ecopolis

life in transformation

Archive for the ‘landscape’ tag

A Break in the Media Landscape (http://artfem.tv)

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ArtFem.TV

ArtFem.TV is a non-profit artist run ITV and media art portal presenting Art and Feminism. The aim of ArtFem.TV is to foster Women in the Arts, their art works and projects, to create an international online television screen for the creativity, images and voices of Women.

“Although there is little consensus among women at the present time about where to go next, and although many goals of the Women’s Movement have not been met – there is still violence against women, discrimination in education and employment, racism, and sexism in daily life – contemporary art by women reveals the formulation of complex strategies and practices through which they are confronting the exclusion of art history, expanding theoretical knowledge, and promoting social change.”[Whitney Chadwick, Women, Art and Society, Thames & Hudson, London, 2002]

ArtFem.TV is an attempt to break with a male dominated net-culture and media landscape to highlight women’s emphases in art and media works.

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

July 10th, 2009 at 6:19 am

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(Everyday is) Earth Day

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earthday_ny.jpg

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

April 22nd, 2008 at 3:26 pm

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La BEI e la diga di Gibe III in Etiopia

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fiume_omo.jpg

La diga di Gilgel Gibe III sul fiume Omo sarà il più grande impianto idroelettrico della storia dell’Etiopia. Alta ben 240 metri, con una potenza stimata in 1.870 MW, Gibe III dovrebbe costare circa 1,4 miliardi di euro. Lungo le sponde dell’Omo risiedono più di 15 diverse comunità tribali, la cui sicurezza alimentare dipende strettamente dalle risorse naturali e dal delicato equilibrio dell’ecosistema locale.

Il fiume offre un habitat unico, ricco di un’incredibile varietà faunistica. Nel 1980 la bassa valle dell’Omo è stata riconosciuta dall’Unesco Patrimonio dell’Umanità per i numerosi ritrovamenti di scheletri ed utensili risalenti a diversi milioni di anni fa. L’impianto idroelettrico sbarrerà completamente il corso del fiume provocando la totale inondazione di un canyon e la creazione di un bacino lungo più di 150 chilometri. Per centinaia di chilometri a valle della diga l’ecosistema sarà completamente alterato.

La CRBM, insieme alle altre Ong che compongono la coalizione europea Counter Balance, chiede con forza alla Banca europea per gli investimenti (BEI) di non fornire prestiti per la costruzione della diga di Gilgel Gibe III, in Etiopia.

http://www.crbm.org/modules.php?name=browse&mode=page&cntid=838

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

March 6th, 2008 at 1:15 pm

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Atlas of Radical Cartography

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An Atlas of Radical Cartography
Edited by Lize Mogel and Alexis Bhagat
Published by the Journal of Aesthetics & Protest Press

Purchase online at www.joaap.org
An Atlas of Radical Cartography is a collection of 10 maps and 10 essays about social issues from globalization to garbage; surveillance to extraordinary rendition; statelessness to visibility; deportation to migration. It pairs artists, architects, and designers with writers to address the role of the map as a political agent. An Atlas of Radical Cartography makes an important contribution to a growing cultural movement that traverses the boundaries between art, cartography, geography and activism.

Maps by:
An Architektur | the Center for Urban Pedagogy (CUP) | Ashley Hunt | Institute for Applied Autonomy | Pedro Lasch | Lize Mogel | Trevor Paglen & John Emerson | Brooke Singer | Jane Tsong | Unnayan

Essays by:

Kolya Abramsky | Sebastian Cobarrubias & Maribel Casas-Cortes | Alejandro De Acosta | Avery F. Gordon | Institute for Applied Autonomy | Sarah Lewison | Jenny Price, Ellen Sollod, D.J. Waldie, Paul Kibel | Heather Rogers | Jai Sen | Visible Collective & Trevor Paglen

This beautiful boxed set containing ten unbound 17²x22² maps and a 160-page book of essays is immediately available from the Journal of Aesthetics and Protest Press @ www.joaap.org.
It is available to bookstores worldwide in January 2008 through Distributed Art Publishers (DAP) @ www.artbook.com.

Written by Luca

January 17th, 2008 at 3:33 pm

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19 Cities 20 Millions 21th Century

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192021 is a prroject devoted to the analyses and definitions of patterns reguarding the urban population explosion. The cities are the most consuming resources zone of the globe, they served as manufacturing place since ever, using the resources coming from agricultural zones near and far away. They’re growing and in the 21th century there’ll be 19 cities with over 20 millions people. These will be the hot spot.

Down here a map of the most populated cities of the world trough history:

Written by Luca

November 16th, 2007 at 3:45 pm

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Photoclima

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Photoclima, a new book lauched by Greenpeace, presents images of some of Spain’s most emblematic places have been altered to show what they could look like if action is not taken to tackle climate change. It’s realized by Pedro Armestre and Mario Gómez and presented by the Guardian.

Clima

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Written by Luca

November 15th, 2007 at 11:07 am

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Artificial Nature?

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Matchmaking

In Trondheim, Norway, there’s a festival from the 19th of October till the 11th of November, where there’re all the most important artists dealing with nature and his manipulation.

Nature can be defined as the physical world containing all natural phenomenas and living things, including the forces and mechanisms that collectively controls and run these processes independently of human volition or intervention. Mankind has tried to master and refine these mechanisms from its very beginning.

NATURE [of man]” presents artists and researchers with projects that takes a deeper look into man´s relation to nature, and the consequences and possibilities that lies therein.

Trondheim Matchmaking is an annual international festival for electronic arts and new technology arranged for the 7th time by the non-profit organization Trondheim Electronic Arts Centre.

The festival is a meeting point for presenting innovative ideas and artistic projects, a place to share knowledge, make contacts and learn new skills and develop resources within new technology and electronic arts. New art projects with a need for technology – new technologies with a need for substance: a place to bind together resources and competence within the field.

Written by Editor

October 29th, 2007 at 12:30 pm

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A New Public Medium?

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Urban

Interview with Susanne Jaschko, curator of Urban Screens Manchester 07, that will be in Manchester from the 11th since the 14th of October, with lectures, performances, conferences about the pixel surfaces of our future cities.

LB: What inspired you to think a project like Urban Screens? And how did you find people interested in it and infostructure to realize it?
SJ: The Urban Screens event in Manchester is the second of its kind. The first one took place in Amsterdam in 2005 and was produced by the Institute of Network Culture. The conference happened at a time when it became apparent that technological development, in particular the higher resolution of LED screens and decreasing costs will result in a massive change of the visual urban landscape. For the first time these urban and public screens were recognised as a phenomenon of post-industrial societies around the globe. Now two years later, the development has not come to a halt but has increased in speed. While the prices for LED screens are constantly dropping, contemporary architecture is increasingly embracing the concept of the media façade, turning whole buildings into screens. Due to their transparency new screen technologies like Mediamesh even allow to be applied to historic buildings, opening up completely new possibilities to architects.
At the same time, both China and the UK are setting up an armada of LED screens for the Olympic Games in 2008 and 2012. Urban Screens will address the challenges which arise from this new public medium. I would argue that most screen operators and city councils have not yet fully understood the potentials and conditions of this medium and the specific architectural and social context it is embedded within. The Manchester Urban Screens Conference and art and events programme will try to identify these potentials, but also discuss the cultural responsibility which commercial operators, architects, urban planners and cities have.
Interestingly the BBC is one of the initiators of the Urban Screens Manchester event. The BBC has pioneered in setting up a network of public LED screens in the UK which don’t show commercial content at all. This is unique and ground-breaking. But the BBC is a TV broadcaster, so they have used these screens as a broadcast medium fore-mostly. Being independent from income made by commercial advertising but also being internationally leading in the non-commercial implementation and use of public screens it is in their natural interest to explore the possibilities for culture and community life further e.g. through enabling the up-coming conference.

urban

LB: Is the city of Manchester really interested in promoting this architectural and perceptual evolution?
SJ: First of all the City of Manchester is strongly supporting and co-funding USM, which already proves that they are really interested in the topic and aware of the challenges which inhere public screens, be it LED screens, large scale projection or animated building façades. As the world’s first industrial city, it has witnessed a quick transformation into a service orientated economy with new types of office and hotel buildings, Manchester was the first city in the UK to host a BBC Big Screen in the city centre back in 2003. Like many UK cities, which are doing well economically, the city grows constantly and is challenged to further improve the quality of urban life. I would wish that more city councils would become more proactive about urban screens. Giant posters, LED screens or media facades have a huge impact on the visual appearance of the city. Currently money seems to win over the aesthetics and the flood of commercial screens in our city centres seems unstoppable. To say it more clearly, I am not advocating the ban of public screens but I would argue that they have to be implemented aesthetically into the existing urban fabric. Also we have to find ways to avoid audiovisual battles for attention in the urban environment. Last but not least I would also like to see art funders and artists take a more active role in this development and to reclaim public space as cultural space.

Urban

LB: Are there any themes or commons tha emerge from the artists presented at Urban Screens?
SJ: Of course, the question on screen aesthetics is one that has been posed by artists working in the urban realm. The Austrian artist Guenther Selichar for instance has extrapolated his concerns with colored screen surfaces to the public realm in several public art “interventions” which he has staged since 1993 on display at venues in New York City, Boston, Shanghai, China and various European cities. He will speak about this at the conference and will contribute a video to the art and events programme, which by and by breaks common expectations for the pleasant screen experience in pubic space. Our keynote speaker Jochen Gerz is renowned for his strong belief that public space is a platform for a heterogeneous society, which is often forgotten. This will be further discussed within the conference panels, one looking at screens as community interfaces and the other one posing the question how publicly accessible urban displays can and should be.

Urban

LB: I think that urban screens it can be a great vehicle for social promotion and partecipation and I’d love to see the big audiovisual billboards of the cities full of creative content, but besides events like Urban Screens how do you think urbans screens can show cultural content against the profits of advertising?
SJ: There is not one way or one solution to this problem. In a neo-liberal world nobody would stop the visual pollution that comes with advertising. Fortunately we still have not arrived in this society in Europe. So what we have to explore here is new models of economy which could also facilitate the production of artistic and community orientated content.
Screen operators are not opposed to artistic content in principal. However, I personally wonder why there are not more directions and restrictions coming from the city council. Public space is a cultural and communal space, so I would argue that commercial screen operators should be urged to show non-commercial content. In the future prices for screens technology will decrease and refinancing of screens will get easier which will hopefully open up more non-commercial content. Slowly architects and building owners will take responsibility for the content on their facades too. In this regard Urban Screens Manchester sets an important sign by focussing on the content rather than on the new technological developments. This conference will hopefully open up a critical debate and come up with some really good concepts instead of celebrating urban screens unaware of the problems which they cause.

Urban


LB: I can say I do really like the big moving images of the big screens, but what do you think about the visual pollution of the cities of the future? Or do you think that being a interactive audiovisual platform is the future of some cities?

SJ: Although urban screens can be perceived as a global phenomenon, I think that we are only just starting to understand the cultural potentials which they bear. Due to economic limitations these screens today are mostly used for advertising or to broadcast other traditional screen content such as video art, short films or TV content. In the future I hope we’ll manage to liberate the urban screen from its rectangular TV like shape and to connect it to the physical space in meaningful and aesthetic ways. Hopefully this will go hand in hand with the development of new content formats. In Manchester we will present some interactive works with this aim, for instance the “2.4 Ghz homing pigeons” project in which the number of pigeons is controlled by the presence of pedestrians. The “15 x15” project opens up the screen for participation and show people’s video clips in a 15×15 square grid. But there is much more to see and experience and I hope that the Manchester weather will be favourable to us.

Written by Luca

October 4th, 2007 at 10:54 am

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