CANADA = BERLIN - KARLSRUHE - DORTMUND
LIVE STREAMING
29. SEPT 05 - 1. OKT 05
CONFERENCE HOME PAGE www.mediaarthistory.org/
Um der wachsenden Bedeutung der Medienkunst in unserer Kultur gerecht zu
werden, diskutiert der Kongress erstmals die Geschichte der Medienkunst
innerhalb der Kunstgeschichte und ihrer interdisziplinären und
interkulturellen Nachbarschaft. Banff New Media Institute, die Datenbank für
Virtuelle Kunst, Leonardo/ISAST und UNESCO DigiArts kooperieren, um die
Interaktionen von Kunst, neuen Medien, Technologie und Wissenschaft sichtbar
zu machen, insbesondere um die Wechselwirkungen zwischen der Geschichte der
Medien und der Entwicklung der zeitgenössischen Kunst zu klären.
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LIVE STREAMING DER GESAMTEN KONFERENZ TÄGL. AB 16.30 UHR
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HMKV DORTMUND
Hartware MedienKunstVerein in der PHOENIX Halle,
Ecke Hochofenstrasse und Rombergstrasse, Dortmund-Hörde
www.hmkv.de
TESLA BERLIN (Transmediale)
tesla im podewilschen Palais Klosterstrasse 68-70, 10179 Berlin
www.tesla-berlin.de
ZKM KARLSRUHE
ZKM | Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie,
Lorenzstrasse 19, 76135 Karlsruhe
www.zkm.de
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29. September 05
GERMANY 16:30 h / CANADA 8:30 am
keynote Edmond Couchot: Towards the Autonomous Image
17:30h / 9:30 am
opening plenary
MediaArtHistories: Times & Landscapes 1
( Chairs: Oliver Grau and Gunalan Nadarajan )
After photography, film, video, and the little known media art history of
the 1960s-80s, today media artists are active in a wide range of digital
areas (including interactive, genetic, telematic and nanoart). Media Art
History offers a basis for attempting an evolutionary history of the
audiovisual media, from the Laterna Magica to the Panorama, Phantasmagoria,
Film, and the Virtual Art of recent decades. This panel tries to clarify, if
and how varieties of Media Art have been splitting up during the last
decades. It examines also how far back Media Art reaches as a historical
category within the history of Art, Science and Technology. This session
will offer a first overview about the visible influence of media art on all
fields of art.
Speakers: Gunalan Nadarajan, Luise Poissant, Oliver Grau, Mario Carpo
19:30h / 11:30 am
plenary Methodologies
(Chair: Mark Hansen and Erkki Huhtamo)
Critical overview of which methods art history has been using during the
past to approach media art.
Speakers: Mark Hansen, Erkki Huhtamo, Irina Aristarkhova, Andreas Broeckmann
22:10h / 2:10 pm
plenary
Image Science and Representation: From a Cognitive Point of View
(Chair: Barbara Stafford)
Although much recent scholarship in the Humanities and Social Sciences has
been "body-minded" this research has yet to grapple with a major problem
familiar to contemporary cognitive scientists and neuro scientists. How do
we reconcile a top-down, functional view of cognition with a view of human
beings as elements of a culturally shaped biological world? Historical as
well as elusive electronic media from the vantage of an embodied and
distributed brain.
Speakers: Barbara Stafford, Kristin Veel, Christine Ross, Phillip Thurtle &
Claudia X. Valdes, Christopher Salter, Tim Clark
0:25 h / 4:25 pm
concurrent session 1
Art as Research / Artists as Inventors
(Chair: Dieter Daniels)
Do "innovations" and "inventions" in the field of art differ from those in
the field of technology and science? Have artists contributed anything "new"
to those fields of research?
Speakers: Dieter Daniels, Chris Meigh-Andrews, Fred Turner, Simon Penny,
Cornelius Borck
concurrent session 2
MediaArtHistories: Times and Landscapes 2
(Chairs: Edward Shanken and Charlie Gere)
Although there has been important scholarship on intersections between art
and technology, there is no comprehensive technological history of art (as
there are feminist and Marxist histories of art, for example.) Canonical
histories of art fail to sufficiently address the inter-relatedness of
developments in science, technology, and art.
Speakers: Edward Shanken, Charlie Gere, Grant Taylor, Darko Fritz & Margit
Rosen, Sylvie Lacerte, Anne Collins Goodyear, Caroline Langill, Maria
Fernandez
30. September 05
16:45 h / 8:45 am
plenary Collecting,
Preserving and Archiving the Media Arts
(Chair: Jean Gagnon)
Collections grow because of different influences such as art dealers, the
art market, curators and currents in the international contemporary art
scene. What are the conditions necessary for a wider consideration of media
art works and of new media in these collections?
Speakers: Jean Gagnon, Christiane Paul, Peter Weibel, Jon Ippolito
19:00 h / 11:00 am
concurrent session 1
Database/New Scientific Tools
(Chairs: Rudolf Frieling and Oliver Grau)
Accessing and browsing the immense amount of data produced by individuals,
institutions, and archives has become a key question to our information
society. In which way can new scientific tools of structuring and
visualizing data provide new contexts and enhance our understanding of
semantics?
Speakers: Oliver Grau, Rudolf Frieling, Sandra Fauconnier, Christian Berndt,
Alain Depocas, Anne-Marie Duguet
concurrent session 2
Pop/Mass/Society
(Chairs: Machiko Kusahara and Andreas Lange)
The dividing lines between art products and consumer products have been
disappearing more and more since the Pop Art of the 1960s. The distinction
between artist and recipient has also become blurred. Most recently, the
digitalization of our society has sped up this process enormously. In
principle, more and more artworks are no longer bound to a specific place
and can be further developed relatively freely. The panel examines concrete
forms, e.g. computer games, determining the cultural context and what
consequences they could have for the understanding of art in the 21st
century.
Speakers: Machiko Kusahara, Andreas Lange, Karen Keifer-Boyd, Tobey
Crockett, Mark Tribe
4:00 h / 8:00 pm
Rudolf Arnheim Lecture:
Sarat Maharaj: Xeno-Epistemics: Global Migrations and other Ways’ of Knowing
1. Oktober 05
Germany 16:30 pm / Canada 8:30 am
plenary
Cross-Culture - Global Art
(Chairs: Sara Diamond and Manray Hsu)
This panel provides an opportunity to put a special focus on cross-cultural
influences, the global and the local. For example, how what are the impacts
of narrative structures from Aboriginal and other oral cultures on the
analysis and practice of new media? How do notions of identity shift across
cultures historically, how are these embedded and transformed by new media
practice? How does globalization and the construction of global contexts
such as festivals and biennials effect local new media practices?
Speakers: Sara Diamond, Manray Hsu, Sheila Petty, Mary Leigh Morbey, Thomas
Riccio, Aparna Sharma, Laura Marks
18:45 h / 10:45 am
concurrent session 1
Cross Diciplinary Research Methods
(Chairs: Ron Burnett and Frieder Nake)
Speakers: Frieder Nake, Ron Burnett, Dot Tuer, Guy Sui Durand, Michael
Century, David Tomas, Will Straw
concurrent session 2
Rejuvenate: Film, Sound and Music in Media Arts History
(Chairs: Tom Gunning and Douglas Kahn)
During an earlier period of new media arts discourse, time-based media were
often considered to be “old media.” While this conceit has been tempered, we
still need to consider the sophistication and provocation of film, sound and
music from the perspective of media arts history.
Speakers: Tom Gunning, Douglas Kahn, Keith Sanborn, Scott Bukatman
21:45 h / 1:45 pm
keynote Lucia Santaella: The Semiosis of Media Art, Science and Technology
22:45 h / 2:45 pm
concurerent session 1
Collaborative Practice/ Networking (History)
(Chairs: Ryszard Kluszczynski and Diana Domingues)
In a network people are working together, they share resources and knowledge
with each other - and they compete with each other. This process has sped up
enormously within a few decades and has reached a new quality/dimension. The
dataflow created new economies and new forms of human communication.
Speakers: Ryszard Kluszczynski, Diana Domingues, Nina Czegledy, Todd Davis,
Douglas Jarvis, Jeremy Turner, Margaret Dolinsky
concurrent session 2
What Can the History of New Media Learn from History of Science/Science
Studies?
(Chair: Linda Henderson)
Science and technology have been an important part of the cultural field in
the 20th century, and the history of science and science studies - along
with the field of literature and science - offer important lessons for art
historians writing the history of new media art.
Speakers: Timothy Lenoir, Michael Punt, Linda Henderson, Timothy Druckrey,
Simon Werrett, Yann Chateigné
1:00 am / 5:00 pm
concurrent session 1
High Art/Low Culture - the Future of Media Art Sciences?
(Chair: Karin Bruns)
The panel aims to bring together the methodological fields of media studies
and media art history. Rather than limiting their focus to canonical works
of art new studies in media art production blend methods and issues from art
history and media sciences as well as from communication studies, sociology,
techno sciences, art history, cultural and postcolonial studies.
Speakers: Karin Bruns, Yara Guasque, Andy Polaine, Claus Pias, Barbara Paul
concurrent session 2
History of Institutions
(Chairs: Itsuo Sakane and Jasia Reichardt)
Speakers: Itsuo Sakane, Jasia Reichardt, Michael Naimark, Peter Richards,
Johannes Göbel, Andreas Broeckmann (Discussant)
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Das REFRESH! Live-Streaming ist eine Initiative der transmediale mit dem
Hartware MedienKunstVerein (Dortmund), Tesla (Berlin) und dem ZKM | Zentrum
für Kunst und Medientechnologie Karlsruhe in Kooperation mit dem Forum
Goethe-Institut und dem Goethe-Institut Toronto.
Die REFRESH! Konferenz ist ein Projekt des Banff New Media Institute, der
Datenbank für Virtuelle Kunst (Conference Chair: Oliver Grau),
Leonardo/ISAST und UNESCO DigiArts.
Reference:
CONF: Refresh! Media Art Histories (29 Sept-1 Oct 05). In: ArtHist.net, Sep 15, 2005 (accessed Oct 15, 2024), <https://arthist.net/archive/27469>.