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September 5, 2008

Dual Ghoul II (2008) - Nate Boyce

By John Michael Boling on Friday, September 5th, 2008 at 11:43 am.


Dual Ghoul II from NateBoyce on Vimeo

More work by Nate Boyce

Via Cory Arcangel

Rhizome News: The Scale of Intervention

September 5, 2008

Co-organized by Conflux
Moderated by Wooster Collective, with CutUp Collective, Leon Reid IV (of Darius + Downey), Betsey Biggs, and Roadsworth

Friday, September 5th, 7:30pm
the New Museum, New York, NY
$6 Members, $8 General Public

Join us this evening at 7:30pm for this month's New Silent Series program at the New Museum, entitled "The Scale of Intervention." Co-organized by Conflux, an annual festival dedicated to psychogeography, and moderated by the founders of the celebrated street art website Wooster Collective, this panel will look at possibilities for artistic disruption within urban environments. Taking its name from a film by the London-based Cutup Collective, which plays with the viewer's perception of a street scene, the panel will feature artists whose work ranges across a variety of mediums and materials. From reformulation of billboard advertisements into powerful, politically-oriented collages to the subversive reformulation of street signs, such as pedestrian crossings and bike lanes, the featured artists will demonstrate how they dislodge the customary navigation and perception of urban space.

Image: Roadsworth, North American Footprint (Parc Ave., Montreal, Quebec, September 2004)

http://www.newmuseum.org/events/245

Tools of the Trade:
Umwelt III (HOME) at 119 Chambers

By Melody Chamlee on Thursday, September 4th, 2008 at 1:13 pm.



Here tech writer Melody Chamlee describes Rob Seward's work Umwelt III (HOME) for Rhizome's ongoing series "Tools of the Trade." - Ceci Moss

Currently on display at 119 Chambers Street is kinetic sculpture Umwelt III (HOME) by artist Rob Seward. Using common fluorescent vacuum tubes to light the sign, Seward says he referenced the Jakob von Uexküll and Thomas A. Sebeok definition of an umwelt, a subjective universe which includes meaning producing aspects for all life forms - in this case the narrative of the building inhabitant to the sidewalk passer-by.


On a quiet night, the gliding mechanical display of short white tubes rotates in a seemingly chaotic pattern out the window, slowly aligning and deconstructing the word "home" in bright white fluorescent fashion. The tubes meet and slowly scatter in clockwork formation, generating a slow animation of random pattern display that floats back together in a clear display of the word "home." What seems at first chaotic movement becomes a perfectly formed idea in alignment with viewer recognition. The concept of "home" is presented much the same way a disoriented traveler recognizes a familiar place.


Says Seward, "Before Umwelt III (HOME), I made pieces that spelled KILL and RUN. These where based on flight or fight instincts. The Umwelt III (HOME) piece is part of an earlier series to play on simple, old emotions. Umwelt III (HOME) is inspired by the need for shelter and feelings associated with it."


Rather than compromise between empiricism and rationalism, the sculpture continues to scatter and realign without adding additional context, leaving the viewer to complete the semiosphere with personal significance.


Seward says he was inspired by the idea of an umwelt to display these ideas, and is already working on a new sculpture, entitled WORK WORK WORK. In the new concept, the word "work" aligns in different rows to produce a chanting effect in visual space.


The artist's other experiments include the CONSCIOUSNESS FIELD RESONATOR (CFR) a random number generator that tests for "micropsychokenisis," a theory that patterns manifest more strongly during times of great shared social experience even when, all else being equal, such patterns should not exist. Elevated examples of patterns from the number generator are recorded and considered in relation to national and world events.

Linked In

By Ceci Moss on Thursday, September 4th, 2008 at 12:30 pm.




  • daniel everett- from i heart photograph: "daniel everett's 'building a more meaningful existence'. as he explains: "for this project i used a graphics editor built into an early arcade game to convert spam emails i had received into a virtual landscape. by reconfiguring the graphics editor interface to accept keystrokes as input, i was able to build these landscapes solely by transcribing the spam messages and compiling them. for this piece i specifically chose spam messages that promised me a more meaningful life, increased happiness, and a greater sense of self-worth."

  • A Speech Recognition Sing-A-Long this Friday- I love Machine Project in Los Angeles, they do such wonderful work. In this tutorial and performance Friday on speech technology, Joe Tepperman will "talk about some of the ways we can apply speech recognition, speech synthesis, and linguistic theories to music, followed by a performance by his alter ego, Mooey Moobau."

  • Ian Burns- Studio visit with artist Ian Burns from NewArtTV. Burns' low-fi motorized sculptures attempt to demythologize the contemporary creation and consumption of images.

  • Olga Chernysheva- New solo exhibition of photography and video by Moscow-based Olga Chernysheva at Foxy Production opens next Tuesday. "In New Work, Chernysheva fuses this visual language to her native city, dramatizing the experience of loss, isolation, and renewal. Moving between empathy and voyeurism, and belief and disillusionment, she appropriates Realism to question what can be known and what can be held as truth."
  • THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP (2007) - Billy Rennekamp

    By John Michael Boling on Thursday, September 4th, 2008 at 10:56 am.

    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP
    THIS IS NEVER GOING TO STOP

    LAUNCH

    More work by Billy Rennekamp

    Interview with Kevin Bewersdorf

    By Gene McHugh on Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008 at 3:21 pm.

    netartdiagram.gif

    In this interview, conducted by Rhizome Editorial Fellow Gene McHugh, artist Kevin Bewersdorf discusses his philosophy toward surfing the web, the spiritual dimension of his work and his upcoming show "Monuments to the INFOspirit" at the New York gallery V&A. - Ceci Moss

    Gene McHugh: The name of your website is Maximum Sorrow. What does this phrase mean to you?

    Kevin Bewersdorf: Maximum Sorrow is my self brand and self corporation. It is a body of information waiting day and night to be wandered through, a corporate body whose only shape is the reverberation of the information passing through it. It is partly a philosophy of "corporate spiritualism" realized through marketing practices and continuous web surfing. I've recently written a text called "The Four Sacred Logos" that introduces some of the basic concepts of Maximum Sorrow. With each new sacred text and addition to maximumsorrow.com, I try to better understand my own spiritual relationship with the web. Hopefully the definition of Maximum Sorrow will become clearer as the site and I evolve together.

    There seems to be a genuine interest in some of your recent work in locating or describing how the spiritual could interface with the digital. For example, Spirit Surfers surf club and the "Stock Photography Watermarks as the Presence of God" photo essay on Art Fag City. Is that accurate and, if so, what conclusions have you come to (if any)?

    Well, the internet has hardly changed our physical lives at all, but it has drastically changed our spiritual lives. I think this perspective goes largely undiscussed when the web is viewed through less pertinent but more common sociological and technological lenses. While the internet is a physical body of wires and chips, the web is a shared non-physical realm of experience that requires many aspects of spiritual faith to interact with. We post and commune on a plane of information that we cannot touch or see. We tend to wander the web in private, confronting the massive database alone each day. We are inclined to use the web for the satisfaction of our emotional and intellectual needs rather than for our physical needs. We make pilgrimage to the same web sites at regular and repeated intervals, paying homage to them by contributing or partaking, and then we move on to our other daily needs like eating and sleeping. But all the while, we have faith that this plane of information we have become so dependent on is tangible enough to provide a worthwhile connectedness. For many of us, the web has become almost sacred, its ritual use is the embodiment of our spiritual needs. So I suppose that my conclusion is this: surfing the web can be a fulfilling spiritual experience and a direct interaction with a transcendent reality.

    The written signature plays a prominent role in your self-portraits. What is it about this gesture that interests you?

    There is something I have noticed about a lot of artists these days, especially net artists: they want to do everything. At one time artists were content with specialization, like in making only stained glass windows or etchings all day long. Now it is more common for artists to want to tackle all the forms of expression that the net can carry -- the still image, the moving image, music, writing, design, and so on. Many net artists may not be willing to admit it, but what they are really trying to do is to build an empire, to be a brand that offers it all. There is an absurdity to that. Having your own website is like building an unnecessary shrine to yourself. We can try to deny this by convincing ourselves that what we are doing is somehow a selfless gift, but the web has not asked us for these gifts. The web would go on without us. As net artists, we are pushing ourselves unsolicited on an already saturated marketplace. So I use my signature and various logos to point out the absurdity of this vanity, the struggle to give of yourself without becoming consumed with yourself.

    The signature also makes my marketing tactics very obvious and shows that I accept myself as nothing more than a product to be marketed. Whether a net artist brands themself with a sparse list of links on a humble white field or with loud layers of noise and color or with contrived logos in a bland grid, they are constructing their own web persona for all to see. They are branding their self corporation. I think this self branding can be done with functionless art intentions rather than functioning business intentions. All the marketing materials are just shouted into the roaring whirlpool of the web where they swirl around in the great database with everyone else's personal information empires. I think these persona empires are the great artworks of our time, and they inspire me to keep building my own brand.

    More »

    4-D Hyper Movie (1962) - A. Michael Noll

    By John Michael Boling on Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008 at 12:37 pm.


    "The notion of creating art works through the medium of machines may seem a little strange. Most people who have heard about the experimental use of digital computers in creative endeavors have probably shrugged them off as being of no consequence. On the one hand, creativity has universally been regarded as the personal and somewhat mysterious domain of man; and, on the one hand, as every engineer knows, the computer can only do what it has been programmed to do - which hardly anyone would be generous enough to call creative. Nonetheless, artists have usually been responsive to experimenting with and even adopting certain concepts and devices resulting from new scientific and technological developments. Computers are no exception."

    -A. Michael Noll -The Digital Computer as a Creative Medium (1967)

    Linked In

    By Ceci Moss on Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008 at 12:00 pm.



  • Paul Chan: Baghdad In No Particular Order- From Heart As Arena, this video essay by Paul Chan chronicles daily life in Baghdad before the invasion and occupation of Iraq.

  • OUT NOW!- Organized by Anton Vidokle, OUT NOW! is an exhibition and several lectures on the occupation of Iraq. "The questions involved in mounting a political art exhibition are extremely complex. In the past I've been skeptical of such direct forms of political expression, primarily due to the instrumentalizing effect they have on artistic production. And yet I have been extremely disconcerted by the near total lack of involvement or discussion of this subject by art institutions here in the only country capable of ending the occupation of Iraq...[OUT NOW!] is less of a curated exhibition than an attempt to explore possibilities for a sympathetic cultural backdrop for urgent action and discussion toward ending this war."

  • Buckminster Fuller Symposium- In conjunction with the Buckminster Fuller exhibition "Starting With the Universe," the Whitney, the Architectural League, and Cooper Union will sponsor a symposium which examines the continuation of Fuller's ideas within the work of contemporary scholars and practitioners.

  • One Hundred $1 Grants- Unique opportunity from ASDF: ASDF is offering One Hundred $1 Grants. All selected projects will be available in a downloadable exhibition in February 2009. Anyone is eligible. There are no restrictions on proposed projects. All forms of creative activity are encouraged. Money can be used for cost of production or for monetary compensation.
  • Suicide (2007) - Gregory Wagenheim

    By John Michael Boling on Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008 at 11:02 am.


    LAUNCH

    More work by Gregory Wagenheim

    Rhizome News: Exploring Big Boxes, In and Out of the White Cube

    September 3, 2008

    The face of the American landscape has been forever changed by the invention of the "big box." These giant, typically nondescript retail meccas exemplified by Wal-Mart not only lead to the mowing-over of existing terrain, they also shift the cultural ecology of a space and bring with them more roads, more cars, and more garbage. But what happens when companies abandon these spaces in favor of paired-down, web-based operations? This is the question that artist Julia Christensen asks in her project Big Box Reuse. She's spent the last five years touring these renounced superstores, photographing them, collecting local residents' stories about the community impacts of the big boxes, and writing a forthcoming book. Documentation of these efforts are being exhibited through November 23rd at Carnegie Mellon University's Miller Gallery in an show curated by Astria Suparak, entitled "Your Town, Inc." Meanwhile, Turbulence has commissioned a forthcoming wiki on which the artist will invite people from across the country to upload their own stories, photos, and videos. Among the project's most poignant ironies is the question of what happens when the retailers that trade in over-packaged, often not-recyclable goods fail to successfully repurpose the structures in which they once perpetuated disposable culture. - Marisa Olson

    Image: Julia Christensen, the Snowy Range Academy (Renovated Wal-Mart located in Laramie, WY) from Big Box Reuse, 2006

    http://www.bigboxreuse.com

    A Tasty Mixture:
    J&L's "Videos and Vodka"

    By Tyler Coburn on Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008 at 2:18 pm.


    Available this month, "Videos and Vodka," the second DVD anthology from J&L Video, comprises selections from a video salon artist Jacob Dyrenforth and curator Eva Respini ran out of their Brooklyn loft from 2004-2006. A strong sense of community binds the works, owing in part to the fact that Dyrenforth received his MFA from Columbia alongside many of the featured artists, including Ohad Meromi, Guy Ben-Ner and Lisi Raskin, as well as to the number of emerging, New York-based artists in the program. In an essay accompanying the anthology, Dyrenforth and Respini foreground these facts, describing their decision to create Video Salon as arising, in part, from a need to provide their friends and the broader public with "non-traditional viewing spaces," in the style of the "collectives, collaboratives and artist-run spaces" established in New York in the 1970s. While the 1990s saw the rise of high-production films, videos and moving-image installations from artists like Matthew Barney, Doug Aitken and Jane and Louise Wilson, many younger artists, the curators claim, "are reconnecting to a history that pre-dates the black-boxed multi-channel universe." Several of the works, for example, build whimsical or fantastical scenarios from patently everyday materials and circumstances, like Untitled, Air Guitar (2005), in which Robin Rhode plays and destroys a guitar drawn, sequentially, on a wall; or Ben-Ner's Berkeley's Island (2000) where the artist/father's desire for solitude manifests itself as a Crusoe-esque life on a desert island, comically set in the center of his kitchen. Others present intensively personal or shared narratives, from the deconstructed footage and text of Lisa Oppenheim's Dioptric (2003) - taken from an imaginary scrapbook - to the three-way telephone conversation in John Pilson's Sunday Scenario (2005), where the back-and-forth between baseball aficionados becomes a language unto itself. - Tyler Coburn


    Image: Guy Ben-Ner, Berkeley's Island, 2000

    Link »

    Abused Amazon Images (2005) - Nat Gertler

    By John Michael Boling on Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008 at 12:30 pm.


    LAUNCH

    Linked In

    By Ceci Moss on Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008 at 12:04 pm.



  • Urban computing, locative media and everyday life in the future city- Anne Galloway from Space & Culture posted her recently completed PhD dissertation (as a pdf) on urban computing. "An analysis of the Mobile Bristol, Passing Glances, Sonic City and Urban Tapestries research and design projects draws out the idea that everyday life in the future city is expected to become more expressive, engaging and meaningful. The increased extensibility and transmissibility of the city itself, along with an increased ability to be socially embedded within it, is seen to be a fundamental promise inherent in these projects. The dissertation argues that such spatial and cultural potentialities can be productively understood as involving temporary, selective and mobile publics, where creative and playful interactions emerge as primary means of social innovation..."

  • FILE Sao Paulo 2008- Giles Askham reviews the festival FILE for Furtherfield.

  • The Digital Dragon: Synthetic Times in Beijing- Régine Debatty takes stock of the current (and future) media art scene in China for ArtReview.

  • halter.ed - Experimental Cinema Resources -Links to research materials on experimental cinema collected by Rhizome Staff Writer Ed Halter.
  • Word Art Encouragement (2008) - Micaela Durand

    By John Michael Boling on Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008 at 9:05 am.


    (In collaboration with BFFA3AE)

    LAUNCH

    More work by Micaela Durand Here and Here.

    Via Travis Hallenbeck

    Rhizome News: Somewhere Out There

    September 1, 2008

    "Artificial World," a two-week exhibition on view at New York's Mountain Fold, assembles works by six Japanese and American artists that explore "ideas of made-up, artificial, or simulated worlds." Visually, the show could not be more eclectic -- shelves of compact discs, knit objects, sprawling fabric paintings and gelatinous sculptures populate the small gallery. Common to many of the works, however, is an interest in the social and creative parameters of virtual space. Ben Fino-Radin, for example, has struck upon a neat, if somewhat twee, techno-meets-craft aesthetic vocabulary. In wall installations like Potience Module (2008), discreet, knit objects (largely depicting computer iconography, including code, mouse icons and the much-reviled hourglass) aggregate in symmetrical, totemic structures. Strips of black tape become disciplinary intermediaries in Aki Goto's big, energetic wall piece (Untitled, 2008), linking fabric and canvas paintings of cats with small, exquisite drawings in graphite and pen. The strongest of the latter presents a humorous take on virtual communities, equally steeped in the visual language of early-80s arcade games and the urban-abstraction of Mondrian's Broadway Boogie Woogie (1942-3), as small, smiling heads form points within webs of overlapping lines. While these and most of the exhibition's other works settle on shallow inquiry - at times to their benefit - Masaru Aikawa's My 25 CDs (2008) strikes a deeper chord. Citing an interest in Benjamin and Warhol and a concern for the status of the artwork in the digital era, Aikawa has "passionately and respectfully duplicated," a cappella, twenty-five of his CDs. Aikawa's heartfelt vocal imitation of the ambient electronics of Kraftwerk's Autobahn provides the most hysterical treat. On a broader level, Aikawa makes a serious comment on twenty-first century virtual consumption, by means of his self-portrait as strange, irreverent fan. - Tyler Coburn

    Image: Ben Fino-Radin, Process NG Unit, 2008

    http://www.mfoldgallery.com/#/current/

    Early Digital Animations by Juha Terho

    By John Michael Boling on Friday, August 29th, 2008 at 6:30 pm.


    LAUNCH

    Mark Your Calendars for September 5th!

    By Rhizome on Friday, August 29th, 2008 at 2:30 pm.


    Join us at the New Museum next week, on September 5th, for this month's New Silent Series event "the Scale of Intervention." An official warm-up for the psychogeographic festival Conflux, the panel will explore possibilities for artistic disruption within urban environments. Artists CutUp Collective, Leon Reid IV (of Darius + Downey), Betsey Biggs, and Roadsworth will present their diverse body of work, followed by an in-depth discussion led by the founders of the celebrated street-art site Wooster Collective.

    [Information and tickets here.]

    CBS Outdoor Pull Suzanne Opton's "Soldier" Billboards During the Republican National Convention

    By Tyler Coburn on Friday, August 29th, 2008 at 12:32 pm.


    The Republican National Convention is still a handful of days away, but controversy is already being courted in Minneapolis-St. Paul over CBS Outdoor's decision to cancel its contract with artist Suzanne Opton due to the politically-sensitive nature of her photographs. Working with local organization Forecast Public Art and curator Susan Reynolds, Opton aimed to display several billboards depicting active-duty American soldiers, whom she photographed at Fort Drum, New York in 2004 and 2005. Like Rineke Dijkstra's series of photographs of young soldiers serving in the French Foreign Legion and Israeli Army, Opton's works offer empathetic portraits of her subjects, at a time when American military action in Iraq and Afghanistan elicits increasing national dissent. Her striking, monumental images find their subjects stripped of body armor and military dress and leaning their heads against a table. The photographs are vertically-scaled and cropped to only show each subject's head and neck, a visual decision Opton has suggested lends vulnerability to these unarmed soldiers, but which also, in light of past Al Qaeda videos, carries a far more disturbing undertone. On the project's website -- now the most significant record of the billboards -- Opton accompanies each of the nine photographs with the length of time served, by a given subject, in Iraq and Afghanistan. In a sense, because of the ambivalent mix of emotions these images conjure, Opton's choice to exhibit them in equally ambivalent public spaces seemed very appropriate. Yet that ambiguity, the artist claimed, was precisely the cause of CBS Outdoor's concern. Worry about possible misinterpretation of the images -- and the lack of explicit indication that they were artworks, as opposed to advertisements -- contributed, she said, to the organization's decision to discontinue her contract. If nothing else, Opton's proposal will serve as an example of a thoughtful, timely coalescence of public and political art, and a reminder of the effect foreign policy continues to have on private enterprise. - Tyler Coburn


    Link »

    Linked In

    By Ceci Moss on Friday, August 29th, 2008 at 12:12 pm.




  • View of Barack Obama's Speech at Invesco Field in Denver (from the New York Times)- I don't think the television broadcast of Obama's speech last night accurately captured the sheer immensity of the crowd. This interactive feature (a QuickTime VR file) by the New York Times provides a 360 degree view of the Invesco Field from the perspective of an attendee.

  • 2008 Presidential Election in the Blogosphere- information aesthetics discuss perspctv "an online information dashboard that summarizes & graphs the Internet activity relating to the 2008 presidential elections, in an attempt to compare the similarities & the disparities between the mainstream media & user-generated content."

  • EcoArtTech's "Externalities: Wilderness and its Others"- On September 5 from 7pm to 10pm at OTO, EcoArtTech (Christine Nadir & Cary Peppermint) will "continue to rethink relations between humans, technics, technology, and the environment with Externalities: Wilderness and its Others a networked, video-based performance piece."

  • Michael Snow: So Is This / Manifesta 7, Fortezza / Franzensfeste- Video documentation of Michael Snow's So Is This by VernissageTV from Manifesta 7. So Is This is "a silent film of 45 minutes consisting of single words of this script or score placed on the screen one by one, one after another, for specific lengths of time."

  • Rhizome News: Northwesterly

    August 29, 2008

    Vanessa Renwick, who produces video under the rubric of The Oregon Department of Kick Ass, is one of the cornerstones of Portland's remarkably fecund scene for moving-image art. Her video Portrait #2: Trojan (2006) documents the last days of the locally-maligned Trojan Nuclear Power Plant, which once rose like a toxic concrete toadstool above the lush temperate rainforests that cover the area's rolling landscape; at the video's end, the plant explodes under planned detonations, sending a quiet plume of smoke into the sky. The strange marriage Renwick chronicles between nature and technology is one familiar to the culture of the region, as captured in the Seattle Art Museum's current show "Thermostat: Video and the Pacific Northwest." In addition to Renwick's piece, Ron Tran's The Peckers (2004) records an experiment in which the artist covered electric guitars and drum kits with birdseed and set them in a park, then recorded the ensuing avian orchestra. Further north, Kevin Schmidt's Long Beach Led Zep (2002) depicts Schmidt on a beach in British Columbia, performing a rendition of "Stairway to Heaven" on a generator-powered electric guitar. The Canadian-American lineup rounds out with short works by Jeremy Shaw, Miranda July, Will Rogan, and Jack Daws. - Ed Halter

    Image: Kevin Schmidt, Long Beach Led Zep, 2002

    http://www.seattleartmuseum.org/exhibit/exhibitDet...

    Events

    The Scale of Intervention
    Co-organized by Conflux
    Moderated by Wooster Collective with CutUp Collective, Leon Reid IV (of Darius + Downey), Betsey Biggs, Roadsworth
    Friday, September 5 at 7:30pm
    at the New Museum
    $8 General/ $6 Members
    BUY TICKETS HERE

    See More Events

    Commissions

    Every year, Rhizome awards commissions to a group of international artists for the creation of new work. Read about the nine projects commissioned in our 2009 cycle!

    Rhizome Seeks Interns

    Rhizome seeks creative, energetic, and bright candidates to fill three internship positions starting this fall. We are now accepting applications for the positions of Curatorial Fellow, Technology Intern, and Social Media Intern.

    MORE