Author Archive

Biennale of Electronic Arts Perth (BEAP)

Wednesday, July 31st, 2002

The Biennale of Electronic Arts, Perth actively embraces the opening of new technological frontiers.

Biennale of Electronic Art Perth 2002 from Paul Thomas on Vimeo.

BEAP is an international event which includes a conference,symposiums, forum and exhibition presenting the theoretical, cultural and philosophical basis of Electronic Arts practice. The inaugural thematic focus for BEAP is LOCUS, the place where we believe consciousness exists. The idea of place is being renegotiated through the developing biological relationships, effecting consciousness. These effects are further confronted through the external input of computer generated and augmented virtual realities. We find ourselves as the centre of this point of convergence, our senses become the portals, our skin becomes the screen between these immersive realties. This portal, this relocated screen, should now be at the forefront of minds, when the skin no longer defines the boundaries of our sense of self.

The Biennale examines these explosions of activities at the intersection of art, science, and technology, by practitioners in the field of developing electronic technologies from Australia and around the world. It will focus on the ongoing need for dialogue and contextualisation to represent the current states in which we will find ourselves.

BEAP shares an interest in the possibilities of using exhibitions and discussion to explore aspects of practice as well as developing networks to critically evaluate work. From Perth the concept of Locus is placed in the wider context of international forums, communicating with other groups and individuals in Australia and overseas.

The John Curtin Gallery and the Studio for Electronic Arts in the School of Art at Curtin University of Technology have sought expressions of interest from artists working either individually or in partnership with scientists to instigate an international electronic arts exhibition. This exhibition will feature cutting edge work from international, national and regional contemporary arts practitioners. The exhibited works will explore the boundaries of new technologies and present them to the public in a challenging and thought provoking way.

There has been a significant attitude shift in recent years with artists and scientists reaching out beyond their own domains and this comes at a time when global economics, fuelled by new developments in science and digital technology, is providing increasing opportunities for artistic and technological interactivity. Artists have always been among the first to apply technological advances to their work, and using electronic and digital technologies for seeing and expressing ideas is becoming commonplace in the scientific arena. This mutual interest in shared electronic and digital tools is fostering a common language between artists and scientists, and the Internet and email enable artists and scientist’s new access to one another. Given all these factors there is now an exciting opportunity for developing collaborative partnerships for informing and inspiring society with the artist and scientist working together in the field of electronic arts.

Director Paul Thomas

http://mass.nomad.net.au/wp-content/uploads/beap/200

SECOND ITERATION: GENERATIVE SYSTEMS IN THE ELECTRONIC ARTS

Friday, December 7th, 2001

Wednesday 5th to Friday 7th December 2001

Second Iteration : emergence is the event for anyone with an interest in the relationship between generative processes, creativity and artistic practice. The key theme will be emergence: the property of simple, interacting processes to acquire characteristics and form beyond those direct to the sum of the individual components. Second Iteration will investigate the discontinuities between poeisis and physis, and how these processes influence the development of creative ideas.

http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~iterate/SI/index.html

E-volution of New Media

Wednesday, November 28th, 2001

Articles in Vol 21 no 3

The E-volution of New Media Art Full article available

Editorial by Kathy Cleland

An Ecology of OZ Mutant Media

Feature by Jean Poole
Wade Marynowsky, aka Spanky is a software engineer who has coded a new program which allows audio-video samples to be collated for the live performance of a particular ‘song’, triggered live through a preferably loud sound system and video projector. This innovation marks a step forward in the realm of audio-video intersection and hybridisation. The recent emergence of VJ’s (Vidi-yo Jockeys), artists who combine computer and VHS source materials to play with visual rhythms, create atmospheres, tell stories, respond to the music and provide visual stimulus also play a crucial role in this new media arena. Other new media collectives such as Shut up & Shop, Kraftwerk, the Distributed Audio Sequencer Environment crew and Labrat are here discussed. — More »

An End to Technophobia! Risk-Taking the way to go

Feature by Kim Machan
Machan turns the light on and examines the fears associated with technology – mystical secret language, complex software, indecipherable code – and furthermore those associated when art is involved. She proposes that the use of technology in everyday life be an experimental process, more aligned to the ways it is used in an art-based contexts. She states that: “through risk taking with fragile technologies we not only accelerate our knowledge but also accelerate relationships formed from the very human experience with technology”. — More »

Digital Drawing: The Same But Different

Feature by Mike Leggett
Drawing – the use of line and tone – is at the other end of a technology timeline currently unravelling in the digital age of information. The theory and practice of drawing ranges from a tool for honing perceptual disciplines to one that permits the free-flow of the obsessive-compulsive component of our personalities. Leggett looks at the works of artists Paul Thomas, Maria Miranda, Harriet Birks, Alyssa Rothwell, Mr Snow, Peter Callas, Simon Biggs and Damien Everett and the various digital tools they employ to assist in the documenting and ‘drawing out’ of their individual ideas. — More »

Do Art-droids Dream Of Electric Sheep? Full article available

Feature by Danny Butt
Peter Robinson and Jacqueline Fraser were the first two New Zealand artists ever to be included in the Venice Biennale. Both were chosen as a result of their work, rich in conceptual layering and with roots in Maori culture, but wrapped in appealingly conventional presentation styles with plenty of hooks for an international audience. This fact leads Butt to the discussion surrounding the support for New Zealand’s arts and culture sectors, pointing to a few examples such as Cuckoo, The Physics Room web project series and artists such as Sean Kerr and Warren Olds. — More »

Electrobricollage and Popular Culture

Feature by Darren Tofts
Tofts attempts to redefine that which is commonly known as ‘new media art’, as he believes it is out of touch with what’s actually going on in digital culture. He refers to a range of contemporary Australian artists utilising digital media to explore some of the ways old material is appropriated and remediated to present works that are new and unique. Amongst those are Josephine Starrs and Leon Cmielewski, Murray McKeich, Ian Haig, Nicholas Negroponte, David Carson, James Widdowson, Gregory Baldwin, Elena Popa, Greg O’Connor,Troy Innocent, Rebecca Young, Andrew Trevillian and Tina Gonsalvas. — More »

Inframedia Audio: Glitches and Tape Hiss

Feature by Mitchell Whitelaw
This article focuses on that which is known as ‘sound art’, ‘new media art’ or if a label is required the best might be simply ‘audio’. It is not so much a sound as a transparent substrate for organised expression but rather sound being mediated, synthesised, generated, collaged. Furthermore this article looks at the in-between sounds – the glitches, clicks, pops, and CD-skips – with many artists drawing on these entropic internal workings of audio processing systems. Artists include Nam June Paik, Minit, David Haines, Vicky Browne, Andrew Gadow and Netochka Nezvanova. — More »

Interfacing Art, Science and New Media

Feature by Anna Munster
Among the current metaphors used to describe the unfolding relations between art and science, the two ascriptions that have held sway most recently have been those of collaboration and/or intersection. Both art and science have sent out sets of feelers towards each other’s cultures which has in turn produced an overlapping sphere of cultural and intellectual activity. Following Lisa Jardine’s argument, Munster tentatively proposes that “we think through these connections as a process of hybridisation performed by the work of the technical-aesthetic objects themselves” rather than to declare a glorious new age of harmony, unity and productivity between the two. Artists Oron Catts, Ionat Zurr, Guy Ben-Ary, Justine Cooper, Michele Barker and Patricia Piccinini are in reference. — More »

Is Any Body Really There? Hybrid/Performance Arts Full article available

Feature by Keith Gallasch and Virginia Baxter
In a work that refuses language and conventional psychologising, Mary Moore’s production Exile, which opened at the Sydney Spring International Festival of New Music at The Studio, Sydney Opera House in 2000, the ascribed meaning is an experience rich in identification. This is pleasurably disorienting theatre that says it all about the ‘immersive’ experience from 3D to Cinemascope to TODD-AO to Cinema to VR. Other new media performance and installation works are brought into focus such as the Melbourne-based Company in Space work Trial by Video (1997), Liquid Gold by Lisa O’Neill, that of Queensland media artist Keith Armstrong and the Melbourne performance company The Men Who Knew Too Much. —More »

Out of Australia: International Exposure

Feature by Linda Wallace
This article poses the question of what new media art exhibitions, as international exports, can offer to us as a nation, as a ‘new media’ community and as individual artists, and of how they can function in terms of the transmission and propagation of certain ideas and images into what might be called ‘the world brain’. To discuss this Wallace looks at the structure and outcomes of PROBE, the first large-scale exhibition of contemporary, new media art ever held in Beijing which featured the work of Patricia Piccinini, Justine Cooper, Leon Cmielewski/Josephine Starrs, Brenda L. Croft, Zen Yipu and Jen Seevink, as well as including a range of internet sites. — More »

Polemic: An Allergic Reaction – The eminence grise in our Art Schools

Feature by Pat Hoffie
Artist/academic Pat Hoffie has been brooding on the rise and rise of the éminence grise in our teaching institutions and warns of the perils of giving in and being swept along by the current of the times. She is not the only commentator to observe that the visual arts created an irritating skin condition for itself in the eighties when, in search of institutional support, it mimicked the language of ‘professionalism’ and thus unwittingly exposed itself to the corrosive influence of bureaucracy. This is here discussed. — More »

Profile: Jon McCormack’s Evolving Ethics

Feature by Liminal Product
Most readers would probably have noticed that talk about A-life technology (or any technology for that matter) has a definite shelf life. Liminal Product [LP] quizzed internationally acclaimed computer artist Jon McCormack, whose paper [Re]Designing Nature given at dLux media art’s FutureScreen symposium on Artificial Life in October 2000, and recent piece, Eden exhibited at Cyber Cultures, Casula Powerhouse, in the same year, articulate many of the concerns about A-Life that Australian artists grapple with. — More »

Profile: Melinda Rackham’s Online Installations

Feature by Sean Cubitt
Time is the key. They say that the only law of physics that absolutely requires time is the second law of thermodynamics, the law that says systems tend towards entropy. That tendency is time’s arrow, the ineluctable winding down of the universe. Except, of course, for life. — More »

Sarai: New Media Initiative in Delhi

Feature by Samara Mitchell
In Delhi early in 2001, a new media research and development program Sarai: The New Media Initiative was launched carrying the energy and quality of intellectual exchange embedded within the history of the caravanserai, translated through the colourful codes, cants and images of public urban life within India’s cities. Sarai is a bold initiative facilitating formal and informal partnerships within India and internationally between the likes of hackers, philosophers, artists, media theorists, graphic designers, anthropologists, filmmakers and software developers. Some of the names which appear in this article include Meena Nanji, Rehan Ansari, Graham Harwood, Monica Narula, Sarah Neville, Mari Velonaki and Mukhul Kesevan. — More »

The A-gender of Cute Capital

Feature by Larissa Hjorth
One the one hand the notion of the ‘cute’ is seemingly universal and yet it is marked by specific cultural indices and contextual factors. The possible modes of employing the ‘cute’ is evidenced by the practices of Australian artists Martine Corompt and Kate Beynon. Both artists have a strong interest in character culture (ie. comics, cartoons) and their associated vernaculars; in turn they explore and outline different types of ‘cute’ landscapes. Both artists use ambiguity in the case of gender representation and utilise aspects of eastern and western contexts and character traits to create works which reinforce and subvert the constructions of gender, class and culture within the ‘universal’ graphic language. — More »

Update: Support for Australian Media Arts

Feature by Julianne Pierce
Through a process of active lobbying by various people around the country in the mid-eighties, the funding and institutional support for art and technology practice in Australia began to materialise. Some key figures in this push were Stephanie Britton, Louise Dauth and Gary Warner who saw the Australian Network for Art and Technology (ANAT) come into existence. The progress of the Australian new media arts scene is here documented from these early years and the various initiatives and supportive programs and events through to what is now the fundamental arts and cultural practice of the twentieth century. Artists Maria Miranda, Norie Neumark and Mari Velonaki are featured. — More »

Writing on the Net: Nodes and Hypertext

Feature by Linda Carroli
Many new media works contribute to the field of hypertext despite not being concerned with the literary. Corroli refers to Adrian Miles who likes to “think of hypertext as being primarily about links and nodes and their relations, which may or may not privilege words”. This topic is examined using examples where hypertext has become a primary focus such as the partnering of eWRe, trAce Online Writing Centre and ANAT who developed a series of online writing residencies in the late 1990s. Artists also discussed: Anne Walton, Francesca da Rimini, Sally Pryor, Diane Caney and Robin Petterd. — More »


FEAR (The Forum for Electronic Arts Research)

Thursday, August 30th, 2001

 

FEAR (The Forum for Electronic Arts Research) is a cross institutionalforum.

Electronic media massages our everyday lives and structures our work environments. Simultaneously global and intimate in reach, it is now the organising locus of contemporary practices, ideologies and ideation. This is why the thematic focus of the FEAR forums is to interrogate not only issues of difference but also to explore the nature of forums and their means of.

FEAR, through a series of forums, will examine concepts of difference whilst also focusing on the notions of the forums within an electronic age. The forum will include key note and specialist speakers, along with generous opportunities for the open discussion of current ideologies and theories in the arts.

This series of electronic arts research forums will address issues relevant to the current research/innovation agenda in the arts.

We are developing within Perth a culture of discussion within in the area of Electronic arts to be transmitted to the broader community both nationally and internationally.

FEAR Committee

Paul Thomas (Director, Studio for Electronic Arts, School of Art, Curtin University of Technology) instigated a series of Forums for Electronic Arts Research (FEAR) in collaboration with
Ian McLean (School of Architecture and Fine Art, University of Western Australia),
Domenico de Clario (Head of School, WAAPA@ECU).
Brogan Bunt Program chair School of Media and Culture, Murdoch University.

 

Fear 1

Fear 2

Fear 3

 

 

First Iteration: Generative Systems in the Electronic Arts

Thursday, December 30th, 1999

1 – 3 December 1999 at Monash University, Melbourne Australia.

The event intended to facilitate an environment conducive to discourse between artists and researchers across disciplines — to create a bridge between the “two cultures”.

The conference included presentations that focus on technical and aesthetic ideas in electronic art, covering both theoretical and practical issues in visual art, music composition and sound synthesis.

In addition to papers, posters and workshops, the conference included an exhibition and series of performances by local and international artists.

http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~iterate/FI/index.html

The Souillac Conferences, 1997-1998

Friday, March 7th, 1997

In 1997, representatives of art and industry gathered in the French town of Souillac for a conference on the topic of “Art, Industry and Innovation.” The result from this meeting was “The Souillac Charter for Art and Industry: A Framework for Collaboration.” In 1998 a second conference built on the efforts of the first gathering, resulting in “Souillac II: A Conference on Art, Industry & Innovation: Final Report.” Both documents have been published separately in Leonardo On-Line and in Leonardo; the full, combined report is presented here in its entirety.

 

http://leoalmanac.org/resources/emonograph/souillac.html

Terminus=

Sunday, December 8th, 1996

Terminus=

PREMISE: Terminus= is a group committed to the investigation of theoretical, cultural and philosophical discourse with contemporary art practice.

INTRODUCTION

Terminus= is an ambiguous reference to place suggesting an arrival at one's destination, as in a journey, a place at the end of the line as it were. But equally it can be a reference to the attaining of a goal or reaching a boundary.

“How does one articulate something like a new identity in a globalised art world when the tools of expression have become so blatantly internationalised?” Sue Best Real Time February 1997.

Western Australia is the largest state in Australia with a population of 1,800,000. Of these 1,400,000 live in the capital Perth. The tourist guide books describe it as the sunniest state capital in Australia and the most isolated capital city in the world. It seems paradoxical that at the time when new technology makes communication frontierless, that barriers between peoples seem to be evident around the globe. It is in the spirit of actively embracing the opening of new technological frontiers that Terminus= operates.

The group meets on a weekly basis both online and in realtime space. It is an art related reading group consisting of artists operating out of Perth, Western Australia. Online discussions from these weekly meetings are transcribed directly onto computer and are published on the internet monthly. Terminus= acknowledges the historical significance of the previous alternative arts group such as Praxis and Media-Space. Terminus= shares an interest in the possibilities of using discussion to explore aspects of their own practice as well as developing networks to critically evaluate work. This is then placed in the wider context of international forums, communicating with other groups and individuals in Australia and overseas.

Terminus= seeks to create a forum for critical buy cialis online without a prescription interrogations of issues that are filtered through this particular place. These observations are presented to artists here in Australia and elsewhere via Internet and printed matter.

Terminus= creates an archive for critical debate, without advocating any one particular methodology or art practice. We encourage collaboration between individuals and groups and seek to promote interdisciplinary practice between organisations and individuals, both here in Australia and elsewhere.


Artists were all working at Central TAFE in the department of art 1996-1998

Paul Thomas

Mark Cypher

Dave Carson

Barbara Bolt

Brian Mckay

Jeff Jones

Theo Koning

Alex Spremberg

CONFERENCE ON CYBERMIND

Friday, November 29th, 1996

CONFERENCE ON CYBERMIND: Registration, On-Line, and Program Information

FRIDAY-SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29 - DECEMBER 1, PERTH AUSTRALIA

AT THE SCHOOL OF DESIGN, CURTIN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, BENTLEY CAMPUS

CYBERMIND96 is the first of its kind in Australia, with participation by
the Australian Aboriginal community, researchers, academics, artists and
students of cyberspace, living and loving on the net. 

The purpose of CYBERMIND96 is to discuss on-line environments, including
issues of technology, email lists, virtual reality, access, software,
philosophy, and psychology/psychoanalytics. Many of the presenters are
from the Cybermind email-list, which has been on-going for two and a half
years; some are also on FOP-L, and e-conf.

The conference has been designed for both real life and virtual partici-
pation (using low-end equipment if necessary). Online options will in-
clude the Cybermind MOO, two email lists, and CU-SeeMe projection. Vir-
tual participation is free of course.

To participate on-line in the conference:

Web site:
http://www.curtin.edu.au/conference/cybermind

Cybermind MOO
telnet://complex.curtin.edu.au:6666
134.7.170.170     port  6666

LOCAL ON-LINE FACILITIES

During the conference there will be a cybercafe in Perth for on-line dis-
cussion and exploration, with us, as part of your real life attendance
experience at CYBERMIND96.  In addition CUSeeMe will be available.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

HOW TO REGISTER

Please document your details (name, insitution etc)
attach to payment, made out to Curtin University of Technology,
and forward to:

Cybermind96
TLG
Curtin University
GPO Box U1987
PERTH   WA   6001

or contact us 61 9 351 3872 (credit cards can be accommodated)
or at http://www.curtin.edu.au/conference/cybermind

Perth

Perth is the City of Lights, seen by John Glenn from space, on the Eastern
edge of the Indian Ocean.  Renowned for its lay-back, easy-style of living,
golden beaches and friendly people.

For further information, on accomodation, what to see and what to do,
please check
http://www.stour.net.au/Perth.html and read below.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Accommodation

Hotel            Royal Hotel - $40.00 per night single
                 Corner William & Wellington Sts, Perth
                  Ph (09) 324 1510
                  Fx (09) 321 2443

Backpackers       Britannia YHA Hostel - $21.00 p.night single
                  253 William St, Northbridge (Perth)
                  Ph (09) 328 6121
                  Fx (09) 227 9784

Student           Townsend Lodge - $15.00 p.night single
                         240 AdelaideTce  Perth
                         Ph (09) 325-4143
                         Fx (09) 421-1328

If you need assistance with accommodation please call
(09) 351 3872

Summer  season - BOOK SOON

   Before 22nd Nov                   After 22nd Nov
                                Waged   Unwaged         Waged   Unwaged

3 Day ticket            $130.00    $60.00          $150.00     $75.00  (Au$)

1 Day ticket            $50.00     $20.00          $55.00      $25.00  (Au$)

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SPECIAL EVENTS

STELARC

http://www.merlin.com.au/stelarc/fracfles/fracfles.html

FRACTAL FLESH

Virtual Reality technology allows a transgression of boundaries between
male/female, human/machine, time/space. The self becomes situated beyond
the skin. This is not a disconnecting or a splitting, but an EXTRUDING OF
AWARENESS.  What it means to be human is no longer the state of being
immersed in genetic memory but rather in being reconfigured in the
electromagnetic field of the circuit -

IN THE REALM OF THE IMAGE.

Performance at PICA - 51 James St, Northbridge
4-7 pm
$5.00 at the door

Perth Institute Contemporary Art
Ph: 227 9339

RICHARD MACKINNON

'Building Virtual communitites'
As presented at Silicon Valley, Calif, USA
Details to be announced

Contact Details
Convenor:
Karen Melzack
melzack@iinet.net.au
Ph (09) 443 1004

CONFERENCE:

EMAIL C
buy tadalafil
ybermind96@cc.curtin.edu.au Fx: (09) 351 3938 Ph (09) 351 3872 OR CONTACT Helen Roberts Curtin University of Technology GPO Box U1987 PERTH WA 6001 Australia. http://www.curtin.edu.au/conference/cybermind ----------------------------------------------------------------------- PROGRAM: FRIDAY: 08.30 - 09.00 REGISTRATION [08.45 - 09.00 MEETING OF PANEL CHAIRS - strategy meeting] 09.05 - 09.30 WELCOME - by Karen Melzack WELCOME - by Nyungah Community of Perth 09.30 - 10.00 MORNING TEA 10.00 - 10.30 KEYNOTE ADDRESS: Cybermind - by Alan Sondheim 10.30 - 12.00 PANEL: Cybermind - The Virtual Community Chair: Richard MacKinnon Discussant: Lynne Roberts * Jon Marshall - The Lost Ethnographer (20 mins) * Jerry Everard - A
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Semiotics of Cybermind (20 mins) Discussant - quick reminder of key points of each paper (15 mins) then 35 mins question time 12.00 - 13.30 LUNCH 13.30 - 14.30 PANEL: Aboriginal Access to Cyberspace Chair: Karen Melzack * Anna Cole - Current Status of Indigenous Australians & the Net * Jill Abdullah - Postgrad Interactive Programs @ Curtin * Michelle Winmar - Reconstruction/ Family History/Cultural Trad * Ernie Stringer - Assessing and Supporting Research 14.30 - 15.00 AFTERNOON TEA 15.00 - 16.30 PANEL: Weaving Webs Chair: Lynne Roberts * Terry Maybury - Virtual Story Telling * Glenda Nalder - Virtual Images * George Borzyskowski - Hacker Demo Scene [16.40 - 17.00 MEETING OF PANEL CHAIRS ******************************************************* SATURDAY 08.30 - 08.45 MEETING OF PANEL CHAIRS 09.00 - 10.30 PANEL: Cyber Spaces Chair Jerry Everard * Fanny Jacobson - TBA * Melinda Wearne - Structural Aesthetics * Geoff Rehn - Interactive Environment on PC 20 mins each then Chair summary of key points + 20 mins questions 10.30 - 11.00 MORNING TEA 11.00 - 12.30 PANEL: Law and Ethics in Cyberspace Chair: Ari Mendoza * Rob Cover - Social Development, Social Reality & Internet * Suzanne McKenzie - Informed Consent in Virtual Reality * Richard MacKinnon - Governance in Cyberspace 12.30 - 13.30 LUNCH 13.30 - 15.00 PANEL: Philosophy in Cyberspace Chair: Richard MacKinnon * Ari Mendoza - The Cybermind Hand * Jerry Everard - Deleuze: The Subject of Cyberspace * Alan Sondheim - Love, Sex & Death in Kyberspace Chair's summary of key points (10 mins) then 20 mins questions 15.00 - 15.30 AFTERNOON TEA 15.30 - 16.30 FORUM: Cybermind: The Philosophy and Psychology of Cyberspace Chair: Karen Melzack Participants: Alan Sondheim, Richard MacKinnon, Jerry Everard, Jon Marshall, Ari Mendoza ****************************************** SUNDAY [08.45 - 09.00 Meeting of Panel Chairs] 09.00 - 10.00 PANEL: Education @ Web Chair: Martin Dougiamas * Eilean Fairholme - WWW Instructional Design * Michael Grau - TBA * Martin Dougiamas - Machine-Augmented Thought 10.00 - 10.45 WORKSHOP Leader: Alan Sondheim 10.45 - 11.00 MORNING TEA 11.00 - 12.30 PANEL: Self in Cyberspace Chair: Jerry Everard * Jon Marshall - Virtual Hauntings * Stelarc - Phantom Bodies * Lynne Roberts - Exploring Virtuality 12.30 - 13.30 LUNCH 13.30 - 15.30 PLENARY: Alan Sondheim - Person/Text Chair Ari Mendoza *Alan Sondheim *Jon Marshall 15.30 - 16.00 AFTERNOON TEA 16.00 - 16.45 ROUND-TABLE: Cybermind - Whence and Whither? Conference Outcomes Chair: Ari Mendoza Participants: Alan Sondheim, Jon Marshall, Ari Mendoza, Richard MacKinnon, Fanny Jacobson, Karen Melzack and other CMers

Art in the Electronic Landscape

Monday, July 22nd, 1996

Vol 16 nos 2&3 1996

Double issue issued with Artlink's CD Rom Sequinz – a survey of electronic art in Australia (Mac users only). The issue examines multimedia and education, frontiers and challenges, the future and audience interaction. Cutting edge issue, opening up many of the ongoing debates about the impact of the digital world on traditional artistic modes of expression.

 


Burning the Interface

Monday, July 22nd, 1996

The thesis describes the development during the 1990s of visual artists' utilisation of computer-based interactive multimedia and the production internationally, with a focus on Australian artists, of artworks on the CD-ROM media format. 
Earlier parts of the author's research led to the exhibition, 'Burning the Interface < International Artists' CD-ROM>', which he co-curated, opening at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, in 1996, before touring to Perth, Brisbane, Melbourne and Adelaide.
The thesis surveys the range of practice by artists working with digital media and the opportunities for exhibition in the public spaces of museums, galleries and the street, and advances scenarios for correcting the laxity of response by the exhibiting institutions to the vigour with which Australian artists represented their work and ideas at this time in national and international forums. 
Four published artists' work on CDROM are analysed in detail, and a concluding chapter about 'interactive multimedia' and its usefulness as an art medium to the artist introduces the studio practice component of this MFA submission. This takes the form of a prototype 'experimental' version of an interactive multimedia work on CD-ROM, ('Strangers on the Land') a copy of which is contained in a pocket at the rear of the bound version.

http://unsworks.unsw.edu.au/vital/access/manager/Repository/unsworks:586