This is an invitation to collaborate in
FIELD OF VISION: NEW YORK
@
The Lab Gallery
New York
13 - 18 September 2004
DESCRIPTION
FIELD OF VISION: NEW YORK is a combined internet / live art event about New York. Artists and non-artists worldwide are invited to send their work for inclusion by e-mail. Images will be printed out postcard size and assembled on location into a billboard format collage.
CRITERIA
We are looking for images that represent how you see New York - not necessarily cityscapes and scenes, but anything that springs to mind in relation to the place. About 300 images will be selected.
MEDIA
Photographs, pictures downloaded from the internet or magazine cuttings, small artworks for example paintings, scanned objects, drawings, collages and electronically generated imagery are all acceptable but must be digitised and sent as an e-mail attachment.
GUIDELINES
- You can submit any number of works
- Send a separate e-mail for each image
- File format: jpeg, gif, png
- File size: max 1 megabyte
If you wish to be credited include your name and city/country. Successful entries will be notified by e-mail and included on the project website.
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SEND TO
ny@field-of-vision.net
DEADLINE
8 September 2004
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FURTHER INFORMATION:
ENGLISH: http://www.field-of-vision.net
ESPANIOL: http://www.campo-de-vision.net
DEUTSCH: http://www.gesichtsfeld.net
ORGANISING ARTISTS:
Paul Dacey / USA
Alison Dalwood / UK
Stephan Hausmeister / D / UK
Iraxte Hernandez Simal / E
Chapman Kuo / ROC
Richard Purdy / USA
Andrey Vrabchev / BG
Michael Wright / UK.
FIELD OF VISION is a series of events initiated by DIGITAL ART PROJECTS with research funding assistance from the Faculty of Art and Design, University of Hertfordshire / UK (info@digitalartprojects.org.uk)
Link:
http://www
Stephan Hausmeister studied fine art at the Hochschule der Künste (HdK = University of Arts) in Berlin and was awarded an MA in 1987. In 1991 he received the prestigious DAAD - Berliner Künstlerprogramm fellowship to work for one year in London in collaboration with the Whitechapel Art Gallery and the Goethe Institute. Since that time he has lived in the UK and exhibited internationally, organised and presented collaborative art events / exhibitions and in 1997 set up artistsprinting, the first open access large format digital print workshop for artists in the UK. In 2003 he was invited to participate in the Kaoshiung International Container Arts Festival and in the same year he exhibited the first of the series of global art productions: Field of Vision, in Germany. In 2005 Stephan began to collaborate with Chinese artists the Gao Brothers and in 2006 presented their Hug performance to a UK audience and collaborated with them for Field of Vision: Beijing, presented at the Gao Brothers’ Beijing New Art Projects gallery in China.
Stephan explores how visual narratives participate in the production and exchange of cultural ideas and meanings and how information technology redefines artist’s roles and offers new methods of production and presentation. His research references issues of globalisation and in the Field of Vision series he seeks to generate a debate concerning the ways in which the visual field contributes to an increasingly trans-national exchange of cultural values and information.
In his series of artworks: Walking Billboards, presented at Documenta11 in 2003, he re-edited and re-published imagery found in the mass media and displaced these images into different contexts and different sequences thus manipulating readings. The intention was not to create an alternative reading, claim objectivity or truth but to make obvious the subjectivity of visual mass media and the transience of the systems and technologies by which they are transported. A series of work exhibited at I-Space Gallery, Chicago in 2000: Magic Slates also references modes of communication and the transience of visual messages. In these works, slogans are presented as fleeting images on a child’s magic slate as if hanging in the air and broadcast from no distinguishable location. Stephan has continued to present his work as practice based-outcomes but increasingly with interrelated web-based presentations that reference his fascination with transient and virtual cultural domains.
Michelle Sujai