Author Archive

Media Art and Its Critics in the Australian Context

Sunday, November 11th, 2007

Daniel Palmer

Media Art Histories Archive

This paper explores the critical reception of media art in Australia over the past three decades, with a view to encouraging more situated critical histories and historically aware critical practices. I give particular emphasis to the responses to key electronic and media art exhibitions by non-specialist critics, writing in newspapers and art journals. Starting with so-called ‘experimental video’ in the 1970s, I explore critical coverage of such seminal events as ‘Some Recent Australian Videotapes’ at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 1980, curated by Bernice Murphy and Stephen Jones; ‘The Australian Video Festival’ in 1986; the ‘Third International Symposium on Electronic Art’ in 1992; various exhibitions held by Experimenta since the 1990s; ‘ConVerge: Where Art and Science Meet’, the 2002 Adelaide Biennale of Art; ‘2004: Australian Culture Now’, a collaboration between the National Gallery of Victoria and the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI), and the biennial Anne Landa Award at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. While this survey reveals an ‘anti-science’ bias, to some extent it also challenges the conception that Australian art critics have ignored or dismissed media art on conservative aesthetic grounds. As such, I draw out some consequences of a too-confident avant-gardism on the part of the new media art community, including a collective fascination with the newness of ‘new media’ art. Another key theme to emerge from this local history is the hybrid role of the video interface. I argue that video art helped to enable the development of ‘new media art’ in the late 1980s, and can be seen as part of a broader shift, with performance art, from the representational tradition of visual art to one engaged in the more presentational modes – incorporating the sense of the viewer participating in the space of the object, images or action. The current position of Australian video art as a bridge between media art and mainstream contemporary art raises the complex issue of how national media art histories relate to broader national and international art contexts. More fundamentally, the survey shows the acute impact of media art’s global networks on local artistic and critical practices.

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Computers in Art and Design Education (CADE) Conference

Wednesday, September 12th, 2007

Computers in Art and Design Education (CADE) Conference

The Biennale of

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Electronic Arts Perth (BEAP) is proud to host the 2007 Computers in Art and Design Education (CADE) Conference as part of its education programme.

The CADE

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Conference is a major international event for those interested in exploring ideas which converge at the intersection of pedagogical methods, arts, design, science, and technology.

Over three stimulating days, forty educators, creative arts practitioners and theorists at the forefront of their practise will explore the latest research and technologies. They will discover new professional methodologies for creative arts education as they contemplate the theme “Stillness”.

CADE conference proceedings

Sound Art and the Extended University

Sunday, August 26th, 2007

julian knowles on survival in a harsh climate

AS MANY OF THE WRITERS FOR THIS ISSUE WILL IDENTIFY, THE ARTS IN AUSTRALIAN UNIVERSITIES HAVE BEEN UNDER A PERIOD OF SUSTAINED

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CHALLENGE SINCE THE MID 1990s. IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO ADDRESS THIS ISSUE IN RELATION TO SOUND ART AND EXPERIMENTAL MUSIC

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PRACTICES WITHOUT CONSIDERING THE ECOLOGY IN WHICH THEY ARE SITUATED

Gillian Leahy: Revolution/Reaction: Production Challenges, Threats to Theory

Thursday, August 23rd, 2007

RealTime Issue 80: Gillian Leahy is a filmmaker whose credits include My Life Without Steve (1986) and Our Park (1998). She is Associate Professor and Program Director of the Media Arts and Production Program at UTS and a

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il of ASPERA.

http://www.realtimearts.net/article/80/8635

New Media Assessment

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

In the Bachelor of Communication in Media/Multimedia Production students undertake a six unit major in practical production. For the major in New Media,

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a typical course structure is:

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a.edu.au/groupwork/Case_1/Frameset.html”>http://creative.canberra.edu.au/groupwork/Case_1/Frameset.html

Master of Science (Biological Art)

Saturday, January 27th, 2007

Biological art is a broad term that covers artistic engagement with the knowledge and tools of life sciences.

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This is a growing field of research in which the manipulation of living systems is performed for the creation of ar

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twork for cultural discussion.

UWA is recognised as the leader in this field. The University provides a space where biological art can be pursued within a scientific setting; through the establishment in the year 2000 of SymbioticA: the art and science collaborative research laboratory within the School of Anatomy and Human Biology.

Teaching in the core units of the course will draw on internationally recognised arts practitioners from the Tissue Culture and Art Project (Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr), scientists from within the School of Anatomy and Human Biology and guest lectures from international scholars and artists undertaking residencies at SymbioticA. A diverse and wide spectrum of expertise in a number of faculties at UWA will be utilised, potentially including Life and Physical Sciences, Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, Natural and Agricultural Sciences, and Architecture, Landscape and Visual Arts.

Why study biological arts?

The Graduate Diploma of Science (Biological Art) and Master of Science (Biological Art) is intended for people who already hold a degree in Science, Humanities and the Visual Arts but who wish to undertake interdisciplinary studies to engage with the crossover of art and science.

The course is designed for art practitioners, scientists, and humanities scholars who wish to engage with creative bioresearch. The course will focus on recent advances in the Life Sciences, both in theory and practice. Emphasis is placed on developing critical thought, ethical and cultural issues and cross-disciplinary experimentation in art and science with an excess to scientific laboratories, techniques and expertise.

Ozco media art scoping study

Monday, September 25th, 2006
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Processpatching Defining New Methods in aRt&D

Friday, September 8th, 2006

Investigates how electronic art patches together processes and methods from the arts, engineering and computer science environments. This investigation is positioned in the electronic art laboratory where new alliances wit

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h other disciplines are established. It aims to improve collaboration by informing others about one’s artistic research and development approach. Processpatching, Defining New Methods in aRt&D, provides information about the practical and theoretical aspects of the research and development processes of artists.

In the context of a rapidly changing domain of contemporary electronic art practice- where the speed of technological innovation and the topicality of art ‘process as research’ methods are both under constant revision- the process of collaboration between art, computer science and engineering is an important addition to existing ‘R&D’. Scholarly as well as practical exploration of artistic methods, viewed in relation to the field of new technology, can be seen to enable and foster innovation in both the conceptualisation and

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practice of the electronic arts. At the same time, citing new media art in the context of technological innovation brings a mix of scientific and engineering issues to the fore and thereby demands an extended functionality that may lead to R&D, as technology attempts to take account of aesthetic and social considerations in its re-development. This new field of new media or electronic art R&D is different from research and development aimed at practical applications of new technologies as we see them in everyday life. A next step for Research and Development in Art (aRt&D) is a formalisation of the associated work methods, as an essential ingredient for interdisciplinary collaboration.

http://processpatching.net/online-reading/introduction-processpatching.html

BEAPworks Exhibition 06

Thursday, August 24th, 2006

The Biennale is dedicated to supporting the ongoing professional development and promotion of Western Australian creators working in the field of electronic and living arts.

In 2005 BEAPworks presented research and development projects with an adv

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enturous approach to emerging technologies. This year the BEAPworks exhibition again showcases local artists exploring new pathways for creating electronic and biological art: Donna Franklin, Nicola Kaye, Stephen Terry, Tanja Visosevic, Guy

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Ben Ary, Mark Cypher. These artists deal with a variety of concerns that focus on our ever-growing computer mediated existence.

 


http://mass.nomad.net.au/wp-content/uploads/beapworks06/beapworks.htm

Christy Dena: ARTISTS [AS] EDUCATORS: MEDIA ARTS: The university: A New Home for New Media

Wednesday, August 23rd, 2006
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