Keith Sanborn on Sat, 18 Jan 2014 05:13:15 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Fwd: [mfalist] More Rotterdam |
Begin forwarded message: From: "Keith J. Sanborn" <ksanborn@Princeton.EDU> Date: January 15, 2014 at 6:20:11 PM EST To: "mfalist@bard.edu mfalist@bard.edu" <mfalist@bard.edu> Subject: [mfalist] More Rotterdam Reply-To: "Keith J. Sanborn" <ksanborn@Princeton.EDU> For any of you who might happen to be in the vicinity, there will be a day-long symposium (10h-16h) on Monday January 27 around the exhibition called Post-Script (in which I have a piece) at the Piet Zwart Institute featuring talks by Rick Prelinger, Pablo Sigg, and yours truly. Here the official press release: Dates: Monday 27th January Doors Open at 10:30 and lectures begin at 11:00 POST SCRIPT A symposium organized by the Piet Zwart Institute, Creating 010 & The 43rd International Film Festival Rotterdam Location: Karel Doormanhof 45 3012GC Rotterdam POST SCRIPT is a symposium exploring contemporary approaches to narrative. Organized within the context of the IFFR, the Master Media Design and Communication programme, in collaboration with Creating 010, has invited significant moving-image artists and filmmakers to talk about their work and strategies of representing stories. Working with new and archival material, montage and found footage, these contemporary practices employ the languages of art, cinema, theatre, documentary and fiction in unexpected ways. Rather than being driven by conventional storytelling or a script, they are often non-linear, fragmentary and rely upon the viewer to lend cohesion and continuity. Gaps are not omissions, but rather choreographed spaces for projection, induced memories, and public participation. In other words, these artists not only test narrative as a variable form, but also expand the notion of spectatorship. Confirmed Speakers: Rick Prelinger is an archivist, writer and filmmaker. He is best known as the founder of the Prelinger Archives, a collection of over 60,000 educational, industrial, and sponsored films acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002. His recent work, No More Road Trips? is a live-performance, interactive film presentation culled from home movies of American car trips and family vacations spanning the 20th century. Like most of his 8mm and Super 8mm source material, Road Trips has no sound: the audience provide real-time audio commentary. Pablo Sigg is a filmmaker and writer based in Mexico City. He has exhibited in venues such as the Museum of the Center for Curatorial Studies, BARD College, Museo de Arte Contempor??nea de Vigo, and Lule?? Art Biennial . He is also author of the books Zarathustra. Estudios nietzscheanos, Georges Bataille: Meditaciones nietzscheanas, and editor of Microhistorias y macromundos 2 and together with Tommy Simoens, Luc Tuymans. Is it Safe? (Phaidon Press). In 2013, his first American solo exhibition, ???The Swedenborg Room??? researched the cinematographic space as a utopian space. Keith Sanborn is a media artist and theorist based in New York. His theoretical work has featured in a range of publications such as Artforum, and books to catalogues published by MoMA, Exit Art, and the San Francisco Cinematheque. His projects have been selected for major surveys, including the Whitney Biennial, and festivals such as OVNI, and the Toronto International Film Festival. His single channel and installation works focus primarily on the re-contextualization and transformation of pre-existing images. # 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: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org