Disrupting Narratives
Friday 13 July 2007, 10.0 – 18.30
Tate Modern Starr Auditorium, Bankside, London SE1
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/eventseducation/symposia/8896.htm
http://www.ires.org.uk
This international symposium brings together some of the world’s leading media artists, theorists and researchers to explore real-time interaction in electronic media. Over the last few years network theories have started to shape our thinking about social and cultural issues. This event seeks out artistic strategies and art forms that engage with these ideas. Contributors include: Mark Amerika, Alexander R Galloway, Andrea Zapp, Kelli Dipple, Kate Rich and Paul Sermon.
Concept by Kate Southworth, developed in collaboration with Tate Modern
In collaboration with iRes (Research in Interactive Art & Design) at University College Falmouth
Tickets #20 (#12 concessions) booking recommended
Book tickets online at www.tate.org.uk/tickets or call 020 7887 8888
Timetable
10:00 Arrival and Registration
10:15 Welcome and Introduction (Kate Southworth)
10:30 Session 1: Counter-Narratives
Mark Amerika: Remixology, Hybridized Processes, and Postproduction Art: A Counternarrative
In this keynote address, artist and theorist Mark Amerika remixes personal narrative, philosophical inquiry, spontaneous theories, and cyberpunk fictions that investigate the emergence of digitally constructed identities, fictional personas, experiential metadata, narrative mythologies, and collaborative networks. Locating what he describes as the “postproduction artist” who engages with D-I-Y networking and alternative distribution schemes to build new models of audience development, Amerika will role-play the contemporary remixologist who is part VJ, part novelist, and part net artist, a made-up character in a book yet written, someone who uses the forms of new media not so much to counter spectacle in the media culture, but to create a counternarrative drift that moves away from the art object per se while investigating the depth of possibilities waiting to be discovered in the creative unconscious.
11:30 Andrea Zapp: For We are Where We are not: Mixed-Reality Narratives and Installations
Andrea Zapp’s practice focuses on room installations in the gallery that are linked to a digital network, mostly through components of surveillance technology. At present she also concentrates on model and miniature aesthetics as a format of expression and narrative architecture; small or shifting scales become another motif to discuss virtual and personal spaces of memory and identity. Life-sized installations like a hut or a hotel room as well as participants are linked to their remote model replicas or online versions to create surreal stages of viewer involvement that discuss the change of existence in a wired
world.
12:15 Kelli Dipple: … duration, distribution and participation _ the performative-emergent narrative
Focussing on examples of contemporary artists’ work, this presentation will observe a notion of performativity in context of cross-platform artistic and curatorial practice. Providing examples of emergent counter-narrative; demonstrated through interaction, participation, interventions and interfaces – that effectively penetrate an exhibition’s mode, duration, functionality, and design. Technology is increasingly ubiquitus within all practice, it permeates interpretation, education, exhibition, performance, communication and distribution; it is sometimes therefore, difficult to tell where an artwork begins and ends. The fluid spaces without protocol dominate emergent narratives of New Media that engage both internal and external configurations of the institution. In order to redraw our expectations of what is possible, how are we able to imagine the virtual museum, the distributed museum or the online gallery – are they feasible platforms? How satisfied are we with broadcast!
and redistribution as primary modes? How do we present New Media Art and make better use of platform-specific versioning in conjunction with social networks, to facilitate more detailed dialogues and provide more satisfyingly responsive cultural architectures?
13:00 Lunch Break
14:00 Session 2 Counter-Protocols
Alexander R Galloway: Counter-Protocol
In this keynote address, Alexander Galloway asks us to imagine an art exhibit of computer viruses. How would one curate such a show? Would the exhibition consist of documentation of known viruses, or of viruses roaming live? Would it be more like an archive or more like a zoo? Perhaps the exhibit would require the coordination of several museums, each with “honey pot” computers, sacrificial lambs offered up as attractor hosts for the contagion. A network would be required, the sole purpose of which would be to reiterate sequences of infection and replication. Now imagine an exhibit of a different sort: a museum exhibit dedicated to epidemics. Again, how would one curate an exhibit of disease? Would it include the actual virulent microbes themselves (in a sort of “microbial menagerie”), in addition to the documentation of epidemics in history? Would the epidemics have to be “historical” in order for them to qualify for exhibition? Or would two entirely different types of inst!
itutions be required: a museum of the present versus a museum of the past? In this talk Alexander Galloway explores a “counter-protocol” aesthetic and how it relates to the contemporary landscape of artmaking.
15:05 Paul Sermon
My work in the field of telematic arts explores the emergence of a user-determined narrative by bringing remote participants together in a shared telepresent environment. Through the use of live chroma-keying and videoconferencing technology, two public rooms or installations and their audiences are joined in a virtual duplicate that turns into a mutual, visual space of activity. Linked via an H.323 Internet videoconference connection, this form of immersive interactive exchange can be established between almost any two locations in the world. As an artist I am both designer of the environment and therefore director of the narrative, which I determine through the social and political milieu that I choose to play out in these telepresent encounters.
15:50 Tea Break. Tea, coffee and biscuits are served in the Starr Auditorium Foyer
16:15 Kate Rich
Feral Trade (Import-Export) is an artist-run grocery business established in Bristol, 2003. The process is called Feral Trade to distinguish it from other methods such as Fair or Free. Feral Trade forges new, wild trade routes across hybrid territories of business, art and social interaction. Goods are run along social routes, avoiding official channels of grocery distribution in preference for a hand-carried cargo system, often using other artists or curators as mules. This distribution infrastructure is modelled on the ‘store and forward’ protocol of email, and proposes the surplus freight potential of networked social and cultural movements as a viable alternative to regular freight services (white van, supermarket lorry, Parcelforce, DHL).
17:05 Panel Discussion
17:50 Closing Remarks (Kate Southworth)
18:00 Drinks Reception. Drinks are served in the East Room on Level 7
Mark Amerika has been named a “Time Magazine 100 Innovator” and has had four retrospectives of his digital art work. In spring 2000, GRAMMATRON was selected as one of the first works of Internet Art to be exhibited in the prestigious Whitney Biennial of American Art. His most recent book, META/DATA: A Digital Poetics, was just published by The MIT Press. A Professor of Art and Art History at the University of Colorado, Amerika’s practice-based research methods have been translated into novels, feature-length films, museum installations, and live multimedia performances that integrate experimental music, live writing, and video sampling into the narrative mix.
Kelli Dipple is the Webcasting Curator for Tate, working across Tate Media, Performance and Adult Education programmes. Her role is to oversee live event broadcasts, curate a context for the development of Tate’s Net Art commissions and to curate performances For Tate Modern’s Long Weekend. Kelli trained in theatre directing and choreography at the Queensland University of Technology in Australia and has worked for over a decade at the intersection of new media and performance practice, specializing in the integration of visual, interactive, communication and network technologies. Previous to working for Tate, Kelli curated and produced digital media and performance programmes for Site Gallery in Sheffield. She also continues her own performative research, which has taken the form of site-specific and interactive performance, software development, personal data exchange and multi-screen or single-channel broadcast. For the past twelve years she has worked in the area of live!
cinematic and networked events. Undertaking artist residencies and projects in conjunction with Virtual Platform (NL), PVA (UK), Montevideo (NL), Steim (NL), Interaktions Labor (Germany), The University of Manchester (UK) and The University of Florida (USA). She has also worked and collaborated extensively with artist-lead groups in the UK including NODE.London, Active Ingredient, Future Physical, Resonance FM and Furtherfield; as well as with Australian artists, Company in Space, Keith Armstrong and The Transmute Collective. www.macster.plus.com/gravelrash
Alexander R. Galloway is an author and programmer. He is a founding member of the software collective RSG and creator of the data surveillance engine Carnivore. The New York Times recently described his work as “conceptually sharp, visually compelling and completely attuned to the political moment.” Galloway is the author of Protocol: How Control Exists After Decentralization (MIT, 2004), Gaming: Essays on Algorithmic Culture (Minnesota, 2006), and a new book coauthored with Eugene Thacker called The Exploit: A Theory of Networks (forthcoming). He teaches at New York University.
Kate Rich is an Australian-born artist & trader. In the 1990s she moved to California to work as radio engineer with the Bureau of Inverse Technology (BIT), an international agency producing an array of critical information products including economic and ecologic indices, event-triggered webcam networks, and animal operated emergency broadcast devices. The Bureau’s work has been exhibited broadly in academic, scientific and museum contexts. Restless at the turn of the century, she headed further east to take up the post of Bar Manager at the Cube Microplex, Bristol UK; where she launched Feral Trade, a public experiment trading goods over social networks. She is currently moving deeper into the infrastructure of cultural economy, developing protocols to define and manage amenities of hospitality, mobility, catering, sports and survival in the cultural realm.
Paul Sermon is Professor of Creative Technology and leader of the Creative Technology Research Group in the Adelphi Research Institute for Creative Arts and Sciences, University of Salford. Born in 1966, he received a BA Hons. Fine Art at the Gwent College of Higher Education in 1988 and an MFA at the University of Reading in 1991. He was awarded the Golden Nica for Interactive Arts at the Prix Ars Electronica 1991 in Linz, and the Interactive Media Festival Sparkey Award in Los Angeles in 1994. Paul Sermon was artist-in-residence at the ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe in 1993; dozent for telematic arts at the HGB Academy of Visual Arts in Leipzig, Germany from 1993 to 1999; and guest professor for performance and environment at the University of Art and Industrial Design in Linz from 1998 to 2000. Since June 2000 he has been based at the University of Salford, where he is researching immersive and expanded telematic environments.
Kate Southworth is an artist and researcher. With Patrick Simons she is a founding member of the art group glorious ninth – producers of distributed artworks, DIY installations and invisible networks. Current experiments into co-poietic relationships between code and ritual find form as aural-visual works, installations, performative presentations and texts, and expose their ongoing aesthetic and political attempts to evade systems of control. Recent works, such as November and love_potion, use magic, tactical gardening and social networks to recover knowledge of herbs and healing from commercial control and to share it as common knowledge. glorious ninth s work has been exhibited in academic, gallery and online contexts. Kate received BA (Hons) in Fine Art and an MSc in Multimedia Systems. She has taught Media Art subjects at Universities in London, Dublin and Cornwall. Currently she is leader of the iRes Research Group in Interactive Art & Design at University College Falm!
outh where, for the last five years, she has been Course Leader of MA Interactive Art & Design.
www.gloriousninth.net
Andrea Zapp was born in Germany and has a background in film and TV studies and creates disorientating digital platforms mixing real, virtual and online spaces, combined with surveillance interfaces and technology. She has edited two books, Networked Narrative Environments as imaginary spaces of being, MMU/FACT Liverpool, 2004; and New Screen Media, Cinema/Art/Narrative,
BFI, London/ ZKM, Karlsruhe, 2002, (with Martin Rieser). She curated StoryRooms, an international Exhibition on Networking and Media Art that took place at The Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester, from October 05 to January 06. She has lectured widely internationally; her art works have been shown at Siggraph 06 Boston, Ars Electronica Linz; ISEA Liverpool and Paris; Pittsburgh Center for the Arts; Festival of Visions Hong Kong – Berlin, Media Forum Moscow, Austrian Photo Triennial Graz, Museum of Image and Sound Sao Paulo; Machida City Museum of Graphic Arts Tokyo; Kunstverein Stuttgart, Intern. Art Fair Madrid, Film Festival Rotterdam; and at conferences including the Biennale of Electronic Arts Perth, Australia; Siggraph Los Angeles, ISEA 02 Nagoya; Muestra Euroamericana de Video y Arte Digital, Buenos Aires. In 2005 she was appointed Senior Lecturer and Route Leader for the MA Media Arts at Manchester Metropolitan University.