Global Feed

Global Feed

‘Global Feed’ builds upon decades of previous work by Peter Fend exploring aspects of our relationship to the environment, through his work as part of Ocean Earth Development Corporation, and his ongoing collaborations with artists, architects, engineers and scientists. Ocean Earth was conceived as an instrument for implementing the goals of the environmental art movement, directly building upon the ideas of artists such as Joseph Beuys, Robert Smithson and Gordon Matta-Clark.

Through inter-disciplinary collaborations and by connecting ecological imperatives with experimental new technologies, Fend asks ‘How far can art go?’ in drawing attention to a belief that artistic research can generate productive dialogue about global ecological problems and that it can be used to develop effective solutions. In this spirit, Global Feed aims to organise the display of processed satellite data for the public to see for itself. Peter Fend undertook a research fellowship at i-DAT from autumn 2003 until summer 2004, supported by the AHRB and Arts Council of England.

2003-2004

Out of Scale

Out of Scale

16/06/2004:

Plymouth Arts Centre.Out of Scale explores architecture’s relationship with image, digital technology, structure and materials, by focusing upon microscopic detail. The show reveals the unusual relationship that architects have with scale; how the digital systems and measuring tools transform models of actuality, from the precision of the scalpel blade used to make a model to the materials used to construct the finished building.

Original HTML website can be found here: https://i-dat.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/oldi-DATprojects/outofscale/index.html

VIVARIA.NET

VIVARIA.NET

The Vivaria Project employs the metaphor of the Zoo to examine artificial life forms, creativity and the relationships between humans, animals and machines. Vivarium is being funded by the Arts Council of England for its research and development phase to initiate a live networked display of artificial life-forms in European Zoos. It builds upon current research interests and the artistic practice of many artists associated with CAiiA-STAR, as well as a current on-line research project EZITT (European Zoos Information Technology Training Project), funded by the Leonardo da Vinci EU Programme. Vivarium seeks to contemporise the C19th century notion of the Zoo and productively employs the Zoo as metaphor to understand some of the complexities and conditions under which animals, humans and machines are classified and differentiated. 2003

Applause SW

Applause SW

Applause South West is a New Opportunities Fund Digitisation project with Plymouth Library and Information Service, i-DAT, Theatre Royal, TSW Film &Television Archive, Plymouth Learning Links, the City Museum and Plymouth and West Devon Record Office. Archives hidden in rarely used collections and materials that are too fragile to be handled are being digitally archived by the project, which also provides access to virtual tours of long lost South West theatres, production diaries and documentation, and interactive exploration of theatre artefacts. The project provides rich opportunity to explores the manipulation of digital objects within online environments and their distribution across a range of media formats and data systems. Now hosted by Plymouth City Council.
2002

Catalogue

Catalogue

06/2002:


The Catalogue show opens at the start of National Architecture Week on June 22nd 2002 at the Plymouth Arts Centre. It features the work of seven artists, academics and architects all of whom are invited to show their work within the framework of the exhibition. The show and its educational project have been kindly supported by the Arts Council of England, i-DAT and the Plymouth Arts Centre. The concept of the show is a simple one; turn the gallery into a reference Catalogue for the public to further access pieces of work that raise questions about the nature of our relationship with interior design and architectural space.

Original HTML website can be found here: https://i-dat.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/oldi-DATprojects/catalogue/index.html

 

Generator

Generator

Spacex Gallery, 1 May – 22 June 2002

Generator: curated by Spacex & STAR, with support from the Institute of Digital Art & Technology and the Arts Council of England (Collaborative Arts Unit). Spacex Gallery, 1 May – 22 June 2002, and touring in the UK. Generator will present a series of ‘self-generating’ projects, incorporating digital media, instruction and participation pieces, drawing machines, experimental literature, and music technologies. All work will be produced ‘live’, in real-time, with some elements continuing indefinitely.

The exhibition can also be described as ‘generative’ in that it will develop and expand over time, by acting as a point of connection for different generative practices across disciplines, pointing to the relationship of visual arts to other media – especially sound works, performance, and issues relating to chaos theory and complexity, neural networks and artificial life.

http://www.generative.net/generator/

And …

STAR & Sulawesi crested macaque monkeys from Paignton Zoo
As part of the development of the Vivaria project, Generator hosted a troop of Sulawesi crested macaque monkeys from Paignton Zoo to test Infinite Monkey Theorem. The idea that an infinite number of monkeys with typewriters for infinity could eventually produce the complete works of Shakespeare was enacted in a monkey cage in Paignton Zoo…

In 2003, lecturers and students from the University of Plymouth MediaLab Arts course used a £2,000 grant from the Arts Council to study the literary output of real monkeys. They left a computer keyboard in the enclosure of six Celebes crested macaques in Paignton Zoo in Devon in England for a month, with a radio link to broadcast the results on a website. Not only did the monkeys produce nothing but five total pages largely consisting of the letter S, the lead male began by bashing the keyboard with a stone, and the monkeys continued by urinating and defecating on it. Mike Phillips, director of the university’s Institute of Digital Arts and Technology (i-DAT), said that the artist-funded project was primarily performance art, and they had learned “an awful lot” from it. He concluded that monkeys “are not random generators. They’re more complex than that. … They were quite interested in the screen, and they saw that when they typed a letter, something happened. There was a level of intention there.”

Notes Towards The Complete Works of Shakespeare Book.

ttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinite_monkey_theorem

Artefact

Artefact

Artefacts can change their meaning not just over the years as different histriographical and institutional currents pick them out and transform their significance, but from day to day as different people view them and subject them to their own interpretation. The ‘Artefact’ Project takes this fluidity as its starting point. The Artefact and its interpretation panel slowly evolve as visitors to the website play with it and reinterpret its meaning.

At the core of the Artefact Project is a 3D database drawn from the V&A Collection. For the duration of the show the ‘Artefact’ evolves through a generative breeding of this ‘genetic’ information. At some point in its evolution the ‘Artefact’ will become the collection.

Artefact is a MODEL project: May 16th – June 9th 2002.

Corrupted images downloaded from the V&A archive during the R&D phase of the project.

Artefact digital sketches.

Old HTML site for Artefact. https://i-dat.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/oldi-DATprojects/artefact/project.html

Artefact was a MODEL production:

.
Model is a transdisciplinary research consortium of three organisations, STAR [Science Technology and Art Research] of the Institute of Digital Art and Technology at the University of Plymouth / REALL [Research in Education, Arts, Language and Learning] at Middlesex University / inIVA [Institute of international Visual Art]. As a collegiate space supported outside fixed institutional frameworks MODEL allows the group to test product and process critically, and as the name MODEL suggests, to develop schematic descriptions of digital arts systems, theories and phenomenon that account for unknown properties and may be used for further study of its characteristics. MODEL’s distinctive interest is in the examination of virtual spaces and objects;- the manipulation of ‘invisible architectures’ and ‘dematerialised objects’.

An example of a MODEL project, “Artefact” can be found in the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Artefact website.

Previous MODEL collaborations include:
1: Vertex, which includes children’s avatar-building software for creating and populating 3D Virtual environments. Vertex is raising research questions about learning which enables children from different cultural and geographical locations to collaborate and exchange stories, experiences and ideas within playful virtual spaces. The Vertex project can be found on-line at: http://www.lle.mdx.ac.uk/research/projects/vw/

2: Autoicon: is funded by the Arts Council of England and inIVA. It is a dynamic Internet work composed of three distinct but integrated components. The aim of the project is to simulate both the physical presence and elements of the creative personality of the recently deceased artist Donald Rodney using interactive and ‘intelligent’ programming for the World Wide Web. In early 1998, Donald Rodney began developing the idea of creating an interactive project which would map out the co-ordinates of an ‘original’ Donald Rodney art work so that his work could continue to be made in the event of his death. Autoicon is also available on CDROM from inIVA. Autoicon can be found at:
http://www.iniva.org/autoicon

MODEL’s staff publications and research commentaries on toys: the Arts Council Touring Exhibition Toys: Are They Playing With You?(1989, G.Cox & V.deRijke) playful pedagogies: This is Not the National Curriculum for Art (1994, G.Cox, V.deRijke) Rubbish Reading (1995, V.deRijke & R.Sinker)The Impossibility of Art Education (1999, G.Cox, H.Hollands, V.deRijke) Making/Unmaking Design History Society Conference(2000, G.Cox, H.Hollands, V.deRijke) and invisible architectures: The Visible & the Invisible (1996, inIVA & international artists) Distance No Object: intercultural art resources on the Net Association of Art Historians at Tate Britain Looking Over the Overlooked Conference(2000, R.Sinker) regular MEDIASPACE sections in the CADE journal Digital Creativity (M.Phillips ed) proceedings and v01d Virtual Architecture catalogue and exhibition, Plymouth University & Arts Centre (2001, F.Bailey & M.Phillips).

.

Hybrid Discourse

Hybrid Discourse

01-05/2002: Place: Sherwell Centre / University of Plymouth / Plymouth / Devon / UK

Original HTML website can be found here: https://i-dat.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/oldi-DATprojects/hybrid/index.html

 

The Hybrid Discourse series of events seeks to address the currency of the term ‘cultural industry’ in the light of current changes in cultural production under the new economic conditions of networked societies. The Hybrid series facilitate a radical critique across diverse fields of cultural practice addressing the ways in which data is instituted (institutionally organised).

Expanding Territory: Culture Industry and Digital Media

Hybrid-Discourse is a series of events investigating current cultural debates in the context of digital media. Evaluating important developments and controversial issues concerning the impact of digital media technologies on the contemporary cultural landscape, this series facilitates a radical critique across diverse fields of cultural practice.

It proposes to look at the changing nature of culture industry and the impact of latest digital media. Focusing on key issues such as mass media and mass culture, cultural capital, consumption and commodity, lifestyle and status, new media and advertising, power, control and authority, this program seeks to re-address the very notion of culture industry in a current context.

The concept of culture industry, thirty years after it has been introduced by the Frankfurt School, has been central to a current critical debate and is now reconsidered in response to evolving cultural landscape shaped by the advent of new technologies.

In its original sense, ‘culture industry’ – in itself a contradictory term setting the culture against its antithesis in industry – refers to the production of mass culture and encompassing such areas of mass communication as radio, tv, press, film/cinema. The account proposed by Horkheimer and Adorno suggests that, unlike nineteenth century Marxist theory of free consumer choice of commodities based on the use-value (utility of the product), consumers in late capitalism are deprived of that choice. The use-value has been brought under the control of capitalist producers due to the power of mass media and advertising in particular. This places the consumer in an awkward if not passive position. However, Horkheimer and Adorno argue that ‘consumption may serve to express a deep awareness of the damage that capitalism is inflicting upon consumers’ who, in turn, develop a range of effective strategies to use the system to their own advantage.

These are those strategies employed by practitioners from various areas of cultural practice such as artistic, curatorial, cultural criticism, media industry which form the core of a debate on ‘the culture industry’ in the context of media.

Each of the events is free and open to the public. The presentations will be webcast and visitors to the website are encouraged to participate in the evolving conversations through the discussion forum.

Speakers:

Josephine Bosma, The Netherlands
Sarah Cook, Canada/UK
Neil Cummings, UK
Eric Klutenberg, The Netherlands
Piotr Krajewski, Poland
Violetta Kultubasis-Krajewska, Poland
Marysia Lewandowska, UK
Olia Lialina, Russia/Germany
Paul D. Miller, USA
Sally Jane Norman, New Zealand/France
Kate Rich, Australia/UK
®™ark, Global
SODA, UK
Jeremy Valentine, UK

DJ Spooky.

 

i+DATA – Instituting Data Exposition

i+DATA – Instituting Data Exposition

[i+DAT[A]: Instituting Data Exposition]

 

[Tuesday 9 to Saturday 13 April 2002]

 

[i-DAT, University of Plymouth, UK]

Original html website can be found here: https://i-dat.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/oldi-DATprojects/idata/index.html

 

i+DAT[A]: Instituting Data Exposition PDF

 

Title: i+DAT[A]: Instituting Data Exposition

Dates: Tuesday 9 to Saturday 13 April 2002

Location: i-DAT, University of Plymouth, UK

Email: @i-dat.org

Subject: i+DAT[A] exposes the ways in which data is instituted in a variety of contexts, de-fragmenting issues related to the production, control and distribution of digital media across the cultural industries.

The i+DAT[A] Exposition seeks to de-fragment practices and digital activities across the public and private sectors that define the cultural industries within the South West region and beyond. Partitioned into a series of seminars, practical workshops, presentations and screenings, the exposition provides a rich environment for focused critical discussion on the future of digital media.

i+DAT[A]’s week of events leads up to the Instituting Data Conference on Friday 12 and Saturday 13 April. This is an international conference, which is linked to the Hybrid Discourse series of events, which seeks to address the currency of the term “cultural industry” in the light of current changes in cultural production under the new economic conditions of networked societies. Both the Hybrid series and the Exposition facilitate a radical critique across diverse fields of cultural practice addressing the ways in which data is instituted (institutionally organised).

The production of digital media content has radically transformed the computing, communications and media industries. The impact on the users of these technologies has been far more acute. Educators and trainers, artists and architects, publishers and broadcasters, curators and archivists, are all faced with new digital opportunities to transform their professional practice. All too rapidly these opportunities manifest themselves as critical problems – that engage legal, technical, managerial, cultural and editorial issues. Even when standards and codes of practice appear to provide a sense of stability, digital data is by its nature unstable and technological innovation threatens to disorientate and fragment any coherent strategies. Through a rigorous engagement with these issues the i+DAT[A] Exposition will help optimise your digital activities.

i+DAT[A] maps a common digital territory that underpins a range of institutions and provides a critical and supportive environment where professionals from across the cultural industries can reflect on the impact of digital data. i-DAT[A] tests old models and provides new perspectives from which to view your practices and the ways in which data is instituted.

i+DAT[A] is organised by i-DAT, the Institute of Digital Art and Technology at the University of Plymouth, a new organisation engaged in the production and distribution of digital media with a broad cultural remit across the fields of art, industry and education. The Institute of Digital Art and Technology aims to be an internationally recognised Institute dedicated to exploring innovative applications of digital technology and associated emergent practices through intensive collaborations with industry, the arts and science. Through a dynamic integration of science, technology and art, i-DAT creates a platform for the exploration and dissemination of contemporary cultural production using digital technologies. Operating on a trans-disciplinary basis, i-DAT provides rich resources for research, development, ‘publishing’, education and training, forming a laboratory for artists and creative professionals to explore this new territory. 

Central to the mission of the Institute will be the economic, educational and creative benefits to the South West region through effective collaboration between partner academic institutions and the private and public sectors. From an economic perspective, the Institute acts as a catalyst for the creation of a vibrant digital media economy. Educationally and creatively, the Institute has, uniquely, a broad remit, which embraces both the digital arts and core technological aspects of the emerging digital media.

Partition Formats:

The Exposition is partitioned into several areas of interest, each of which is aimed at a particular target audience. However, the structure of the Exposition is designed to encourage participants to engage with sessions that offer a complimentary or parallel perspective on relevant digital issues. The intention is to encourage a de-fragmentation of digital knowledge and expertise.

All events have limited spaces and must be reserved in advance on a first come first serve basis. As a requirement of the European Social Fund all participants are asked to complete an ESF beneficiary form.

Conferences: Discreet conference sessions which engage with critical digital debates and knowledge exchange. These include: Digital Archiving / Public-Private Sector Digital Support / e-Learning / Digital Rights / Digital Publishing-Broadcasting / Generative Media / Curatorial Practices / Institutional Practices. Conference sessions take place daily usually in two simultaneous streams, in the Sherwell Centre on the University of Plymouth Campus.

Seminars: i+DAT[A] will host seminar and breakaway sessions from the main i+DAT[A] partitions. These include: Digital Networks for the Arts and Industry / Digital Curation, a regional perspective / Digital Rights and Intellectual Property in the Digital Age. These are being timetabled around the main conference sessions. Timings and locations will be announced on the i+DAT[A] website.

Workshops: Practical digital media workshops that cater for the conference sessions target audiences and initiate a regional collaborative digital production network. Workshops take place in the Babbage Building New Media Studios. A workshop fee of £20 per person will be charged.

Software available for exploration within the workshops include: Interactive Authoring: [Macromedia Flash, Director, Roxio Toast]: Image: [Freehand, Adobe Photoshop]: Web: [Dreamweaver, Java, CGI, Perl, BBEdit]. Audio: [SoundEdit, Emagic Logic Audio, Sonic Foundry Sound Forge, Acid]. Video: [Sorenson Broadcaster, Adobe Premiere, After Effects, Apple QuickTime Pro, Apple QuickTime VR Authoring Studio, Terran Cleaner]. 3D: [Kinetix 3D Studio Max, Cosmo Worlds VRML Builder].

Screenings: Evening sessions will be used for the screening and performance of digital works. A performance will follow the Generative Media conference (Thursday evening) and screenings follow the Curatorial Practices conference (Friday evening).

Exhibition: The foyer of the Sherwell Hall Conference Centre will host a number of digital events and commercial stands. Exhibitors include Submerge and MLA#2. Companies and organisations wishing to use the venue to tie into specific conference sessions should contact the Exposition organisers contact@i-dat.org or through the Exposition booking form.

Casts: The conference and evening sessions will be webcast and incorporate a number of online access points. For further details see the i+DAT[A] website:

www.i-dat.org/projects/idata

The i+DAT[A] Exposition programme may be subject to change without further notice. For up to date details on i+DAT[A] speakers, timetable and booking forms please see:

www.i-dat.org/projects/idata or Tel: (01752) 232560 or Email: contact@i-dat.org.

 

i+DAT[A] Exposition:

 

Tuesday: 09/04/02

Stream1: Digital Archive: 1.30-5.00 PM: Sherwell Centre.

This conference will present a number of digital archiving case studies and will explore the critical issues related to digital archiving practices and institutions, maintenance and future proofing, media formats, legal issues. Digital Archiving is revolutionising the activities of libraries and museums, offering new potential for greater access but also creating a range of concerns for coherent standards. This session draws on the expertise of organisations currently involved in establishing standards and practices that will define the future of our digital past.

Digital Archive Speakers: ARKive Project [Hewlett Packard] / Chris Clarke [National Sound Archive] / MODEL – [i-DAT+REALL+inIVA/V&A Museum- Artefact Project] / Patrick Russell [BFI].

Stream 2: Digital Interface: Public-Private Sector Futures. 1.30-5.00 PM: Sherwell Centre.

The Interface conference presents an opportunity for organisations developing parallel policies and practices in digital media across the South West region to present, discuss and reflect on policy, provision, infrastructure, and strategies for a shared digital future. Presenters are drawn from across the public and private sector support organisations for education, industry, arts and media. This is a unique occasion to map out opportunities [for funding, regional and national policies and potential cross disciplinary collaborations] across the emerging digital landscape.

Digital Interface Speakers include representatives from: South West Arts / Smart South West / Higher Education Regional Development Association – South West / South West Screen / Chair: Julian Beer [SRRU, UoP].

Workshop: Babbage New Media Studios.

Remote Access Workshop #1: Babbage New Media Studios. Running from Tuesday to Thursday the Digital Media Production Workshops initiate the Remote Access Network. These workshops will generate a network of practitioners wishing to share their particular skills and work collaboratively on new media projects. The intention is to develop a programme which will generate and strengthen a network that will become an organisation /network /collective in its own right.

Wednesday: 10/04/02

Stream1: Digital Knowledge: e-learning. 1.30-5.00 PM: Sherwell Centre.

Digital Knowledge explores current and future developments in digital learning environments from educational, technical and experimental perspectives. Speakers are drawn from a diverse range of backgrounds, each presenting a specific educational, technological or audience perspective on the fragmented field of digital learning. In an era where there is too much data to be processed into information, where information is seldom transformed into knowledge, and where knowledge is too often a substitute for wisdom, the e-Learning session examines the aspirations of educators and trainers exploring digital content and delivery systems. e-Learning Speakers include: Dr. Victoria de Rijke, Principal Lecturer and Rebbeca Sinker, Senior Research Fellow [DARE to Quack: Middlesex University + inIVA] / Neil Mcfadden [Orange Group Ltd] / Sybille Mansfield-Schiffmann [e-Learning Consultant] / Mike Phillips [i-DAT] / [Additional speakers tbc].

Stream2: Digital Rights: Intellectual Property and Media Law. 1.30-5.00 PM. Sherwell Centre.

This session will present legal perspectives on the impact of digital media and digital distribution systems on individual and corporate ownership of artistic and literary copyright, licensing, data protection and other media rights. The session will include case studies that explore the impact of media law on the digital domain, and conversely, the impact innovations in digital media are making on the future evolution of media law. In an area that is fraught with problems pertinent to small to medium size companies, as well the activities of individuals, this session will help map out a territory littered with digital/ legal mine fields.

Digital Rights speakers include: Andy Finney [ATSF] / Gary McKay [Bevan Ashcroft] / [BPI- British Phonographic Society] / Hugo de Rijke [i-DAT] / [Additional speakers tbc].

Workshops: Babbage New Media Studios.

#1: Remote Access Workshop #1+2.

#2: Digital Archiving Workshop: 10AM Start:

The Digital Archiving workshop provides a hands-on exploration of digital archiving processes. A variety of technologies will be explored for the capturing and formatting of digital assets from a range of source material. The workshop: Babbage New Media Studios.

Thursday: 11/04/02

Stream 1: Digital Publishing/Broadcasting: 10.00 AM – 5.00PM: Sherwell Centre.

One of the most important factors in the collapse of ‘multimedia publishing’ in the 90’s was the dominant mind set that defined the look and feel of products with a dogged determination to adhere to traditional media forms and production practices. Shovelling ‘book’ content onto the computer screen resulted in a surfeit of graphical interfaces with pseudo-metaphors for front ends. Unable to make the dimensional leap through the 3rd dimension (apart from superficial 3D menu buttons), towards the 4th (the domain of film and video), and finally the 5th dimension of interaction, the New Media industry all but collapsed under the gravitational pressures of a 2 dimensional mentality. Fortunately On-Line technologies now offer a second chance for a digital redemption. This conference explores issues that surround the successful and appropriate design, production, management and delivery of ‘digital media’. The focus is on the potential for the emergence of a truly ‘transmedia’ dissemination form that redefines traditional models of ‘publishing’ and ‘broadcasting’.

Speakers include: Macromedia / BBC (tbc) / OKSO / Two Four Productions / Northcliffe Group (tbc) / The Liquid Press / Andy Williamson [Peakviewing Transatlantic] / Chair: Mic Cady [New Media Consultant].

Stream 2: Generative Media: 2.00  – 5.00PM: Sherwell Centre.

Generative media is a term given to work usually (although not exclusively) automated by the use of a machine or computer, or by using instructions to define the rules by which the artwork is executed. After the initial parameters have been set by an artist-programmer the process of production is unsupervised, self-organising and ‘live’.  Work literally ‘grows’ autonomously, according to the innate properties of the chosen technology or the particular circumstances in which the instructions are carried out.

Alex Mclean [state51] / Joanna Walsh [zooleika] / Adrian Ward [signwave] will demonstrate creative possibilities for generative media, with a focus on issues related to creative autonomy and the emerging figure of the artist-programmer. Tom Trevor [Spacex Gallery] and Tina Sotiriadi [i-DAT] will talk about two art projects that engage these ideas – ‘Generator’ and ‘Vivaria’. Jon Pettigrew [Maxus] will present his generative film prototype that builds upon his earlier work as co-founder of KOAN. Geoff Cox [i-DAT] will chair and introduce the event. This seminar is programmed in association with eu-gene mail-list (http://www.generative.net) where

discussion may continue. This event also acts as pre-publicity for the touring exhibition *Generator*, Spacex gallery, 1 May – 22 June 2002, supported by The Arts Council of England (Collaborations Unit). *Vivaria* is at a research and development stage, and is also funded by the Arts Council of England (New Media Fund).

Workshops: Babbage New Media Studios.

1: Remote Access Workshop #2

2: e-Learning Workshop: In collaboration with The Orange Group Ltd.

The e-Learning Workshop explores the creation and development of digital learning environments. Issues of planning, design and re-usability are explored through a hands-on practical workshop that responds to the needs of participants.

Who is it for?: Organisations wishing to integrate a learning or training activity into their work environment and educators wishing to transfer their teaching and training skills to OnLine or OffLine (CDROM/HD) environments.

Generative Performance: 6.00PM> Sherwell Centre: The Generative Media event will be followed by performances of generative music by Slub and Limbomedia.

Friday: 12/04/02.

Curatorial Practices (in association with MUTE): 2.00-6.00PM: Sherwell Centre.

Based on the Frankfurt School’s concept of the culture industry, this session will investigate the diverse models of curatorial practice that facilitate production, distribution and dissemination of new media works. Set within a wider context of the current cultural economy this session examines interrelationships between artistic programming, varied sources of funding, audience development and participation, local and non-local community development, social infrastructure and cultural policy.

Speakers: Olia Lialina [Professor of Merz Academie, Stuttgart] / Violetta Kutlubasis-Krajewska & Piotr Krajewski [WRO Centre for Media Art, Poland] / Sarah Cook [Canada/UK, University of Sunderland] / Chair: Joasia Krysa [i-DAT] & Lina Dzuverovic-Russell [MUTE].

Workshops: Babbage New Media Studios.

1: Digital Publishing/ Broadcasting: 10.00AM Start: In collaboration with the Liquid Press and limbomedia.

Following on from the Digital Publishing / Broadcasting session this workshop explores some of the practical issues of transmedia content generation and dissemination. This workshop is designed to give participants the skills necessary to create interactive elements for use on CD-ROM or the web and for output to stable media forms such as journals and books. Server side environments are also explored for streaming media and integrated online environments. The workshop has a flexible format and will respond to issues and skill needs raised by participants.

Who is it for?: Organisations and individual new media practitioners interested in exploring digital dissemination activities that might not conform to standard website and CDROM design environments.

2: Generative Media Workshop: 10.00AM Start: In collaboration with limbomedia.

Following on from the Generative Media sessions the Generative Media Workshop allows participants to explore the development of generative systems using a range of media and software for OnLine or OffLine (CDROM/HD) environments. Previous experience of authoring environments would be helpful, although a range of models will be available for modification and mutilation. The workshop will explore audio and visual media formats.

Who is it for?: Organisations and individual new media practitioners interested in exploring generative systems for OnLine or OffLine (CDROM/HD) environments.

Screening: 6.00PM>: Sherwell Centre.

Screening of digital archive material from the WRO Centre for Media Art, Poland.

DataSpace zero-g: Yuri’s Night Celebration / Discussion: 6.00PM-late: Plymouth Arts Centre.

On the anniversary of Yuri Gagarin’s first human flight into space, i-DAT and Plymouth Arts Centre hosts a Yuri’s Night Celebration. Looking to the future of gravityless art and other cosmic investigations, participants and space-artists will explore possibilities through chatshow style discussion, installations, and celebratory fun.

As part of a global Space party (http://www.yurisnight.net), the DataSpace discussion will explore conjunctions of transcultural and progressive practices, creating strategies for artists to infiltrate space industry technologies such as microgravity simulations / Chair: Lorelei Lisowsky [i-DAT].

Saturday: 13/04/02.

Institutional Practices: 10.00AM-6.00PM: Sherwell Centre.

#1.Models: 10.00AM:

This session will examine different models of media art institutions that promote and disseminate digital technologies and their modus operandi: their structure, management, funding, programming, production and dissemination, audience development and future strategies for development. Issues to be addressed will include the importance of models for institutions; the demands of an infrastructure; how new media institutions can be made flexible and not condemned to a fixed building; how peripheral institutions can act as centres of activity.

Speakers: Luca Dal Pozzolo [Fondazione Fitzcarraldo, Italy] / Clive Gillman [FACT, UK] / Anne Nigten [V2, The Netherlands] / Chair: Bronac Ferran [Arts Council of England].

#2. Art-Commerce: 2.00PM:

This session will focus on the relationship of digital media institutions to industry in local and non-local contexts. For instance, to what extent is artistic research a development process for commercial interests, how can a sense of artistic integrity be maintained whilst remaining open to creative possibilities and how useful is the distinction between public and private spheres? The contradictory benefits of industrial links will be investigated through a discourse which questions how these tensions might be embraced as part of the creative dynamic of cultural production using digital technology.

Speakers: Jordan Crandall [Artist and media theorist, USA] / Marina Grzinic Mauhler [Institute of Philosophy at the ZRC SAZU, Slovenia] / Simon Ford [Mute Magazine, UK] / Chair: Violetta Kutlubasis-Krajewska & Piotr Krajewski [WRO Centre for Media Art, Poland].

 

Contact:

The Institute of Digital Art and Technology

School of Computing

University of Plymouth

Drake Circus

Plymouth

PL48AA

t: ++44-01752-232541

f: ++44-01752-232560

e: contact@i-dat.org

Location:

Workshops: Babbage New Media Studios on the University of Plymouth Campus.

Conference: Sherwell Centre on the University of Plymouth Campus.

 

V01D

V01D

22ND JUNE – 22ND JULY 2001.
Through digital processes, forms of architecture are changing. The definitions of buildings, spaces and places have all undergone transformation as digital processes alter the way we design, construct, conceive, present and ultimately experience architecture. As architecture transforms its identity and role, it is an appropriate point to reflect upon the methodologies that have emerged in recent times. To document the less tangible, to critique the crazy and explore the subtle. The V01D show provides the public and architects a chance to see unusual and cutting edge forms of digital architectures. From virtual reality systems, 3D fly-throughs across extraordinary landscapes, and what happens when you let children play with VR technology, the show promises to extend our understandings of buildings as new media emerges and transforms our world. Exhibition runs from 22nd June 22nd July 2001. This exhibition coincides with the Royal Institute of British Architects Architecture.

 

C O N T E N T S
preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .04
walking with avatars fiona bailey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
new improved reality digital skin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18
stephen perrella interview oliver lowenstein, encoding by limbomedia .22
we like technology general lighting and power . . . . . . . . . . . .30
occupied territory iain borden . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40
habitaculus chris speed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .46
psychometric architecture mike phillips . . . . . . . . . . . .52
extending architecture peter anders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58
playground geoff cox and drmm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .66
biographies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70
acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72
V01D
22nd June – 22nd July 2001
Edited by Chris Speed and George Grinsted
Produced by The Institute of Digital Art and Technology,
Plymouth Arts Centre, limbomedia and Digital Skin.
ISBN 1 84102 087 7
Digitally printed in the UK
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