current

MIT wins $40,000 prize in nationwide balloon-hunt contest

http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/12/05/darpa.balloon.challenge/index.html

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(CNN) — A team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology won $40,000 in a high-tech scavenger hunt on Saturday by discovering the location of 10 red weather balloons.

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency announced that the MIT team was the first group in the contest to report the latitude and longitude coordinates of all 10 balloons, which were scattered across the United States.

DARPA is the U.S. military’s research arm. Saturday’s challenge is the latest in a series that the agency has hosted since 2004.

This contest was designed to test the way social networking and lesser-known Web-based techniques can help accomplish a large-scale, time-critical task.

read more…

Art and Its Cultural Contradictions, Joshua Decter

 http://www.afterall.org/journal/issue.22/art.and.the.cultural.contradictions.of.urban.regeneration.social.justice.and.sustainability

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What is at stake when artists, architects, curators, organisers and other cultural producers facilitate bricks-and-mortar change, on the ground in cities, with citizens, communities and institutions? How do we test the interrelationships between the practices of artists and urban policy makers? What is the metric that we might utilise to determine effectiveness? And what do we mean by effectiveness? Critical effect? (Or, for that matter, critical affect?) The putatively emancipatory outcome generated by some kind of new situational knowledge? Or, is it a question of generating ambiguity, per se, as a means of problematising hegemonic political, economic and cultural formations?

read more…

German Brutality and Roman Sensuality: Pictures of Soldiers in the Landscape

Collier Schorr’s photographs examine the way nationality, gender and sexuality influence an individual’s identity.
Collier Schorr was born in New York City in 1963 and attended the School of the Visual Arts, New York.
For her 1998 project “Neue Soldaten,” Schorr juxtaposed documentary-style pictures of a Swedish army battalion with pictures of fake Swedish soldiers played by German teenagers.
http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/schorr/

whitehot | November 2008, Maya Lujan and Melanie Pullen

Feminism, Fashion and the Swastika in Los Angeles
Part I: Maya Lujan controversy
Part II: Mary Anna Pomonis interviews Melanie Pullen

Two Los Angeles based female artists Maya Lujan and Melanie Pullen started the fall opening season with a bang. The images of their work containing swastikas have descended on the art scene in a flurry. Lujan has been all over the Los Angeles Times blog, “Culture Monster” and Pullen’s image of a Nazi ran as the back cover of Artillery Magazine. This article began as an investigation of the swastika and symbols of violence and their contemporary use. It wound up being a journey that led me to two very different female artists with divergent takes on the subject.
http://whitehotmagazine.com/articles/2008-maya-lujan-melanie-pullen/1654

DICTIONARY OF WAR

http://dictionaryofwar.org/concepts/

DICTIONARY OF WAR is a collaborative platform for creating 100 concepts on the issue of war, to be invented, arranged and presented by scientists, artists, theorists and activists at four public, two-day events in Frankfurt, Munich, Graz and Berlin. The aim is to create key concepts that either play a significant role in current discussions of war, have so far been neglected, or have yet to be created.

DICTIONARY OF WAR is about polemics in various respects: It seeks confrontation with a reality that is characterised by the concealment of power relations the more that one talks about war and peace. But it is also about finding out to what extent war may function as an “analyzer of power relations” that constitutes current changes.

Changes that have been producing ever new wordings: The new war, post-modern war, global war, immanent war – all sorts of labels that indicate that the juridical model of sovereignty would seem to have had its day: war as an armed confrontation between sovereign nation states is a thing of the past.

While this still refers to conflict between different interest groups that are defined by the degree of their intensity and extension, unlike in the past war serves to regulate rather than destroy or renew existing power relations.

War is a “constitutive form of a new order” that no longer knows an inside or outside, that not only destroys but also produces life. In this new world order there is no difference between war and non-war: war is perpetual and everywhere.

So like so many other things these days, war too seems to be subject to a de- and re-regulation process that radically challenges old certainties and replaces them with new premises that shall not be questioned. DICTIONARY OF WAR sets out to oppose war and, at the same time, calls for “desertion” from a war of words in which facts are created with such force in their communication and propaganda that they can no longer be challenged.

The aim of DICTIONARY OF WAR is to make the creation or revaluation of concepts transparent into more or less open processes in which we can and need to intervene; at the same time, the aim is to develop models that redefine the creation of concepts on the basis not of interdisciplinary but rather undisciplined, not co-operative but rather collaborative processes.

“At least, when we create concepts, we are doing something.” The idea of DICTIONARY OF WAR, then, begins by referring to the theory of creating concepts proposed by Deleuze and Guattari: Concepts must be invented, created, produced; concepts refer to problems without which they would be meaningless. It is not about definitions, anecdotes, original opinions or entertainment, but rather about developing the tools with which to attain new ideas.

The concepts are created by conceptual personae, who are not identical to the author, philosopher, artist self, but rather testify to a third person beneath or beside. According to Deleuze and Guattari, “we do not do something by saying it but produce movement by thinking it, through the intermediary of a conceptual persona”.

DICTIONARY OF WAR is not a book in the proper sense. It is not about texts, deadlines or editing but about performativity. The concepts are introduced in alphabetical order by their conceptual personae in twenty-minute presentations.

There are no restrictions with regard to format. DICTIONARY OF WAR will be composed of lectures, choreographies, films, slide shows, readings or whatever format authors, actors, organisers and conceptual personae choose to use.

Finally, DICTIONARY OF WAR may well be a kind of war machine itself: the concepts are not intended to be deployed as means of control that regulate meanings, but which rather activate developments and processes and evoke events. “To draw speech to oneself and bring something incomprehensible into the world.” (Kleist)

Iconoclash! – Political Imagery from the Berlin Wall to German Unification

Exhibition

Wednesday, 4 November 2009 – Friday, 8 January 2010
Goethe-Institut Washington, FotoGalerie
+1 (202) 289-1200

Political and cultural artifacts – how their meanings change.

Political iconography is established with meaning and purpose. Tampering with an icon means that the original value system has been altered, compromised or simply fallen away, creating new meanings in the process.

Read more:

http://www.goethe.de/ins/us/was/ver/en4921346v.htm
info [at] washington [dot] goethe [dot] org

leninade

SA + CfPP bibliography 09/10

Surveillance Architecture:
/ Andreas Böhn, Christine Mielke (Hg.), Die zerstörte Stadt – Mediale Repräsentationen urbaner Räume von Troja bis SimCity

Vogelsang aftermath:
/ Hinderik M. Emrich, “Was Avatare und Engel uns sagen können…” Zur Philosophie des Unsichtbaren, 2006
/ Daniel Levy/Natan Sznaider, Erinnerung im globalen Zeitalter: Der Holocaust, 2001
/ Klaus Theweleit, Männerphantasien 1+2, Stroemfeld 1977 + 1978, Lizenzausgabe als TB bei Piper Verlag 2000
/Schenker, Christoph [Hrsg.], Kunst und Öffentlichkeit
/Schwierin, Marcel [Regie], Ewige Schönheit
/Virilio, Paul, Die Kunst des Schreckens
/Zielinski, Siegfried, Archäologie der Medien
/Steinacher, Gerald [Hrsg.], Faschismus und Architektur
/Lennon, John, Dark tourism
/Foucault, Michel, Die Heterotopien
/Colomina, Beatriz, Domesticity at war
/Chomsky, Noam, Interventionen
/Agamben, Giorgio, Die souveräne Macht und das nackte Leben
/Agamben, Giorgio, The coming community 2001

other references:
Caroline Jones
http://architecture.mit.edu/people/profiles/prjones.html

Caroline Bassett
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/mediastudies/profile24166.html

democracy…

http://www.spiegelfechter.com/wordpress/1094/eine-gute-frage
wenn Menschen vor die Wahl gestellt werden, ob sie sich für Etwas in den
Folgen Kalkulierbares, Überschaubares entscheiden sollen,
oder für etwas Unsicheres, Unabsehbares, dann neigt die Mehrzahl dazu,
sich für das Kalkulierbare, das Überschaubare zu entscheiden.
Sogar wenn absehbar ist, daß das Resultat mit Sicherheit niederträchtig
und miserabel sein wird.
Das Unkalkulierbare meiden die Meisten, sogar wenn etliche in Frage
kommenden Faktoren weitaus besser sind, als das sichere Schlechte……
Ich frage mich oft, was überwiegt: Der Fatalismus, die Dummheit oder die
gedankliche Bequemlichkeit…..

Da wagt es doch tatsächlich ein holländischer Journalist, der Merkel
eine “nicht vorgesehene” Frage bei der Pressekonferenz zu stellen,
was sich von den gekauften deutschen Journalisten keiner mehr traut…..
sehr delikat…….
Im erhaltenen Originaltext hieß es “und wir dummes Volk haben die auch
noch gewählt”
-da mußte ich einhaken- denn ich habe sie nicht gewählt und gehöre ja
auch zum (dummen) Volk….

the 10 second conversation

10 sec. 1 bayt. {+992-98-537-89-54}

Call for Participation in Tajikistan:Mon Oct 12 (noon) to Wed Oct 14 (noon), 2009

Many Tajiks are aware that for those cell phone users who have a plan with the Central Asian telecommunications company named Babilon, the first ten seconds of any phone call are free. To take advantage of this freebee, strategic users have developed a new art form – the ten second conversation.

Inspired by this contemporary cultural form and the Tajik tradition of 2-verse poetry (or ‘Bayt’), REV-, a New York-based art organization (www.rev-it.org) is initiating a competition for the best ten second poems. You are invited to participate; newcomers to Tajik poetry are invited to try their hand.

The project’s title, ‘Bayt’ (pronounced ‘bite’ in English), refers to both the Tajik word for the short 2-verse poem popularized to Western audiences by the Rubayat, written in the 12th century by poet Omar Khayyam. ‘Bayt’ also resembles in sound the English noun that means, ‘a small piece’ (as in, “Just a bite”), and the ‘byte’, an internationally recognized unit used to measure quantities of digital data.

http://www.10sec1bayt.com/en/home.html