oliver grau on Tue, 9 Sep 2003 11:15:52 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[rohrpost] When New Media Was New |
When New Media Was New Despite a history stretching back to the 1950s, art made using what are now called new media has been neglected by the mainstream art world. This series of talks and seminars looks at the history of new media art from experiments with computer art in the 1950s and 60s to the emergence of net art in the 1990s. It features three curators/critics who have pioneered and supported new media art over the last forty years: Jasia Reichardt, Christiane Paul and Peter Weibel. The aim is look at landmark works and exhibitions in the field of computer art, digital and electronic media, and internet art, and discuss their relationships with mainstream art practice and with technological developments in the wider world. In conjunction with the three talks, Tate Modern is running a seminar series on the same topic. Reichardt, Paul and Weibel will each lead a session focusing on the themes of Cybernetics, Telematics and Performance respectively themes that have been central to their work. The seminars will also feature contributions from other leading figures involved in the development of new media art today. When New Media Was New is organised and moderated by Charlie Gere (Birkbeck College), author of Digital Culture (Reaktion Book, 2002). It is a collaboration between Tate Modern Interpretation and Education and the School of History of Art, Film and Visual Media at Birkbeck College, and has been made possible by an AHRB 'Changing Places' research grant. THE TALKS Starr Auditorium, Tate Modern 240 places Tuesdays 30 Sept, 14 and 28 Oct. Start 18.30, ends approx 20.00 Drinks reception Tickets £5 (£3 concs) each event Tues 30 Sept. Jasia Reichardt Writer and curator Jasia Reichardt was Assistant Director of the ICA (1963-71) and Director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery (1974-76). She has taught at the Architectural Association and elsewhere and published widely. She is interested in art that encroaches on other fields: science, music and literature, and has spent many years following up the connections between art and technology. Among her exhibitions staged in Britain the best known is Cybernetic Serendipity (1968), a landmark show about the computer and the arts. In recent years she has spent considerable time working in Japan. Tues 14 Oct. Christiane Paul Christiane Paul is the Adjunct Curator of New Media Arts at the Whitney Museum of American Art and the director of Intelligent Agent, a service organization and information resource dedicated to digital art. She has written extensively on new media arts, including Digital Art (2003). She teaches in the MFA computer art department at the School of Visual Arts in New York and has lectured internationally on art and technology, while organising a number of shows of new media art in the States and elsewhere. She also runs Artport, the Whitney Museum's online portal to Internet art. Tues 28 Oct. Peter Weibel Peter Weibel has been head of the ZKM_Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe since 1999. Besides his activities as artist and curator, his publications about art and media theory earned him international renown. Since 1976 he has lectured widely at universities and academies in Europe and the US. After heading the digital arts laboratory at New York University, he founded the Institute of New Media at the Städelschule in Frankfurt-on-Main in 1989. He was in charge of the Ars Electronica festival in Linz as artistic consultant and later artistic director (1986-95), and has commissioned the Austrian pavilions at the Venice Biennale. THE SEMINAR SERIES McAulay Studio B, Tate Modern 40 places Wednesdays 1, 15 and 29 Oct 14.00-17.00 Tickets £45 (£30 concs), includes admission to all three Tuesday talks Wed 1 Oct. CYBERNETICS Paul Brown, artist and Senior Research Fellow for the AHRB-funded Computer Arts, Contexts, Histories, etc& (CACHe) project, studying early British computer art, in the School of History of Art, Film and Visual Media, Birkbeck College, and Helen Sloan, Director of Southern Collaborative Arts Network (SCAN), will join Jasia Reichardt and Charlie Gere for a seminar on questions arising from her talk. Wed 15 Oct. TELEMATICS Giles Lane, founder and director of Proboscis and Associate Research Fellow of MEDIA@LSE in the London School of Economics, and Josephine Berry, an editor of Mute, a cultural politics and technology magazine, and author of a PhD in site-specific art on the net, will join Christiane Paul and Charlie Gere for a seminar on questions arising from her talk. Wed 29 Oct. PERFORMANCE Hannah Redler, curator at the Science Museum, and Sarah Cook, independent new media curator and co-editor of the Curatorial Resource for Upstart Media Bliss (CRUMB) website and listserv, will join Peter Weibel and Charlie Gere for a seminar on questions arising from his talk. ------------------------------------------------------- rohrpost - deutschsprachige Liste zur Kultur digitaler Medien und Netze Archiv: http://www.nettime.org/rohrpost http://post.openoffice.de/pipermail/rohrpost/ Ent/Subskribieren: http://post.openoffice.de/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/rohrpost/