend only. So book early! e-Xplo invites you to what should be an unforgettable tour of the city. Dates: Friday March 22nd, and Saturday 23rd Time: Friday and Saturday 7:30 PM and 9:30 PM Location: 16 Beaver Street, NY NY 10004 Ticket Prices General Tickets 20$ / Reduced 15$ Phone RSVP 866.248.7671 xt. 8114 http://www.e-Xplo.org "I just wanted to use the Whitney Biennial as a free advertisement." _Miltos Manetas WhitneyBiennial.com is online now! The site contains 120 digital art works from 80 contributors. http://WhitneyBiennial.com ______________________________________________ 7_thing.politics John Perry Barlow, Paul Garrin and Christine Wang talk about ICANN (a/k/a the WTO of the Internet) and ICANN's plan to disenfranchise the public from the governance of the Internet. Barlow, Garrin, and Wang speak out in support of reclaiming public space on the Internet and what we all can do to assure democracy, free speech and open access to the digital media. http://FreeTheMedia.org/radio _________________________________________ 8_thing.future Prevent Nanotech-based Terrorism In one of his weekly columns on technology and public policy for _Tech Central Station_, University of Tennessee law professor and Foresight.org Director Glenn Reynolds stated that 2001 "was the year that people started to get serious about the promises and dangers of nanotechnology". And he concludes: "Where this powerful technology is concerned, a nanogram of prevention is worth a kilogram of cure. Let's start thinking about nanoterrorism now, while we have the luxury of time. It's a luxury that won't last forever." http://nanodot.org/article.pl?sid=02/01/02/1654253 _______________________________________________ http://bbs.thing.net _______________________________________________ -------------------------------------------------------------------- THE THING NEWSLETTER To unsubscribe send message to majordomo@bbs.thing.net and write "unsubscribe newsletter" in the message body or change your settings at http://bbs.thing.net But then, why would anybody want to do that? -------------------------------------------------------------------- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net