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shea ordahl

Vietnam, a war broadcasted for all to see - 2 views

Reading the Half-Inch Revolution I couldn't help think of the vietnam war and how this was broadcast for a whole nation to view and watch as regular programming. The broadcasted images and videos r...

Collective Conscious technolgy Vietnam

started by shea ordahl on 14 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
c diehl

Rhizome | Net.art and Hypertext - 4 views

shared by c diehl on 14 Feb 14 - No Cached
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    Rhizome, one of the early media art organizations, continues to serve contemporary new media art communities and, importantly, to conserve and archive Internet based artworks. In this collection you'll find a variety of net.art and hypertext fiction projects from the first decade.
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    Here's a more extensive collection on Rhizome: http://rhizome.org/artbase/browse/archived/
John Summerson

Life Imitates Art - 4 views

This piece from The Futurist (a "magazine of forecasts, trends, and ideas about the future") explores the connection between art and the future - specifically, the effects of technology on the worl...

asimov cyborg future technology

started by John Summerson on 30 Jan 14 no follow-up yet
c diehl

net_condition - 4 views

shared by c diehl on 14 Feb 14 - Cached
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    Described by new media artist Alexander Galloway as " simultaneously an introduction to and a retrospective of net art" this turn of the millenium collection of net.art was put together by ZKM, a German art, technology and culture institute dedicated to interdisciplinary and international collaborations.
c diehl

Gallery 9 - Walker Art Center - 8 views

shared by c diehl on 14 Feb 14 - Cached
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    Internet -based art in an online venue, housed on the servers of the 'brick-and-mortar' art institution, the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. Then curator Steve Dietz initiating this collection which remains accessible, an incredible archive of early net.art works.
c diehl

Whitney Museum of American Art: Artport - 6 views

shared by c diehl on 14 Feb 14 - No Cached
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    Net.art collection intiated in 2002 at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Amongst the many artists works you'll find examples of net.art conservation, and questions as to the 'integrity' of the work that accompany such endeavors --- is the artwork compromised if you update the browser plug-ins?
Sarah Hayes

Stolen Pieces - 2 views

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    I followed some links from the net.art year in review reading assigned, clicked around, and found this cool collection. Stolen fragments of famous pieces of art. Although the documentation was of course displayed and shared via web, what connects it to the topic of internet art seems to be the concept of fragments. That though having a piece of rock from a famous piece of art may not be much, when collected together these fragments form a commentary on something bigger, perhaps the absurd "value" Deshamps (for instance) objects are set at.
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    Nice, thanks. Fragmentation is a more tangible idea with which to understand technical aspects of the internet, like 'packet switching'. Related to the abstraction of fragments, there are resonant connections between Performance, Conceptual Art, the push towards 'ephemerality' in the 1960s and the ways in which those ideas resurface with new media and internet art in the 1990s. 10100101110101101.org making that connection explicitly. Please be sure to add the bibliographic citation at the end of your posts.
kbeasley1

RFID Trash Cans - 0 views

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    One example of how objects are slowly turning into spimes, is the addition of RFID into products that consumers use on a daily basis. Baltimore is one of a few cities that have begun distributing trashcans to businesses and individual house holds that contain the id chips. It is the hope that they will be able to collect information that will assess the usage of the cans by the customer, as well as other factors that are useful for creating a positive trash-collecting experience both for the company and the customer. Mark Reutter, Mark. "Inside City Hall: Are you ready for "smart" garbage cans?" Baltimore Brew, November 21, 2013
c diehl

Sentient City Survival Kit - 3 views

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    This is a project that could be categorized as design fiction. The artist/architect Mark Shepard explores the possible ways in which the proliferation of 'sentient cities', urban environments equipped with many, many networked sensing devices, might jeopardize privacy and increase unsolicited data collection. He does this using the affordances of fiction, designing and building functional prototypes for an imagined 'near-future' context. This sort of 'critical making' is a strong supplement to traditional modes of scholarship which Shepard also pursues. Mark Shepard "Sentient City Survival Kit" 2010 http://www.survival.sentientcity.net/info.html Accessed January 25, 2014
Carinne Urrutia

Radical Software - 0 views

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    Radical Software was created in the 1970s by Beryle Korot, Phyllis Gershuny, and Ira Shneider to create a network of video sharing. This site has PDF files of the Eleven issues published and distributed by Radical software between the years 1970 and 1974. The website also provides the history of The Raindance Corporation which was created in 1969 by a radical media activist and artist by the name of Frank Gillette. The general Idea behind Raindance Corporation was to created a collection of works and ideas for "implementing communication tools in the project for social change." The website also discusses in detail the intent of Radical Software and fight towards creating a world of free and accessible information.
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    thanks, this is an excellent example of primary source document, the actual artifact providing visual detail of its historical context that escapes easy translation. This site is equipped with a well organized search and browse function, too!
c diehl

Whole Earth Catalog archive - 0 views

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    Like the old websites accessed through the Wayback machine, this is another great archival resource for research. Primary source documents offer direct reflection of the language and design from a specific point in time, without the inherent filtering of such content through secondary sources. Specifically, like Radical Software, Whole Earth Catalog was a critical tool within the networked countercultures of the 1960s / 70s. Here, you can skim through digitized collection of Whole Earth Catalogs, subsequent "CoEvolution Quarterly" , "Whole Earth Software Catalog" and other pursuits. Identify recurrent patterns along with curious or lesser known topics of these cybernetically inclined thinkers. The site itself is a remediation of the magazine as "evaluation and access device," using popular categories of the original for navigation. "Whole Earth Catalog: Access to Tools and Ideas" Accessed February 2, 2014. http://www.wholeearth.com
clae spratt

Happier Days via the Amorphous Body Study Center - 1 views

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    This is a page I came across whilst frustratedly slogging about on one of those rabbit-hole-look-there-are-so-many-fucking-links-all-over-that-move-and-change-colors-and-shit-aren't-we-so-disruptive-type-sites. It is rather unremarkable in most ways, but I found it a semi-welcome respite from the rest of the site. Like many other sites of this era, it is a web poetry message board of sorts that relies on user generated content, namely semi-anonymous bits'o "creative writing" that are supposedly prompted by way of the writer viewing one of three pairings of images. Some users attempt to narrativise the images to varying degrees of success, and some people write about fucking jars of peanut butter, as in literally humping said jar. Like many such collections of user generated avant-poetry it becomes increasingly difficult to suss out which pieces have an actual considered conceptual core, and which are just word diarrhea. Nevertheless, I found some of them sort of charming. Also of note is that there are mail-to links associated with each writing that are supposedly linked to the writers email account. This seems bizarre in a present where such personal information is closely guarded, hidden from the masses of web-weirdos and spambots.
tlunden

Learning to Love you More - 1 views

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    I began my search by seeing what type Media Arts collection the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art has. It appears SFMOMA has embraced Media arts and has procured and archived a site called "learning to love you more." The site was in operation from 2002-2009. The site issued "assignments" for participants to post on the site. Some of the subjects people were asked to post include, "take a picture of your parents kissing, "photograph a scar and write about it," and "interview someone who has experienced war." There are a total of 70 assignment subjects with a lot of submissions for each topic. "Learning To Love You More." Learning To Love You More. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Feb. 2014.
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    Thanks this is great example of work bridging online / offline space, opening up a participatory platform. This one originated in Portland, I believe, coordinated by Harrell Fletcher and Miranda July
c diehl

Visual Complexity - 0 views

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    One of several excellent online collections of Data Visualization endeavors. Browse the many different categories, keywords, authors and approaches to comprehending 'big data'. Along with aesthetic variation along the metaphorical to modernist continuum, there are many new media trends covered. Those of you exploring social media in your final research paper may well find this useful reference, too! Visual Complexity. Last updated February 19, 2014. www.visualcomplexity.com/vc. Accessed April 6, 2014
c diehl

NSA Slides - 0 views

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    Here's a collection of the NSA slides, revealed by Edward Snowden by way of the Guardian news. The slides detail the various pervasive and invasive methods of surveillance, tapping into phone and social media networks, as orchestrated by the National Security Agency. This is the internet-of-things-that-go-bump-in-the-night. Also, as discussed in class, the layout and design of these slides is often horrendous, complicating or obstructing clear communication of information. "NSA Prism program slides" The Guardian News. Published Friday 1 November 2013 http://www.theguardian.com/world/interactive/2013/nov/01/prism-slides-nsa-document. Accessed April 6, 2014
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