Sunday, December 30, 2007

WiKitchen

As we head into the new year, many of us resolve to become better organized. To that end, we present" WiKitchen" by Zach Kmiec. The Data Stream wishes one and all a happy, healthy, creative and adventurous 2008!

[Note that this remarkable video of a temporary art installation, created in conjunction with a University of Iowa class on video blogging, was photographed using a primitive, 'one point oh' video cell phone.]

watch

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Marking Time: The Data Stream at its current address ...

187 posts later, today marks the one year anniversary of The Data Stream at its current address. On Boxing Day 2006, we featured a first post on a memorial for Marcia Tucker, founding guiding light of the New Museum.

The blog began as a project for NAAO, the National Association of Artists Organizations. I'm not 100% sure when it launched, but I'm sure it was no later than February 15, 2005, as posts from that date on are archived in reverse chronological order at www.naao.net/ds_archive/data_stream_15.html.

[graphic from google image search for 'data stream,' from Charles Wehner's Data Compression site.]

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

James Brown May 3, 1933 – December 25, 2006)



On the one year anniversary of the death of James Brown, above is a YouTunbe video, footage of a 1968 performance at the Apollo Theater on 125th Street in Harlem.

[more: December 27, 2006 Data Stream post with link to a Fresh Air interview.]

New Orleans Holy Night


[From Troy 'Trombone Shorty' Andrews' website, an mp3 recording of "Oh Holy Night" from a holiday episode of Aaron Sorkin's now cancelled "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip." The recording features: Troy 'Trombone Shorty' Andrews - Trumpet; Kirk Joseph - Sousaphone; Roderick Paulin - Saxophone; Frederick Shepherd - Saxophone; Stephen Walker - Trombone; Mervin "Kid Merv" Campbell - Trumpet.]

listen

View a clip from the show of the performance [the music begins at the 2:30 mark]

More: December 13, 2006 Times Picayune article

Monday, December 24, 2007

Oscar Peterson | August 15, 1925 – December 23, 2007



[Above, one of a number of videos on YouTube featuring the legendary Canadian pianist Oscar Peterson.]

"TORONTO - Jazz pianist Oscar Peterson, whose flying fingers mesmerized audiences around the world - from dance halls in 1940s Montreal to the lights of Carnegie Hall and beyond - has died at age 82.

He played alongside the giants of jazz: Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Charlie Parker, Roy Eldridge, Nat King Cole, Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie, Ella Fitzgerald and Duke Ellington, who once called Peterson the "Maharajah of the keyboard.""

more

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Big Chief


[According to the information provided by geepee on YouTube: "New Orleans Jazz Fest '91." Enjoy.]

The Neville Brothers

Worst Album Covers Ever Part Deux


After months of hiatus, following an earlier post, we're happy to bring back our "Worst Album Covers Ever" feature.

[Special thanks to Allen in Oakland for reminding me of ETN's original tip!]

[image: Manowar album cover]

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

The People's Choice Music

[In honor of the holiday season, the Data Stream will be offering a selection of free online gifts in the days ahead. To begin the sharing of presents, below is a treat from Ubu Web, the brilliant archive of 20th and 21st century avant-garde art, a genuine online treasure]

Komar & Melamid
"The People's Choice Music"
(1997)

"With the collaboration of composer Dave Soldier, Komar & Melamid's Most Wanted Painting project was extended into the realm of music. A poll, written by Dave Soldier, was conducted on The Dia Foundation's web site in Spring 1996. Approximately 500 visitors took the survey. Solder used the survey results to write music and lyrics for the Most Wanted and Most Unwanted songs:

The Most Wanted Song: A musical work that will be unavoidably and uncontrollably "liked" by 72 ± 12% of listeners.
[listen]

The Most Unwanted Song: Fewer than 200 individuals of the world's total population will enjoy this."
[listen]

more

[image: Komar & Melamid, "UNITED STATES: MOST WANTED PAINTING." From Dia web site]

Monday, December 17, 2007

Year of the Diamond Dogs

Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center
Through December 22

Julio Cesar Morales
The Year of the Diamond Dogs

a Hallwalls Artist in Residence Project (HARP)

The Year of The Diamond Dogs is a sonic and visual landscape that evokes the dystopian future explored by Orwell’s novel 1984 and Bowie’s Diamond Dogs. In Morales’ work, peril, expectation, desire and disillusion create a field of tension. Working from a Latino perspective, Morales uses mutated sound samples of Diamond Dogs, language, typography, and idiosyncratic symbols from the Latin American urban landscape—such as the broken bottles that are often found embedded in the concrete atop walls to protect and define property boundaries—to create a dangerous topography that evokes issues of immigration, alienation, dystopia and surveillance.

The project includes multi-channel video, sculpture and sound with original music by Los Creamators and additional audio of the artist’s aunt singing obscure Mexican songs. Morales utilizes digital media in the broadest sense—as a printed mural, recorded sound, LED signs, video etc. His artistic practice can be described as employing the DJ’s method of remixing as a means to analyze the politics of culture.

[text of post edited from Hallwalls Web site. Image of artwork by Julio Cesar Morales from Hallwalls Web site.]

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Emory Douglas

MOCA Pacific Design Center
8687 Melrose Avenue
Design Plaza G102
West Hollywood, CA 90069

Though February 24, 2008
Black Panther: The Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas

"Bobby Seale and Huey Newton said I was going to be the revolutionary artist, but as the Party grew and we needed more structure, I became the Minister of Culture. I reported to Eldridge Cleaver, the Minister of Information. I was in charge of the printing operation, photography, and the design layout of the newspaper.

We would do posters, banners, fliers, and business cards for people in the community. That helped sustain our operation."


--- Emory Douglas, August 18, 2007.

[image from MOCA web site. "Emory Douglas, poster for The Black Panther, November 8, 1969.]

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Local Noise: Hip-Hop and Langauage


[with thanks to language scholar BKL, my brilliant friend and colleague in Washington State]

"Local Noise is an ARC (Australian Research Council) funded project running since 2005 and led by Dr. Tony Mitchell and Prof. Alastair Pennycook from UTS (University of Technology, Sydney). The project’s focus is on Australian hip-hop, and the localisation of hip-hop in different cultural, societal and educational contexts."

see | hear

[screen grab from Local Noise Web site.]

Saturday, December 08, 2007

Neville Brothers + The Meters

[for your weekend listening enjoyment, a broadcast performance by The Neville Brothers, "New Orleans first family of funk" and the legendary Meters]

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

State of the Nation Art and Performance Series

Ashe Cultural Art Center
1712 Oretha Castle Haley
New Orleans

December 7th, 2007 (Doors at 7pm, Performances 8-10pm)
$5.

"ASHE Cultural Art Center, ArtSpot Productions, Mondo Bizarro, New Orleans International Human Rights Film Festival and the Network of Ensemble Theaters are teaming up to produce an evening of performances from local and national artists. Performers and presenters from across North America and beyond will converge on Louisiana for the National Performance Network Annual Meeting December 6-10.

To highlight the work of New Orleans artists, we are hosting an installment of our State of the Nation Art and Performance Series at ASHE Cultural Art Center. Complimentary food will be served from 7-8pm with performances, film and music to follow.

National Guests:
M.U.G.A.B.E.E. (Jackson, MS), Tim Miller (Los Angeles, CA), Millicent Johnnie (Tallahassee, FL), HIJACK (Minneapolis, MN).

Local performers include:
Bamboula 2000, Creative Forces, Cripple Creek Theater Company, The Free Agents Brass Band, Mardi Gras Indians, Jose Torres Tama, Sunni Patterson, 2-Cents, MOOSE, Scotty Heron and Hijack, Origins of Life on Earth, Stephanie McKee, Maritza Mercado Narcisse and many more…"

[information from ArtSpot Productions Web site.. Image of M.U.G.A.B.E.E. from their MySpace page.]

Monday, December 03, 2007

Bronx Museum First Fridays Holiday Party

Friday, December 7 – 6:00pm
Bronx Museum of the Arts

From Salsa & Bachata to Merengue & Son:
The Popular Music of Two Islands

South Wing—Lower Gallery
Admission: Free

A showcase with live band performances and DJs covering popular musical genres from Cuba and Dominican Republic.

Hosted by DJ Cato
Featuring Grupo Son Como Son with special guest David Oquendo.

[photograph of DJ Cato from Bronx Museum mailing.]

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Screen Cleaner

[With thanks for the tip to KMcL of Flashcoders New York]

FYA


[01.12.08 update: from DMcD on the West Coast, we learn that the link is down again. Sigh. See below for the commerce-driven alternative]

[01.11.08 revision: thanks to the SC in Newcastle Upon Tyne, we're now able to present the original cleaner. For context here's the alternate.]

[12.06.07 note: shortly after featuring this project, as often happens the site was removed from the Internet. Again, with thanks to KMcL we've put up a link to a similar project. The image above is a detail from the now defunct site which featured a very rambunctious, slobbery pug.]

Saturday, December 01, 2007

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Senseless Acts of Beauty


[With thanks to GC in Carson City for the tip:]

Senseless Acts of Beauty

[graphic from Web site. Caption: "San Francisco".]

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

You Are Here


Aurora Picture Show
Cynthia Woods Mitchell Center for the Arts

Friday November 30 & Saturday December 1
You Are Here

The map is a device of multiple powers. What happens when this device is purposely redirected by artists?

You Are Here is a symposium featuring leading contemporary artists and researchers exploring the interplay between art and geography, activism and cultural studies. Can investigations of mapping, tracking and tactical media yield new forms of tourism, overwrite official boundaries with local ecologies, expose governmental secrets, and generate new ways of experiencing and understanding our physical environment?

Offered by the University of Houston Mitchell Center for the Arts in collaboration with Aurora Picture Show. Curated by Bree Edwards.

LOCATION: Aurora Picture Show
800 Aurora Street
Houston, TX
Information: 713.743.5548
$6 on Friday; Free admission on Saturday

SCHEDULE:
Friday 9:00 pm
Matt McCormick - Kick off performance by this award winning filmmaker and musician!

Saturday 1:00 - 5:00 pm
Presentations:
Nato Thompson, Curator, Creative Time - "Experimental Geography"
Institute for Applied Autonomy, artist collective - "Terminal Air"
Matthew Coolidge, Founder/Director of the Center for Land Use Interpretation - "Points of Disinterest in the Gulf Coast Region"


[image: screen grab from Aurora Web site.]

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Soft Turns

Neutral Ground
#203 - 1856 Scarth Street
Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
S4P 2G3


November 10 - December 8, 2007
Soft Turns
Sarah Jane Gorlitz & Wojciech Olejnik


"This installation is comprised of two videos by Olejnik and Gorlitz: /mm and just add water. The videos were shot in time-lapse and feature a meticulously detailed model of a subway station constructed by the artists from candy and household objects. /mm takes the viewer slowly through the station, while just add water depicts the model slowly filling with water and then draining, peacefully and gently, leaving destruction in its wake.

Sarah Jane Gorlitz and Wojciech Olejnik are an artist duo formerly from Ontario and now based in Berlin whose work addresses, complicates and in some cases contradicts the traditional understanding of the relationship between time and space."

[image from Neutral Ground Web site.]

Friday, November 23, 2007

Grounded?

Southern Exposure
Intersection for the Arts

Grounded? — The Grounded? Public Art/Urban Interventions Day


Saturday, December 1, 11am – 5pm

Admission: FREE
Location: Area around Southern Exposure and Intersection for the Arts

Stacy Asher
The Counter Narrative Society
James Goode
Genine Lentine
Sabina Nieto & Melinda Stone
Kari Orvik
Nancy Popp
Sidney Russell
Markuz Wernil Saito
Joshua Short


"Situate yourself in the public realm for this day of urban interventions and public art projects. The Grounded? Public Art/Urban Interventions Day presents work by artists using the city as a platform for creativity and expression. Pick up a map and schedule locating the selected projects at Southern Exposure or Intersection for the Arts or on our websites and start exploring!"

Projects selected by Center for Land Use Interpretation (CLUI) Program Developer Erik Knutzen.]

[graphic from Southern Exposure Web site.]

[disclosure: The Data Stream editor serves on the advisory board of Southern Exposure.]

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Jazz Fest April 25-27 + May 1-4, 2008

Save the dates: The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival!

"Mahalia Jackson, often called the greatest gospel singer, returned to her hometown to appear at the first New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival in April of 1970. While attending the Louisiana Heritage Fair in Congo Square (then known as Beauregard Square), she and Duke Ellington, who also appeared at the event, came upon the Eureka Brass Band leading a crowd of second-line revelers through the Festival grounds. George Wein, producer of the Festival, handed Ms. Jackson a microphone, she sang along with the band and joined the parade…and the spirit of Jazz Fest was born."

more | ticket information

[Screen grab and text from the Jazz Fest web site. The 2008 line-up will include the return of New Orleans' native sons, The Neville Brothers, in their tradtional, honored spot as the closing act of the festival.

The 'Stream' will publish the complete schedule, once it is finalized.]

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

I-10 Witness

I-10 Witness

The I-10 Witness continues to interview New Orleans residents about their storm related experiences. In conjunction with Xavier University's Department of Communications, we recently completed several rounds of interviews at St. Dominic's Church in Lakeview, Mary Queen of Vietnam Church in New Orleans East and the Uptown Shepard's Center. This week we will also continue to collect stories in Gert Town. Last month, we we're proud to collaborate with Mourning Line Productions and the 78th Street Theater in Manhattan, NY for our first public installation of these narratives. The show was seen by several New Yorkers who continue to visit our website. It is our hope that these types of events can keep this story alive in the hearts and minds of people throughout this country. As always, if you or anyone you know is interested in recording their story or helping to gather stories please contact us through the site as we would be happy to meet with you at your convenience.

[graphic: screen grab detail of I-10 Witness web site. Pictured: Verna Thompson; Age: 56; Home: Harvey, LA; Occupation: Custodian. Listen]

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

OpenLab

25 Nov 2007
2pm till late

OpenLab4
Melange Social Club

281 Kingsland Road
London England E2 8AS

"Openlab 4 will be a whole day event around Free Software as creative means in music, digital arts and performance. The event will provide the general public an opportunity to learn about the potentials and culture of Free Software as well as enabling Openlab activists to showcase their work. The event will start with presentations in the early afternoon and finish with a series of live demonstrations and perfomances in the evening."

source

[image linked from web site for Evan Raskob's earlier Human Patching Live Coding Max workshop.]

Monday, November 19, 2007

Connecting in Kyiv II


[follow-up to an earlier post on this remarkable project from Outpost]

Outpost for Contemporary Art
Los Angeles, California U.S.A.


Connecting in Kyiv II


In June 2007, Outpost sent U.S. artists Jeff Cain, Adam Frelin, and Angie Waller to Kyiv, where they presented their work and ideas at Kyiv’s Center for Contemporary Art. They also created new work in dialog with the Ukraine, and will share their resulting work and experiences with Outpost’s audience during this series of presentations, which will be held at Outpost for Contemporary Art's new community resource center in Highland Park at 6375 N. Figueroa Street in Los Angeles.]

Wednesday, November 28, 7pm
Jeff Cain (Los Angeles, CA) will present “ReConstructivists,” a work-in-progress that documents independent social organizations and enterprising individuals who exemplify Ukrainian ingenuity and a do-it-yourself spirit.

Thursday, December 6, 7pm
Angie Waller (New York, NY) went to Kyiv focused on the Orange Revolution, which was a jumping off point for her research. She will present documentation of the conversations and encounters she had with Ukrainians and discuss the work that is emerging from this experience.

Thursday, December 13, 7pm
Adam Frelin (Albany, NY) spent three weeks in Kyiv shooting a new video called "The Faction.” Adam will present and discuss the work, which was shot in various locations throughout Kyiv and had five members of a military marching band as its cast.

Outpost’s programming through 2009 will focus on Eastern Europe, bringing and sending artists, art works and curators to and from the region, to illuminate contemporary responses to the region’s complex challenges. Our program cycle started with Connecting in Kyiv. In turn, Ukrainian artists Lesja Zajac and Olexander Gnititsky will spend six weeks in Los Angeles beginning January 14, 2008.

[image from a google image search for "Kyiv" found on "Ukraine-Canada Policy and Trade Centre, Ottawa: Ukraine-Canada Relations, Ukraine Embassy in Canada" Web site. Caption: "Independence square (Maydan Nezalezhnosty) on the main Khreschatyk Boulevard in Kyiv - scene of parades and celebrations throughout the year."]

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Delayed Patriotism

[follow-up to an earlier post on Performa 07]

Sunday, November 18, 12 - 2pm
Bronx Museum of the Arts

Tania Bruguera: Delayed Patriotism

$5. free for Bronx Museum members

The Bronx Museum of the Arts and Performa 07 are pleased to announce the launch of Delayed Patriotism, the debut New York City performance series by internationally renowned artist Tania Bruguera (Cuba/Chicago). Presented as part of PERFORMA07, the second biennial of new visual art performance, Delayed Patriotism explores the creation of the Party of Migrant People (PMP), an international institution with political aspirations, which defines displacement and migration as a new international culture.

The performance reflects on the idea of belonging while being an immigrant and the process of gaining the rights to be part of that new culture. Audience members will be given the opportunity to interact in Bruguera’s performance through photographic sessions that hope to capture the great American family portrait.

[image from a Bronx Museum press email.]

Saturday, November 17, 2007

November 17, 1966

On the occasion of the forty-first anniversary of Jeff Buckley's birth, below is a link to a remarkable video of a performance by Jeff Buckley of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah."

listen

[image from Wikipedia entry for Jeff Buckley. Caption: "Jeff Buckley in 1995."]

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

NOLA Ladyfest

"November 14-18

LADYFEST NEW ORLEANS
is a non-profit, music, spoken word and arts festival organized by local women of all identities to showcase, celebrate and encourage the music, poetry and art of women in New Orleans and to benefit organizations that support women!"

Thursday November 15th's show is 7-11pm at the American Federation of Musicians Union Hall, 2401 Esplanade, New Orleans. Kathy Randels' “Mama Nola” will be the Mistress of Ceremonies for a lineup featuring Banu Gibson, Holly Bendtsen, Gina Forsyth, Poet Marcia Wall, Topsy Chapman & Solid Harmony, Poet Keshia Caldwell, and the "Some Like It Hot Jazz Band." Featured visual artists are Heather MacFarlane,
Lynn Magnuson
and Veronique Orsingher.

For more information about please contact 504-949-3001 or
LadyFestNO@gmail.com

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Convergence | Quarter Life

Hollywood producers Marshall Herskovitz and Edward Zwick, [“My So-Called Life” and "30 Something.'] have launched Quarter Life, a project that combines social networking with conventional television situation drama with online social networking.

Quarter Life

Fresh Air ran a story on Quarter Life on November 13. [listen]

[image: screen grab from the qLife area of the site.]

Monday, November 12, 2007

Performa 07


[in the spirit of better later than never, spotlighted mid-stream:]

Performa 07
Second visual art performance biennial in New York.

This edition features a "focus on several new themes, including the relationship between the avant-garde dance and art worlds, with visual art projects that include choreographic precepts as material for art."

Numerous events. Through November 20.

more

[image: participating Fluxus artist Alison Knowles, from the Performa 07 Web site. Ms. Knowles will premiere SNÖFRID #0 at Smith-Stewart Gallery, 53 Stanton Street, New York, Nov 16, 2007, 8 pm - 11 pm. Admission is free.]

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Norman Mailer - We are in love with the word


From the extraordinary Internet Archive, a 1986 two-part, hour long interview with Norman Mailer on the U.S. television series The Open Mind.

Part I

Part II


About the series:

"First Broadcast in May, 1956, The Open Mind is still produced weekly by Richard D. Heffner, host, historian, and University Professor of Communications and Public Policy at Rutgers University. These dialogues with some of the most creative thinkers of the last half-century are a primary resource available to students, teachers, researchers, archivists, librarians, historians, journalists and all who are interested in history, biography, media, communications, news, and public affairs."

A quick perusal of the list of 454 shows online revealed a remarkable range of interviews from William F. Buckley on legalizing drugs, Gloria Steinem on Marilyn Monroe, Stanley Crouch on education to Lou Reed on 'rock 'n roll heart.'

[graphic: screen grab from the Norman Mailer Open Mind interview]

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Hollywood by the Numbers

[Below from the Heartland, where the countdown to the Iowa Causes dominates the psychic landscape, we offer an arithmetic weekend diversion from Tinsel Town. Thanks to SMB in Berkeley for the tip!]

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Goin' Home


[Click graphic above to enlarge. See right hand column for more information and link to the Tipitina's Foundation. Graphic from their Web site.]

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Identity - NOLA VA 2

New Orleans Photo Alliance

Exhibition: Identity
1111 St. Mary Street near Sophie Wright Place
New Orleans.

Gallery hours: Wednesday—Friday 3 p.m. to 6 p.m
Saturday 11a.m. — 4pm or by appointment.

"The New Orleans Photo Alliance presents IDENTITY, an exhibit of contemporary photographic portraiture exploring photography's role in illuminating and defining the persistence and evolution of personal and social identity. The 22 artists represented in IDENTITY invite the viewer to consider the photographic artifact as evidence of life and to reconsider his or her own identity; what it means to be alive in our age, in this place, in our skin on this very day. IDENTITY was juried by Deborah Luster, a highly acclaimed portrait artist who published a book entitled "One Big Self prisoners of Louisiana."

The exhibition will run from October 6th to November 24th with support from the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Foundation.


[image and text from Tim Best Web site.]

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

NOLA VA 1


Barrister's Gallery
2331 St. Claude Ave
New Orleans

Anne Grgich
Nov 10 — Dec 1
Opening: Saturday, Nov 10, 4:00-9:00

[image from Barrister's Web site. Caption: Ode to Frida, 2006, Assemblage, 10 x 6 x 5".]

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Twittervision

[follow-up to earlier post regarding Blogger Play:]

Twittervision

What is Twittervision?
["real-time geographic visualization of posts to Twitter."]


text compliment of a sort to Flickrvision

note: both to be included in "Design and the Elastic Mind," a 2008 exhibition at NY MOMA.

[image: screengrab of Twittervision]

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Day of the Dead San Francisco 2007

November 2, 2007 - 7:00 p.m.
24th & Bryant Streets in the Mission
Dia de los Muertos
San Francisco

Annual procession, lead by the Rescue Culture Collective.

The procession will end in Garfield Park at the Festival of Altars 8:30 PM at 26th & Harrison.

"Please bring flowers, candles, and remembrances of your loved ones for our community altar. This event is FREE and open to the public, wheel chair accessible.

We invite all community members and artists to participate in this celebration."

more

[graphic from dayofthedeadsf.org Web site. Caption: "Last year's illustration created by Chummy Alexanian. Layout by Tim Ferman."]

Monday, October 29, 2007

Learning from New Orleans, the Western Balkans, and Acre, Brazil

The New School - Orozco Room
66 West 12th Street
New York City

Thursday, November 1, 2007 - 6:30 to 8:00 p.m.
Admission: $8, free for all students, as well as New School faculty, staff and alumni with valid ID*

"Future Talk Now: Learning from New Orleans, the Western Balkans, and Acre, Brazil"

2007-08 Vera List Center Fellow Marjetica Potrc, in conversation with Carlos Basualdo, Curator of Contemporary Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art

"Sustainability has become a buzzword recently. Slovenian artist and architect Marjetica Potrc has applied and investigated this concept for many years in artworks, museum exhibitions and on-site interventions around the world. In this conversation, the renowned curator Carlos Basualdo will introduce the artistic oeuvre of Potrc, the newly appointed Vera List Center Fellow with whom he has collaborated on several projects.

The focus of their conversation will be Potrc's new research project on the use of water: during an artist's residency with the Contemporary Art Center in New Orleans this fall, the artist was conducting on-site examinations into sustainable water-use practices that have developed in New Orleans since Katrina such as the reclamation of wetlands, and she is now beginning to draw comparisons to New York City.

The New Orleans project is characteristic of the artist's approach: Potrc took up residency in a site of political turmoil and social transformation and, after extensive scientific and cultural research, will insert into the contested situation her work, possibly an architectural installation or simply a conversation, in order to provide clarity and new solutions. The outcome of this project will be featured in the exhibition "Something from Nothing," curated by Dan Cameron and opening at the New Orleans Contemporary Art Center in early 2008."

*["Space is extremely limited; reservations are required."]

[graphic from google search for "water" found on Sustaining the Environment and Resources for Canadians - About Water Web site.]

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Waiting for Godot in New Orleans

[thanks once again to EC, our scout in Buffalo, New York.]

Creative Time
Paul's Chan's
Waiting for Godot in New Orleans

"... a project by Paul Chan, co-produced by Creative Time with curator Nato Thompson and The Classical Theatre of Harlem with director Christopher McElroen, featuring New Orleans born actor Wendell Pierce, and in collaboration with New Orleans’ partners: University of New Orleans, Xavier University, Dillard University, NOCCA High School, Lusher High School, Frederic Douglass High School, John McDonough High School, Students at the Center, Neighborhood Story Project, The Porch, and Renaissance Project.

The Project

New Orleans is the setting for the 20th century’s most emblematic story of waiting. According to artist Paul Chan, “The longing for the new is a reminder of what is worth renewing. Seeing Godot embedded in the very fabric of the landscape of New Orleans was my way of re-imagining the empty roads, the debris, and, above all, the bleak silence as more than the expression of mere collapse. There is a terrible symmetry between the reality of New Orleans post-Katrina and the essence of this play, which expresses in stark eloquence the cruel and funny things people do while they wait: for help, for food, for tomorrow.”

The Play

Four free outdoor evening performances of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot will take place over two weekends in November in two New Orleans neighborhoods — the middle of an intersection in the Lower Ninth Ward, and the front yard of an abandoned house in Gentilly.
November 2 & 3, N Roman St & Forstall St., Lower Ninth Ward, 7:00PM
November 9 & 10, Robert E Lee Blvd & Pratt Dr., Gentilly, 7:00PM

more

[image from project web site]

Friday, October 26, 2007

Beyond Boundaries

October 26 - November 14, 2007
Beyond Boundaries: The Emergence of Croatian Cinema

Walter Reade Theater
The Film Society of Lincoln Center



"Croatian filmmakers’ talent for making provocative, satirical & innovative work has garnered them attention & awards on the international film festival circuit. We’re presenting a vibrant mix of political dramas, black comedies & sophisticated animations. One highlight is Light Drawings: The Zagreb School of Animation, a program of animated shorts curated by Croatian film scholar Mato Kukuljica. We also welcome 3 directors to New York to introduce their films: Krsto Papic (A VILLAGE PERFORMANCE OF HAMLET), Dejan Sorak (TWO PLAYERS FROM THE BENCH), and Ognjen Svilicic, whose film ARMIN is the Croatian nominee for the Best Foreign Film Academy Award."

more

[image from Lincoln Center Web site. Production still from "The Melody Haunts My Reverie."]

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

techPresident


[With thanks to AB in Solon, below is a link to a techPresident — "How the candidates are using the web, and how the web is using them," a political web log well worth exploring. Among the stream of posts and a number of data visualization features, the site is tracks candidate support on Facebook. Click on graphic to view today's numbers.]

explore

[graphic from techPresident Web site]

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Two at the Apex

Thursday, October 25, 7-9 pm
Why Am I Here? The State of Residency


A Panel Talk With:
Nathalie Anglès, Residency Program Director, Location One
Fritzie Brown, Executive Director, CEC ArtsLink

Alexandra do Carmo, artist, past resident Location One, Irish Museum
Kambui Olujimi, artist, past apexart outbound resident to Australia

Moderated by Steven Rand, Executive Director, apexart
"Why do we have residencies and what types of programs are most effective? Who do residencies serve, who should they serve? Why do artists seek out residencies, what are the expectations and what are the results? The panel will address these questions and related issues in a discussion that will be informative and engaging for residents and arts administrators alike.

===

January 9 - February 16, 2008
The Promotion Project
curated by the public

"Why don't museums and galleries advertise on TV? Why don't people in the arts tell the truth about how much TV they watch? Help bring the art world in touch with the real world.

apexart invites creatives to challenge the "TV is not good enough for me" attitude by making a 30-second spot promoting.... us."

submissions due December 7, 2007.

[graphic: first image displayed from a google image search for 'residency']

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Getting Personal

Arts Council of England
Getting Personal: artists and audiences in the era of Web 2.0


23rd October
3.30 - 5.30pm
Arts Council of England
2 Pear Tree Court,
London U.K. EC1R0DS

In the 4th Digital Culture Lunchtime Session, Arts Council London invites you to consider with us the implications of MySpace, Second Life, Facebook, You Tube, Flickr and other online collaborative interfaces on artistic practice and cultural participation. Do they represent a fully democratised cultural opportunity for artists and audiences? Does endless availability, access and openness lead to a deterioration in artistic quality? Is the paid professional contributing any more than the unpaid amateur?

Join in the discussion with:-

Andrew Keen: Author of 'The Cult of the Amateur'
Paula LeDieu: Managing Director, Magic Lantern Productions
Alex Fleetwood: Producer and associate of Punchdrunk
Saul Albert: Artist and co-founder of 'The People Speak' and nm-x.org

Please RSVP to sabine.unamun@artscouncil.org.uk

ANDREW KEEN is a Silicon Valley author, broadcaster and entrepreneur whose acclaimed new book 'Cult of the Amateur: How the Internet is Killing Our Culture' presents an antidote to the prevailing assumptions around Internet cultural democracy as championed by Charles Leadbeater. Andrew is a prominent media personality who has appeared on CNN International, NPR, and BBC Newsnight. He has written for The Los Angeles Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Guardian, and has been featured in many publications including Time Magazine, the Financial Times, the Sunday Times, & the Independent.

PAULA LE DIEU is MD at Magic Lantern Productions. Set up by Anthony Lilley it creates innovative interactive media, most notably FourDocs, the broadband, user-generated documentary channel with Channel 4. Other partners and clients include the BBC, BT, the UK Film Council, Skillset and many others. MLP specialise in understanding the power of broadband networks and emerging digital platforms, for the creation, presentation, distribution and sharing of ideas. Prior to joining Magic Lantern, Le Dieu was the director of iCommons, the international arm of Creative Commons.

ALEX FLEETWOOD is an artist and producer of Hide & Seek, London's first pervasive games festival. He is a collaborative associate of Punchdrunk Theatre Company and along with other artists and creatives will be exploring audience participation within alternate reality gaming as part of the PlayTime Lab at this years London Games Festival Fringe.

SAUL ALBERT, our esteemed compere, is an artist, coder and writer known for his open source ethos and advocacy of collaborative, self-organised structures. Instrumental in establishing projects such as the University of Openess, nm-x.org, Node London and others, Saul is co-producer of The People Speak, which is currently re-inventing funding models with 'Who Wants to Be..'. Based on the ask-the-audience feature of the popular TV game show 'Who Wants to Be a Millionaire' it helps large groups of people to make suggestions, discuss an issue, and to vote on each step in a creative decision-making process.

In association with the PlayTime Lab at this years London Games Festival Fringe.

[graphic from a google image search for 'Web 2.0']]

Monday, October 15, 2007

Cape Farewell

Cape Farewell
Cape Farewell is a charitable organisation that brings artists and scientists together to address and raise awareness about climate change.

Created by artist David Buckland in 2001, Cape Farewell works to bring about long term change in cultural attitudes towards climate change. He has led three expeditions into the Arctic on a sailing schooner, each carrying a number of artists, scientists and educators to explore the seas that hold the key to understanding the changes in our climate.

Cape Farewell recently concluded its first youth expedition.

more

[image from Arts Council of England|Cape Farewell Web site. Caption: Cape Farewell's launch of the youth expedition, Tower Bridge, 9 September 2007. Photo: Cape Farewell]

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Fanzine

[with thanks for the tip to our scout MFC in Saugus, some information on a compelling site for contemporary literature.]
FANZINE

"... is an online general culture magazine that was launched in August 2005 at the CMYK Independent Magazine Festival in Barcelona, Spain. ... our aim remains to provide a venue on the Internet for longform writing, both fiction and non, that is at once intelligent, engaging, witty, informative, and fun."

[image from FANZINEWeb site]

Friday, October 12, 2007

Critical Art Ensemble Defense Fund Update

[Below, printed in its entirety, the text of a Critical Art Ensemble Defense Fund press release.]

SICKNESS, "ABSURD" DOJ PROSECUTION FORCE SCIENTIST TO PLEAD IN PRECEDENT-SETTING CASE
Scientist's Wife and Daughter Comment on Case


Buffalo, NY - Today in Federal District Court, Dr. Robert Ferrell,
Professor of Human Genetics at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate
School of Public Health, under tremendous pressure, pled guilty to
lesser charges rather than facing a prolonged trial for federal
charges of "mail fraud" and "wire fraud" in a surreal post-PATRIOT
Act legal case that has attracted worldwide attention.

"From the beginning, this has been a persecution, not a prosecution.
Although I have not seen the final agreement, the initial versions
contained incorrect and irrelevant information," said Dr. Dianne
Raeke Ferrell, Dr. Ferrell's wife and an Associate Professor of
Special Education and Clinical Services at Indiana University of
Pennsylvania. "Bob is a 27 year survivor of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
which has reoccurred numerous times. He has also had malignant
melanoma. Since this whole nightmare began, Bob has had two minor
strokes and a major stroke which required months of rehabilitation."

Dr. Ferrell added that her husband was indicted just as he was
preparing to undergo a painful and dangerous autologous stem cell
transplant, the second in 7 years.

The Ferrells' daughter, Gentry Chandler Ferrell, added: "Our family
has struggled with an intense uncertainty about physical, emotional
and financial health for a long time. Agreeing to a plea deal is a
small way for dad to try to eliminate one of those uncertainties and
hold on a little longer to the career he worked so hard to develop...
Sadly, while institutions merely are tarnished from needless
litigation, individuals are torn apart. I remain unable to wrap my
mind around the absurdity of the government's pursuit of this case
and I am saddened that it has been dragged out to the point where my
dad opted to settle from pure exhaustion." (To read Gentry Ferrell's
full statement, please visit:
http://caedefensefund.org/press/ferrellplea.html)

Dr. Ferrell's colleague Dr. Steven Kurtz, founder of the
internationally acclaimed art and theater group Critical Art
Ensemble, was illegally detained and accused of "bioterrorism" by the
U.S. government in 2004 stemming from his acquisition from Dr.
Ferrell of harmless bacteria used in several of Critical Art
Ensemble's educational art projects. After a costly investigation
lasting several months and failing to provide any evidence of
"bioterrorism," the Department of Justice instead brought charges of
"mail fraud" and "wire fraud" against Kurtz and Ferrell. Under the
USA PATRIOT Act, the maximum penalty for these charges has increased
from 5 years to 20. (For more information about the case, please see
"Background to the Case" below or http://caedefensefund.org)

JURIDICAL ART CRITICISM?

The government is vigorously attempting to prosecute two defendants
in a case where no one has been injured, and no one has been
defrauded. The materials found in Dr. Kurtz's house were obtained
legally and used safely by the artist. After three and a half years
of investigation and prosecution, the case still revolves around
$256 worth of common science research materials that were used in
art works by a highly visible and respected group of artists. These
art works were commissioned and hosted by cultural institutions
worldwide where they had been safely displayed in museums and
galleries with absolutely no risk to the public.

The Government has consistently framed this case as an issue of
public safety, but the materials used by Critical Art Ensemble are
widely available, can be purchased by anyone from High School science
supply catalogues, and are regularly mailed.

PROFESSORS OF ART & SCIENCE EXPRESS ALARM

"The government's prosecution is an ill-conceived and misguided
attack on the scientific and artistic communities," said Dr. Richard
Gronostajski, Professor of Biochemistry at SUNY Buffalo, where
Professor Kurtz also teaches. "It could have a chilling effect on
future scientific research collaborations, and harm teaching efforts
and interactions between scientists, educators and artists."

"It's deeply alarming that the government could pressure someone of
Dr. Ferrell's stature into agreeing to something like this. The case
threatens all Americans' Constitutionally guaranteed right to
question the actions of their government," said Igor Vamos, Professor
of Integrated Electronic Arts at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

PLEA COMES AMIDST OVERWHELMING PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR DEFENDANTS

The plea bargain agreement comes at a time of overwhelming public
support for the two defendants. A film about the case, Strange
Culture - directed by Lynn Hershman Leeson and featuring Tilda
Swinton (Chronicles of Narnia, Michael Clayton), Thomas Jay Ryan
(Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind), and Peter Coyote (E.T., Erin
Brockovich) - has drawn widespread critical praise and public
interest, with screenings in dozens of U.S. cities after its
selection to open both the 2007 Human Rights Watch International Film
Festival and the Berlin International Film Festival documentary
section. An October 1 screening of the film at the Museum of Modern
Art in New York City drew a crowd of 400 who stayed for an hour
afterward for a discussion with Professor Kurtz, director Hershman
Leeson, and actress Tilda Swinton. Special benefit screenings of the
film in numerous cities have raised thousands of dollars to offset
the two defendants' escalating legal costs.

BACKGROUND TO THE CASE

The legal nightmare of renowned scientist Dr. Robert Ferrell and
artist and professor Dr. Steven Kurtz began in May 2004. Professor
Kurtz and his late wife Hope were founding members of the
internationally exhibited art and theater collective Critical Art
Ensemble. Over the past decade cultural institutions worldwide have
commissioned and hosted Critical Art Ensemble's participatory theater
projects that help the general public understand biotechnology and
the many issues surrounding it. In May 2004 the Kurtzes were
preparing a project examining genetically modified agriculture for
the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, when Hope Kurtz died of heart failure. Detectives who responded to Professor Kurtz's 911 call deemed the couple's art suspicious, and called the FBI. Within hours the artist was illegally detained as a suspected "bioterrorist" as dozens of federal agents in Hazmat suits sifted through his work and impounded his computers, manuscripts, books, his cat, and even his
wife's body.

CASE DEPLETES PUBLIC AND PRIVATE RESOURCES

The government has pursued this case relentlessly for three and a
half years, spending enormous amounts of public resources. Most
significantly, the legal battle has exhausted the financial,
emotional, and physical resources of Ferrell and Kurtz; as well as
their families and supporters. The professional and personal lives of
both defendants have suffered tremendously. A trial date has not yet
been established.


For more information about the case, including extensive
documentation, please visit http://caedefensefund.org

Thursday, October 11, 2007

NOLA Supernova



Barrister's Gallery
2331 St. Claude Ave
New Orleans

Super Nova
October 13 thru November 3, 2007


"An exhibition, curated by by Jeanette Ingberman, founding director of Exit Art, showcasing the first group of artists curated for NOVA Projects' New Orleans Artist Registry."

"This is a continuing effort to permanently catalog online working contemporary artists in the region. The next curated selection will be exhibited June, 2008. Each exhibit will call upon a different curator--different region, different sensibility."

[click on the announcement above to read the names of the artists]

more

[thanks to EC, our scout in Buffalo, for the tip:]

Doris Lessing

The 2007 Nobel Prize in Literature goes to Doris Lessing "that epicist of the female experience, who with scepticism, fire and visionary power has subjected a divided civilization to scrutiny."

more

[photo from nobelprize.org Web site. Credit: "Photo: Scanpix/Ulrich Perrey"]

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Lulu's Back in Town - Thelonious Sphere Monk (October 10, 1917 – February 17, 1982)

[Please join the The Data Stream in celebrating the 90th anniversary of the birth of Thelonius Sphere Monk, a giant of jazz and one of the twentieth century's greatest composers and pianists.

Below is a fantastic performance of Harry Warren's 1935 Lulu's Back in Town, a standard in Monk's performance repertoire. The YouTube information is listed as follows:
Live in Norway 1966
Thelonious Monk - Piano
Charlie Rouse - Tenor
Larry Gales - Bass
Ben Riley - Drums]



Monday, October 08, 2007

Before vs. After


John Jay College Gallery
899 10th Avenue
New York, NY 10019

October 9-27, 2007
Nola Romano
Before vs. After


[image from exhibition announcement]

Saturday, October 06, 2007

Flickrvision

[Companion to earlier post regarding Blogger Play]

Flickrvision

[image: screengrab from Flickrvision Web site.]

Thursday, October 04, 2007

B. Sakata Garo Gallery
923 20th Street
Sacramento, CA 95811

Alice Shaw Paint/Sculpture/Landscape/Architecture
October 2-November 3
Opening Reception Saturday October 13th 6-9

[photograph by Alice Shaw]

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

No Wave Cinema



EFA Gallery
No Wave Film Night

New York City
October 17, 2007 | 7 — 9 pm

"Three distinctive films by the director/artists Beth and Scott B and Amos Poe will be screened. These films mark the genesis of the "No Wave" or "New Cinema" film scene."

G-Man by Beth and Scott B (1978, 40 min) An exploration of social schizophrenia in which terrorists consult their mothers before planting bombs, and the head of the NYC bomb squad succumbs to his dominatrix. With Bill Rice and Marcia Resnick.

Letters to Dad
by Beth and Scott B (1979 15 min) A litany of letters written to Jim Jones read by a cast of artists and musicians. With Arto Lindsay and Pat Place.

The Foreigner by Amos Poe (1978 60 min) An agent sent on a secret mission blindly navigates the darkened corners of New York City while thugs and counter spies shadow him and plot his demise. With Eric Mitchell, Patti Astor, Anya Phillips, The Cramps and The Erasers.

Primarily seen as an art movement, No Wave or New Cinema flourished in the Lower East Side between the years 1976 and 1984. Each film, shot on super-8 and then transferred and edited on video, was a collaborative effort between artists, filmmakers, actors, and musicians. By mimicking B-movie narratives, these underground films set themselves apart from the structuralist films of the time and are predecessors of today's "indies.""

[Image: Amos Poe: The Foreigner from EFA Gallery mailing]