Archive for the ‘+media’ Category

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Torture Classics at Coded Cultures

Liz Vlx about the ubermorgen.com project “torture classics”

Coded Cultures 2011

This week the Coded Cultures Festival 2011 starts in Vienna.

coded-cultures

Coded Cultures 2011 presents itself on many different locations in Vienna, with the main focus on the Donaukanal (Danube Channel) and the surrounding Viennese city districts.

From 21st to 25th of September focus days will be held, which mainly will take place at the Viennese Danube Channel, the 2nd district of Vienna, Museums Quarter Vienna, the Badeschiff and the Odeon Theatre. From the 26th of September to the 2nd of Octo- ber workshops, presentations and artist-talks are taking place. Partners are Transmediale Berlin, Media Lab Prado Madrid, Enter Festival Prag and Amber Festival Istanbul (among many others). On the 1st of October the Festival is ending with a big event at the Badeschiff in cooperation with the viennese Waves Festival.

CC_map

The opening event is this Wed 21st – expect first postings 2b online during the weekend!

FILE Festival Sao Paulo 2011

FILE Festival, Sao Paulo. Huge city, huge exhibition. Like every year, the File Festival manages to show a wide variety of international contemporary new media art. Installations, Performances, Machinima, Animations, Webart,… But they also host Workshops dealing with newest technics and tools and a Symposium which addresses current topics and therefor is a good discursive platform for new media art.

A big difference to most of the new media art festivals is the wide-ranging audience visiting the exhibition. With about 1000 visitors per day and a period of one month it does not only adress the typical new media art nerds.

Because i participated with my installation “skia” in the exhibition and the symposium i had a very limited time frame to document the artworks.

But i even managed to get Christobal Mendoza for an interview, whos collaborative work “nervous structure” was one of my favourites.


Another very poetic and beautiful piece was ADA, an analog interactive installation by Karina Smigla-Bobinski.

The next work i have to explain a bit…. If you stand in front of this screen, your face is tracked and alternately displayed with some movie scenes, where the head of the actors are on the same position in the framing as yours… It is called “movie mirrors” and was made by Ali Miharbi from turkey.

y/our/space: digital art exhibition. vienna 2011

media art, digital art, installations, sculputures, photographie, video and sound….

last spring, you could get a picture about the vararity of works, produced by students of the university of applied arts, department: digital media art. they showed 35 new works in a very special place, an former store for exclusive fur-goods, right in the inner-city of Vienna. tagr.tv was invited to tag this exhibition and had the chance to talk to 10 artists and the two curators, Ruth Schnell and Romana Schuller, about their work.

Interview: Franziska Mayr-Keber
camera: Andreas muk Haider
Edit: Andreas muk Haider, Franziska Mayr-Keber

Interviews with participating artists

we couldn’t catch up with all the 34 represented artists in this exhibition… but at least with a few of them…

Interviews: Franziska Mayr-Keber
Camera: Andreas muk Haider
Edit: Andreas muk Haider

French Pavillon- Biennale Venice 2011

Christian Boltanski has built a huge scaffold supporting a long conveyor-belt, printed with babies, displayed birth- and starving-rate, made a game out of it and called it “Chance”.”The unfolding of life and the incessant rhythm of birth raise the question of the universal and the unique in a way, to ponder what distinguishes one from the other…” (Jean-Hubert Martin)

Having a seat after this interview, relaxing from running around for hours, on one of three very old chairs placed beside this pavillon, a strange whispering voice stated to ask “is it the last time?” repeatedly, so that I needed some time until I recognized that it was comming from my chair.-spooky!

For those who don´t have the ability to visit venice until end of november and also for those who just like killing time, they´ve installed a homepage where you can play this game “Chance” too.
Christian Boltanski promises to send you a surprise in the case you win.
www.boltanski-chance.com
Enjoy!

The Stateless Pavilion – Pirate Camp

The new project devised by the Italian art group CONIGLIOVIOLA – is the first itinerant artists’ camping program created to give free hospitality to a selection of young international artists during the most important contemporary art events worldwide.

In true corsair style, the PIRATE CAMP will – for the very first time – break the well-entrenched rule that outlaws camping in the lagoon!

The Stateless Pavilion, as the first PIRATE CAMP has been dubbed, aims to focus attention on the topic “extra-territoriality” as a condition typical of artists that comes to expression in the project’s two key figures: the pirate and the camper.The status of not-belonging-to-places, inhabiting places while remaining outside the concept of territorial ownership, becomes a status of statelessness, of not-belonging-to-any-state, in the context of the Venice Biennale, whose mainstay is the fact that its every edition is built on an offering – and a reiteration – of the representation of national identities, by “national” pavilions.

www.pirate-camp.org

www.coniglioviola.com

Video by Philipp Köster and Wasserbloom, Interview and edit by Wasserbloom

Gelitin Pavilion – Some like it hot!

Gelitin presented a wood fired glass melting furnance at the Venice Biennale 2011 in the Giardino della Vergini at the Arsenale. The text inserts are taken from an Interview with Tobias and Ali by Christian Egger. Video by Wasserbloom and Susanna Gartner, Cut by Wasserbloom. More information at www.gelitin.net/venezia2011

Roboterträume @ Kunsthaus Graz 2010

Spontan habe ich mich entschlossen nach Graz zu düsen, im Dezember des Vorjahres. Eigentlich, um einen Vortrag der holländischen Kunsthistorikerin und Filmemacherin Mieke Bal zu lauschen (“what can museums do, beyond the local-global dilemma”). Sie war zu Gast im Kunsthaus Graz und ebendort lief zu dieser Zeit auch die Ausstellung Robotertäume. Eine wunderbare Gelegenheit also, diese Medienkunst-Schau für tagr.tv zu inspizieren.

Auf meine Spontanität hat sich, seitens des Museums, Jochen D. Paul eingelassen, nahm sich Zeit und Mut für eine kleine Führung bei laufender Kamera. Besten Dank an dieser Stelle, Jochen!

In der Ausstellung, eine Koproduktion des Kunsthauses Graz und des Museum Jean Tinguely Basel, werden junge Positionen – unter ihnen auch Niki Passath – mit KünstlerInnen einer älteren Generation – wie Richard Kriesche und Nam June Paik – gegenüber gestellt. Alles unter dem Titel Roboterträume. Aber um die Träume der Roboter geht es nicht, wie Peter Pakesch und Roland Wetzel im Vorwort des Ausstellungskatalogs klar stellen.  Auch wenn die Geschichte von SF Autor Isaac Asimov Titel-gebend ist: Roboter Elvex beginnt zu träumen von der Revolution gegen seine Schöpfer, den Menschen. Elvex wird abgedreht.

Pakesch, Wetzel schreiben weiter: “Junge Künstlerinnen und Künstler sind eingeladen, mit neu entwickelten Projekten auf die Frage zu antworten, was die Kunst zum Verständnis der rasend schnell voranschreitenden Entwicklung in Forschung und Technik beizutragen hat.” Da ich den Ausstellungskatalog erst im nachhinein gelesen habe, fällt es mir schwer zu beurteilen, ob ich als Besucherin auf diese Frage eine Antwort bekommen habe.
Ehrlich gesagt, es ist mir egal. Denn die Ausstellung war interessant, eben weil es eine gute Mischung war. Junge Kunst auf Augenhöhe mit den Urgesteinen.

Von den modernen Ausstellungshallen des Grazer Aliens war ich dafür weniger beeindruckt. Eine flache Rolltreppe befördert dich nicht nur auf die erste Ebene, sondern lässt dich gleich ans erste Kunstwerk taumeln. Und beim Betrachten desselben wurde ich das unangenehme Gefühl nicht los, Neuankömmlinge könnten mir in den Rücken fallen. Gut, der Andrang war nicht so groß, sodass ich nur einmal angestupst wurde. Ausserdem, ist es wirklich notwendig sich lange vor einem Kunstwerk aufzuhalten?

Enter Festival 2011, Prague

A walk through the exhibition of this years exhibition of the enter festival in Prague.

interview & editing: emanuel andel
camera: andreas muk haider

Daito Manabe: Body Hack

After flying to Berlin, a night without sleep and a full day workshop Daito showed us how his Body Hack works and how it developed.

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