ecopolis

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Archive for the ‘values’ tag

Lynch and the Invincible Germany?!

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David Lynch’s Berlin visit on the 13th of november in Berlin was turned into a chaotic fiasco by his friend, “The Raja of Germany”. They’re there to present the Since he just kept repeating the same words when asked to clarify, the two latter seem closest to the truth. The crowd started screaming and booing, David Lynch and his american entourage looking dumbstruck, not having understood a word of the Raja’s speech in german. Nose on the Nosedef blog reported everything:

“We want an invincible Germany! Invincible Germany” exclaims the “Raja of Germany”, dressed in a white robe and golden little crown.
“What do you mean?” cries the audience. “Hitler wanted an invincible Germany as well!”

“Yes, but unfortunately he didn’t succeed!”

“WHAAAAAAAAAT”?!?!?!?!

And then Lynch tries to explains…

Lynch had also brought spokespeople for the enlightenment movement / cult called Transcendental Meditation, and announced that the David Lynch Foundation yesterday bought Teufelsberg where it will build the “Invincible Germany University”. A place for 1.000 students to learn all there is to learn – plus Transcendental Meditation™ and yoga flying. A lot of people expressed doubts about this Transcendental Meditation™ procedure, like Joe Kellet.

Here’s a photo of the University / Tower of Invincibility on Teufelsberg and it’s quite scary:

Written by Luca

November 20th, 2007 at 3:58 pm

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The Antarctic Treaty

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There are few places in the world where there has never been war, where the environment is fully protected, and where scientific research has priority. But there is a whole continent like this – it is the land of the Antarctic Treaty parties call “… a natural reserve, devoted to peace and science”.

Antartic Nations

The Antarctic Treaty was signed in Washington on 1 December 1959 by the twelve nations that had been active during the IGY (Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Chile, France, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, South Africa, United Kingdom, United States and USSR). The Treaty, which applies to the area south of 60° South latitude, is surprisingly short, but remarkably effective. Through this agreement, the countries active in Antarctica consult on the uses of a whole continent, with a commitment that it should not become the scene or object of international discord.

penguins1.jpg

Since entering into force on 23 June 1961, the Treaty has been recognised as one of the most successful international agreements. Problematic differences over territorial claims have been effectively set aside and as a disarmament regime it has been outstandingly successful. The Treaty parties remain firmly committed to a system that is still effective in protecting their essential Antarctic interests.

Environmental protection reached a new stage with the signing of the Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty in Madrid on 4 October 1991. The Protocol designates Antarctica as a “natural reserve, devoted to peace and science ”, and, together with the six Annexes, contains a comprehensive set of basic principles and detailed, mandatory rules applicable to human activities in Antarctica.

Drake passage


Francis Drake
810 km (500 miles) wide passage is the shortest crossing from Antarctica to the rest of the world’s land. The boundary between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans is sometimes taken to be a line drawn from Cape Horn to Snow Island (260 km (161 miles) north of mainland Antarctica). Alternatively the meridian that passes through Cape Horn may be taken as the boundary. Both boundaries lie entirely within the Drake Passage.

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

June 18th, 2007 at 9:51 am

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Ten Theses on Non-Democratic Electronics

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Think Global Act Local

Ten provocative theses by Geert Lovink and Ned Rossiter to promote the networks to engage ‘the political’:
1. Welcome to the politics of diversion. There is a growing paradox between the real existing looseness, the ‘tyranny of structurelessness’ on the one hand, and desire to organize in familiar structures such as the trade union, party and movement on the other. Both options are problematic. Activists, especially those from the baby boom generation, do not like to speculate on the potential of networks as they fluctuate too much – an anxiety perhaps fuelled by the instability of their pension funds. Networks are known for their unreliability and unsustainability. Even though they can scale up in unprecedented ways, and have the potential to perform real-time global politics from below, they also disintegrate in the same speed. Like Protestant churches and Christian sects, leftist political parties and traditional union structures can give people a much needed structure to their life. It is hard to argue against the healing, therapeutic value that such organisations can have on societies and neighbourhoods that are under severe pressure of disintegration. What we observe is that these two strategies are diverging models. They do not compete, but they do not necessarily overlap either.

2. Uphold the synthesis. Think Global, Act Local. It sounds obvious, and so it should be. But what is to be done in a situation of growing gaps, ruptures and tensions? It is naive to think that old trade union bosses are likely to give up their positions, in the same way as political parties will not risk their institutional commitments for some digital hipsters. The question then becomes how to arrange temporary coalitions, being well aware of the diverging interests and cultures. We see this happening in unique ways amongst activist bloggers and, for instance, the Muslim Brothers in Egypt. Instead of ‘managing’ disruptive technologies, it should be also taken into consideration to radically take sides with the new generations and join the disruption. It is high time for radical politics to take the driver’s seat and suppress the compulsive response to point at ‘damaging consequences’. Let’s get rid of moral pedagogies and shape the social change we envision.

3. Applied scalability is the new technics. How to crack the mystery of scalability and transformation of issues into a critical proliferation of protest with revolutionary potential? With the tendency of networks to regress into ghettoes of self-affirmation (the multitudes are all men), we can say that in many ways networks have yet to engage ‘the political’. The coalition building that attends the process of trans-scalar movement will by design create an immanent relation between networks and the political. Moreover, it will greatly facilitate the theoretical and analytical understanding of networks. Tension precipitates the will to utterance, to express and to act. And it is time for networks to go to work.

4. Dream up Indymedia 2.0. No more Wikipedia neutrality. Where are the social networking sites for activists? The Internet flagship of the ‘other globalization movement’, Indymedia, has not changed since its inception in late 1999. Of course the website has grown – there are now editions in dozens of language, with a variety of local and national nodes that we rarely see on the Net. But the conceptual basics are still the same. The problems have been identified a long time ago: there is an ongoing confusion between the alternative news agent model, the practical community organization level and strategic debates. All too often Indymedia is used as an ‘alternative CNN’. There is nothing wrong with that, except that the nature of the corporate news industry itself is changing.

5. The revolution will be participatory or she will not be. It there is no desire addressed, not much will happen. YouTube and MySpace are fueled with no shortage of desire. Rightly or not, they are considered the apogee of participatory media. But they are hardly hotbeds of media activism. Linux geeks – leave the ecosphere of servicing free software cartels. The abbreviation policy, from G8 to WTO, has failed, precisely because abstract complex arrangements within global capitalism do not translate well into the messy everyday. By contrast, the NGO movements, at their best (we won’t go into a catalogue of failures here), have proven the efficacy of situated networks. The problem of trans-scalar movement, however, remains. This was made clear in the multi-stakeholder governance model adopted by government, business and civil society organizations throughout the UN’s World Summit on the Information Society (2003-2005). Here we saw a few CSOs find a seat at the negotiating table, but it didn’t amount to much more than a temporary gestural economy. At the same time, as CSO participants scaled the ladder of political/discursive legitimacy, the logic of their networks began to fade away. This is the problematic we speak of between seemingly structureless networks and structured organizations. The obsession with democracy provides another register of this social-technical condition.

6. The borders of networks comprise the “‘non-democratic” element of democracy’ (Balibar/Mezzadra). This insight is particularly helpful when thinking ‘the political’ of networks, since it signals the fact that networks are not by default open, horizontal and global. This is the mistake of much of the discourse on networks. There is no politics of networks if there are no borders of networks. Instead of forcing ‘democracy’ onto networks, either through policing or installed software, we should investigate its nature. This does not mean that we have to openly support ‘benevolent dictatorships’ or enlightened totalitarian rule. Usually networks thrive on small-scale informality, particularly in the early existence of social structures.

7. The borders of networks are the spacings of politics.
As networks undergo the transversal process of scalar transformation, the borders of networks are revealed as both limits and possibilities. Whereas in Organized Networks 1 we emphasized what happened to the ‘inside’ of a network, we will look here at what happens to the edges. In the process of growth the kernel of a network crystallizes a high energy. After some months or, for the lucky ones, a few years, there is longer an inside of networks, only the ruins of the border. This is an enormous challenge for networks – how to engage the border as the condition of transformation and renewal?

8. There are no citizens of the media. Find and replace the citizen with users. Users have rights too. The user is not a non-historical category but rather a system-specific actor that holds no relationship to modernity’s institutions and their corresponding discourse on rights. What is needed, then, is total reengineering of user-rights within the logic of networks. As much as ‘citizen journalists’, liberal democratic governments, big media and global institutions are endlessly effusive about their democratic credentials, organized networks are equally insistent in maintaining a ‘non-democratic’ politics. A politics without representation – since how do networks represent anything? – and instead a non-representational politics of relations. Non-democratic does not mean anti-democratic or elitist. It has proven of strategic importance to loosen ties between ‘democracy’ and ‘the media’. Let’s us remember that the citizen journalist is always tied to the media organs of the nation-state. Networks are not nations. In times of an abundance of channels, platforms and networks, it is no longer necessary to claim ‘access’. The democratization of the media has come to an end. People are tired of reading the same old critique of NYT, CNN and other news outlets that are so obviously Western and neo-liberal biased. It is time to concentrate our efforts on the politics of filtering. What information do we want to read and pass on? What happens when you find out that I am filtering you out? Do we only link to ‘friends’?
And what to make of this obsessive compulsion to collect ‘friends’? Would it be alright if we replaced friends with comrades? What could object against the tendency to build social networks? Wasn’t this what so many activists dreamt of?

9. Governance requires protocols of dissensus. The governance of networks is most clearly brought into question at the borders of networks. Control is the issue here. Borders function to at once regulate entry, but they also invite secret societies to infiltrate by other means. The contest between these two dynamics can be understood as the battle between governmental regimes and non- governmental desires. We do not have to decide here as we have split agendas: we long for order in times of chaos and simultaneously overload and dream of free information streams. This brings us to the related issue of sustainability. If the borders of networks consist of governmental and non-governmental elements (administration vs.inspired sabotage and the will to infiltrate), then we can also say that the borders of networks highlight their inherent fragility. How can this be turned into a strength for the future of networks? There are always overlaps of identity and social structures.

10. Design your education. At the current conjuncture we find inspiration in the proliferation of education-centred networks, of non-aligned initiatives, of militant research. Education, of course, has always been about the cultivation of minds and bodies in order supply capital with its required labour-power. Organized networks have a crucial role to play in the refusal of subjugating labour and life to the mind-numbing and life-depleting demands of post-Fordist capital. And it is through these ‘edu-networks’ that we see some of the most inspiring activities of new institutional invention. This, we believe, is where energies can be directed that engage in practices of creative collaboration. What we need is a conceptual push and a subsequent ‘art of translation’ in order to migrate critical concepts from one context to the next. It is time to reclaim an avant-garde position and not leave the further development of such vital techno-social tools to the neo-liberal corporate sector. What we say here about new media and Internet can also be transposed to other sectors of education and research. Over the next decade, half of the world population will use a mobile phone and two billion the Internet. How are we going to use this potential?

Written by Luca

June 3rd, 2007 at 5:19 pm

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White Center (Yellow, Pink and Lavender on Rose)

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Rothko

Rothko’s “White Center (Yellow, Pink and Lavender on Rose)” from 1950 is being auctioned for the first time. The Rothko, being sold by Sotheby’s on behalf of David Rockefeller, is expected to sell for $40 million US in Sotheby’s auction of contemporary and post-war art.

Sotheby’s
Contemporary Art Evening Sale
LIVE AUCTION
DATE & TIME: Session 1: Tuesday, 15 May 07, 7:00 PM

LOCATION: NEW YORK

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

May 15th, 2007 at 5:28 pm

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Interview with Maria Thereza Alves

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alves

Artista : Maria Thereza Alves
Origine : Ilari Valbonesi RAM Interview

Interview with Maria Thereza Alves

Durata 55.05
Formato Audio Windows Media
Qualità 24Kbps
Canali audio 2

Maria Thereza Alves , born in 1961 in Brazil, lives today in Berlin. In 1986, she co-founded Brazil’s Green Party in São Paulo. Amongst others, her work has been exhibited at the Liverpool Biennial; NGBK, Berlin; Villa Medici, Rome; Steirischer Herbst, Graz; Venice Biennial; New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York; Musée Portuaire, Dunkerque; CEAAC, Strasbourg; Spacex, Exeter; Gallery 101, Montréal; BüroFriedrich, Berlin; The House of World Cultures, Berlin; Galerija Miroslav Kraljevi, Zagreb; Porin Taidemuseo; Kunstwerkt, München; Zerynthia, Italy; Museum in Progress, Vienna; Werkleitz Biennial, Halle/ Saale; Insite, Tijuana/San Diego; Boxx, Brussels; Buersschouwburg, Brussels; Central Space Gallery, London; Temistocles 44, Mexico City; Casa del Lago, Mexico City; La Estación Gallery, Cuernavaca; Biennial Havana; Kenkeleba House, New York.

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

May 12th, 2007 at 12:48 am

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La dolce vita 2007

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foto CloseUp (Roma)

22 aprile 2007 alle 18:59 — Fonte: repubblica.it

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

April 27th, 2007 at 8:51 am

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Italian Women Artists from Renaissance to Baroque

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Lavinia Fontana: Portrait von Antonietta Gonsalus

In celebration of its 20th year, the National Museum of Women in the Arts will host the ground breaking exhibit Italian Women Artists from Renaissance to Baroque. This exhibition brings together paintings, prints, drawings and sculpture by prominent women painters, including Artemisia Gentileschi, Lavinia Fontana, Sofonisba Anguissola, Giovanna Garzoni and Elisabetta Sirani and presents them within a historical context. It will examine the position of women artists as second-class citizens, the economics of art production, and the cultural context both within Italy and beyond the country’s borders. Ultimately, it will address the ways in which these artists overcame “the conditions of their sex,” to leave behind a fascinating visual legacy.
http://www.nmwa.org/interactives/italian/index.asp

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

April 22nd, 2007 at 10:35 am

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Eco Summit 2007 Beijing, P.R.China

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ecosummit

From May 22 to 27 – Eco Summit 2007 hold in Bejiing will focus on integrative aspects of all ecological science and its application under the general theme of “Ecological Complexity and Sustainability: Challenges and Opportunities for 21st-Century’s Ecology”.

http://www.ecosummit2007.elsevier.com/program.htm

Ecological complexity and sustainability are becoming a core concept and instrument for improving our common future. The aim of this Eco Summit is to encourage a greater integration of both the natural and social sciences with the policy and decision-making community to develop a better understanding of the complex nature of ecological systems. This understanding will provide the basis for sustainable solutions to environmental problems, to meet the challenges raised from the Earth Summit (1992), the World Summit on Sustainable Development (2002), and the United Nations 2005 Millennium Review Summit.

目前,世界正在经历着快速的城市化、工业化和全球化。 全球变化的速度、范围和深度正在从局地、区域和全球等不同尺度直接影响人类赖以生存的生态系统。人类活动导致的水资源短缺、荒漠化加剧、土壤退化、温室效应及环境污染已经成为全球发展所面临的共同挑战。实现可持续发展的关键是依据生态学原理,对环境、经济、政策、社会、文化等因素之间的相互作用关系进行生态学的辨识、规划和管理。生态复杂性逐渐成为全球可持续发展领域的核心科学概念和工具。

第三届世界生态高峰会(EcoSummit 2007)的主题为“生态复杂性与可持续发展:21世纪生态学的机遇和挑战”。会议主要关注生态科学理论和应用研究的整合,包括自然科学、社会科学、及其与政策和决策的整合。会议的目的是推动人类对生态系统复杂性的理解,为解决可持续发展领域中急待解决的环境问题提供科学基础。

第三届世界生态高峰会期待得到全世界所有关注生态与可持续发展问题的组织、生态学家及实践者的广泛参与。期待整个生态学界表现出一致的理念和决心,尽最大的努力,利用生态学理论与方法,去应对1992年全球环境与发展峰会、2002年世界可持续发展峰会,以及联合国2005年千年项目峰会上提出的各项挑战。

第三届世界生态高峰会的学术交流形式主要包括:大会主题报告、专题学术研讨会,各种形式的口头发言、墙报展示及晚间学术活动。会议还将提供实地考察的机会。

本次峰会将邀请14位世界知名人士做主题报告。10多个Elsevier出版社的生态学相关杂志将从这次会议中选择论文出版专刊。大会通用语言为英语。

http://www.ecosummit2007.elsevier.com/program.htm

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

April 18th, 2007 at 10:45 am

Posted in Culture

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