Melinda Klayman on Thu, 4 Sep 2003 16:34:26 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> LEONARDO:OLATS CO-SPONSORS SYMPOSIUM ON ZERO GRAVITY ART |
Dear Leonardo Colleagues I would like to bring to your attention this event co sponsored by Leonado/OLATS LEONARDO:OLATS CO-SPONSORS SYMPOSIUM ON ZERO GRAVITY ART IN PARIS, FRANCE OCT 4, 5 2003 Symposium Art &and Zero Gravity http://www.olats.org Visibility – Legibility of Space Art. Art and Zero Gravity: The Experience of Parabolic Flights October 4th and 5th 2003 International Festival @rt Outsiders Maison Européenne de la Photographie 5/7 rue de Fourcy 75004 Paris Métro : Saint-Paul Curated by Annick Bureaud, the Visibility – Legibility of Space Art. Art and Zero Gravity: The Experience of Parabolic Flights symposium is a joint project between the @rt Outsiders International Festival (http://www.art-outsiders.com) and Leonardo/Olats (http://www.olats.org). The Visibility – Legibility of Space Art. Art and Zero Gravity: The Experience of Parabolic Flights symposium proposes to: - present the details of parabolic flights and consider the main issues outside of their spectacular nature; - specify their different roles within the creative process. Often perceived as the space where creation takes place (site of performance and exhibition), parabolic flights are first and foremost the space of experimentation (a “studio” or creative workshop) as well as the material for creation; - conduct a preliminary aesthetic analysis of the works: what is their form, what do they say, how do they relate to contemporary art and to techno-scientific art in general, in what way are they “informed” by weightlessness and the environment that constitutes the flight? etc.; - highlight the importance of these works within a broader artistic process; - raise questions regarding the “visibility” and “legibility” of the work, to question art critic. This symposium gathers artists, theorists as well as parabolic flight specialists. Alex Adriaansens, director V2, Rotterdam Marcel.li Antunez Roca, artist, Barcelona Kitsou Dubois, artist, Paris Kodwo Eshun, Anjalika Sagar, Richard Couzins, artists, London Vadim Fishkin, artist, Ljubljana/Moscow Flow Motion (Anna Piva & Edward George), artists, London Jean-Pierre Haigneré, spationaut, Paris Nicola Triscott & Rob LaFrenais, Arts Catalyst, London Roger Malina, astronomer, director of Leonardo, Marseille Takuro Osaka, artist, Tokyo Marko Peljhan, artist, director Projekt Atol, Ljubjana Frank Pietronigro, artist, San Francisco Thierry Pozzo, researcher, Dijon Mikhail Ryklin, philosopher, Moscow, Denis Thierion, parabolic flight director, CNES, Toulouse Louise K. Wilson, artist, London Whether it is in the scientific, commercial or artistic field, space exploration introduces extremely diverse practices. This year, the Art Outsiders International Festival 2003 proposes to investigate some of these practices within the world of contemporary art. The sensation of weightlessness, of floating, flying, freely in three dimensions, of holding still without support and without fear of falling, is one of the more tenacious dreams, desires, fantasies, and surely one of the chief reasons human beings succumb to the urge to venture outside of their native planet. For many artists, creating work in, with, for, or about this condition of zero gravity is an artistic re-examination extending far beyond the dream. With the exception of a few cosmonauts or astronauts who are also painters, such as the Russian Alexei Leonov, to this day no artist has been able to live weightlessness in a durable fashion aboard a space station or the American shuttle. On Earth, the parabolic flight remains the sole means of experiencing this unique condition. In a parabolic flight, a specially equipped plane describes a series of parabolas in the air (bell-shaped curves with a 45° angle). In the climbing phase, gravity goes from 1 G. (normal terrestrial gravity) to 2 G. for 20 seconds before attaining the weightless phase at the top of the curve for approximately 25 seconds. During the descent phase of the flight, the plane returns to the 2 G. phase for roughly 20 seconds. The cycle is repeated. Thus, the parabolic flight can be described as a succession of very short periods (2 G. - 0 G. - 2 G. - 1 G) constituting a rather exceptional environment, where the experience of weightlessness is framed by moments of 2 G. Although access to parabolic flights remains a challenge for artists, to date 22 have been able to work with and within their unique environment. Thus, we have a very diverse body of work and projects at our disposal (ranging from dance to performance, sculpture, painting, sound/music, video, etc.) by artists from different artistic horizons and diverse cultures (France, Japan, Spain, Russia, United States, Great Britain, etc…). Within the category of space art, creation during parabolic flights constitutes a comprehensive subgroup that defines a common base from which to conduct an artistic and aesthetic analysis of these practices. This is the challenge of this symposium. -- Melinda Klayman Leonardo/ISAST Director of Development and Communications www.leonardo.info Receive your FREE subscription to the Leonardo Electronic Almanac e-mail digest at http://mitpress.mit.edu/lea/e-mail -- just provide your email address, name, and password, and check off that you'd like to be added to the Leonardo Electronic Almanac monthly e-mail list to keep on top of the latest news in the Leonardo community. # 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