Guided tour through Genesis

Just so you know: tomorrow I’ll be one of the guides for the tour through the excellent exhibition Genesis (curated by Emilie Gomart) at the Centraal Museum in Utrecht: http://www.centraalmuseum.nl/page.ocl?pageid=103&nieuws_id=99&filter=.

In my 15 minutes I’ll talk mostly about early computer art and communications theory. (So that’s where the exhibition starts). The other guides are Emilie Gomart, Koen van Mechelen and Huub de Groot.

http://www.centraalmuseum.nl/page.ocl?pageid=67&expo_id=154&filter=3

en,free publicity,research | June 1, 2007 | 21:48 | Comments Off on Guided tour through Genesis |

Overwinteren

Went to see a try-out of the theatre piece Overwinteren for two reasons: one is that it’s directed by Marijke Schermer, who’s working in the Marci Panis building where I’m living, the other is that it takes place at the Volkskrantgebouw, on the seventh floor. Since that building will be used for ‘culture & arts’ in the next few years I was eager to have a look at how that might work…

The play is really well acted and well written – it’s classical and conventional realistic theatre, – the type of theatre that is very enjoyable to watch if well written and well acted. Plus: it really works well on the seventh floor with a view over the Amsterdam, through the big square windows. It makes a great set. Another thing that makes the play work is that the characters have a clear shape, it’s so recognizable it’s sometimes creepy – yet there is also always a distance between yourself as a viewer and the problems of the characters. I often had a smirk on my face. Well it’s contemporary realism, and it’s just very well-done.

Info on Overwinteren: http://www.opiumvoorhetvolk.com/.

en,free publicity | May 10, 2007 | 23:41 | Comments Off on Overwinteren |

Urban exploring

Friday the Urban Explorers Festival starts in Dordrecht – some interesting things there. Of course on saturday a performance of Oorbeek (alas without me, since I’ll be in a car on my way to France), but also for instance Cilia Erens, Machinefabriek, Toktek, Jack Gallager and a circuit bending workshop: http://www.urbanexplorersfestival.nl.

For more urban exploring and game-based art you’ll have to go to Enschede the same weekend (or the week after, since this runs on till the 20th), where Planetart put together an exhibition as part of the Balenfestival: http://www.roombeek.nl/balenfestival/expositie/planetart_expo.html, with Joane Leandre, Julian Oliver, Jodi and lots of street art.

en,free publicity,music | May 10, 2007 | 23:22 | Comments Off on Urban exploring |

BR-podcast

The Bayerischer Rundfunk does have a podcast for Hörspielen: http://www.br-online.de/download-podcast/mp3-download/bayern2radio/mp3-download-podcast-hoerspielartmix.xml. It now features many short re-makes of Ruttmann’s Weekend. Alas, very short bits.

en,free publicity,music,ubiscribe | May 10, 2007 | 23:22 | Comments Off on BR-podcast |

Radio, podcasts, playlists and German Hörspiel

I don’t really use podcasts as such. The main reason is my dislike of Itunes – that program has simply become too big and too slow to use. I prefer Cog. Podcasts I download as I download mp3’s. I also rarely use playlists since my music doesn’t fit on the harddisk of my laptop anyhow, certainly not on my ipod, and even at home I do not always have the external harddisks connected to the laptop. I only use playlists for ‘research’. Yesterday for instance I ‘lost’ 2 hours building a chronological playlist for all the Anthony Braxton I have collected, covering the first 10 years of his career as I’d like/hope to listen through all that in the next few days.

That said, podcast-functionality is perfect for keeping track of programmes that you forget about. I for instance forget that I am interested in audio art, radio art, German Hörspiel. I don’t encounter it in the places that I visit (places = websites, blogs, real places). Yes, I would subscribe immediately if the WDR and Deutschlandradio and Cafe Sonore would offer podcasts of their programs. There is a stream of course.

(Btw: yes, I saw that remark about no podcasts for audio art, during the discussions about Radio at the Balie running at the bottom of the screen).

So here, as a reminder, when the good stuff is on:

WDR 3: http://www.wdr.de/radio/
wednesday 22.00 Hörspiel; 23.00 Studio Elektronische Musik (yes, still wednesday, I am able to remember that!);
saturday 23.00 Studio Akustische Kunst;
sunday 23.00 Studio Neue Musik.

Deutschlandradio Kultur (well, that’s what I know as Deutschlandfunk) has a Hörspiel des Monats, and – that’s a coincedence – on the 13th of May that will be a piece by Raymond Federman: http://www.dradio.de/dkultur/sendungen/hoerspiel/610766/. An overview of their Hörspiels is here: http://www.dradio.de/portale/hoerspiel/. I’m afraid I don’t see any podcasts.

Cafe Sonore is the only programme left on Dutch (national) public radio that covers the ars acustica. Here luckily we have audio on demand (but not for download): http://www.vpro.nl/programma/cafesonore/.

Just reminders to self.

en,free publicity,music,ubiscribe | May 9, 2007 | 16:07 | comments (1) |

Radio 2.0 at Cool Media Hot Talk

Wednesday May 2nd I’ll be speaking at the Radio 2.0-event of the Cool Media Hot Talk Show at De Balie, Amsterdam. Here’s a copy of the text and statements that frame the event:

Questioning the relevance of radio in the internet age

Internet radio or net.radio is now so much part of the daily practice and experience of the internet that it has become alsmost ‘vernacular’, i.e it is almost impossible to perceive it for what it is (audio on-line), and more importantly to see it as something that could be imagined differently. The adoption of the metaphor in such mainstream software packages as iTunes strengthens the adherence to the old and accustomed model of ‘radio’ with a critical mass of internet users. In a sense, most befitting to a show about media hot and cool, it expresses beautifully the idea of McLuhan that “the content of any new medium is an old medium” and that we are thus “moving into the future looking backwards”…

We want to question what the relevance of radio is (as an artistic form and as a medium) in the internet age. Why stick to the notion of ‘radio’ when the ways of handling and experiencing audio in an on-line environment (on the internet) can be so much more versatile? Is not a concept like net.radio, popular in internet-art circles such as the xChange network, already a reactionary move towards the past?

If artists want to explore, continue or reinvigorate the legacy of ‘Radio Art’, why connect this with an internet related practice? Looking back at the history of radio as a medium and the artists involvement it is important to remember that already in the late 1920s Bertold Brecht famously explored the idea of radio as a distributed interactive communication space consciously as an artistic and a social / political tool. Technically also traditional radio has the capacity of transforming every receiver into a transmitter, thus enabling a communication structure pretty similar to the internet. However, it was not technology but regulation and legislation that killed this transformative potential of the radio medium.

Looking at this today two ideas present themselves: First that we need to be aware of this history in order not to make the same mistakes vis-à-vis the internet (allowing it to be closed down by regulation and legislation). Secondly, now that a mass of users has become accustomed to the open media of the internet, would it not be a more productive and interesting idea to take the internet to radio, rather than the other way around? Why not try to open up the traditional radio space in a way similar to the internet, taking the internet-attitude of the youtube generation to radio?

This is also important locally in Amsterdam, where after all this show is physically staged, which had a huge tradition in open media and free radio, but where the radio space has recently been forcefully closed down by new regulation, legislation ánd enforcement!

Statement of Adam Hyde

Radio is not as it seems. It has never been live. It has always been a rather fast method for delivering an archive. It is now time to confront the great pretender and investigate the nuances of the reigning principle of radio – delay.

Radio is the best archival media there is. Copy your digital files into sound, broadcast them into space, – they will exist forever. Retreiving them does require some work still as the speed of light remains a barrier for indexing and retrieving radio waves, but given time science cures even the most anxious archivists worries. Archive now, let science take care of the rest later.

But is radio really an archival medium? Or is it live? Are radio waves themselves a guarantee of liveness or do they simply deliver archival material really quickly? What does ‘live’ actually mean and does it even matter? Further, what role does the internet have in this debate, is it possible to say that a downloaded mp3 file is live radio?

Adam will talk about various projects he has worked on including r a d i o q u a l i a s Radio Astronomy (http://www.radio-astronomy.net) and Wifio ( by Simpel – http://www.simpel.cc). Radio Astronomy is a live online radio station broadcasting sounds from space. Wifio is a radio tuner that allows you to listen to the internet. It captures data traffic on open wireless connections and translates emails, webpages, voip and irc to speech. With wifio you too can listen to the internet in your neighbourhood….

Adam Hyde (.nz), is an artist, educator, tactical media practitioner, streaming media consultant, and sometime curator. He is involved in numerous projects that fuse (sound-) art, radio, and the internet, a.o. r a d i o q u a l i a, Radio Astronomy, and Polar Radio. http://www.radioqualia.net/, http://www.xs4all.nl/~adam/.

Statement of Arie Altena

What is radio? Maybe the only way of explaining what radio nowadays signifies, is by taking radio as a sort of mock-latin for “I am beaming”, or “I am sending”. In the West we are getting quite far removed from ‘radio’ as a specific way of transmitting signals through the air, or a format where someone in a studio makes a programme for us to listen to. The word radio is grifted upon many of our media-uses. We can even conceptualize of every carrier of an iPod or laptop with an open internet-connection and iTunes (or another sound-programme running) as radio-stations, stations that others can tune into. Radio then is – like the commercial channels – an operation upon an archive (selected play lists from a huge database of sound files), possibly remixed.

I like this re-use of the word radio – taking all those stations streaming sound as radio. Most of that is utterly uninteresting to most (even when I sit down in places like De Balie or V2_ and proceed to check on the shared iTunes-‘radio stations’ in my immediate environment, I hardly ever see anything I’d like to listen to, and I imagine the same will be true of people checking on my archive.) If we have something like radio, it is radically personalized (more personalized than Last.fm).

This is the perspective of the listener who in some sense, involuntary, becomes a radio station himself, by carrying around networked equipment. It’s a technology-effect, it has not much to do with a (conscious) decision to start sending.

What then does the same technological change signify for someone who takes the conscious decision to send? To become a disembodied voice? To represent – what?

I am always a bit disappointed when alternative radio – say artists taking up radio – uses the formats of classic, mainstream radio from the twentieth century, from the high times of ‘radio stations’, with talk shows, jingles, announcements, phone-ins, and a deejay who talks in between records that he spins. Of course, that was a strong genre.

A note: all the radio programmes that I have fond memories of were held together by a distinctive human voice (like that of Michiel de Ruyter).

http://www.coolmediahottalk.net

en,free publicity,research,ubiscribe | April 24, 2007 | 11:28 | Comments Off on Radio 2.0 at Cool Media Hot Talk |

Making electronic thingies….

META is a bunch of artists, techies and other suspects in Amsterdam: http://www.makingelectronicthingiesinamsterdam.nl. They organize workshops in which they (and you), well, the name of the group says it all: make electronic thingies.

en,free publicity,software | April 24, 2007 | 11:15 | Comments Off on Making electronic thingies…. |

Exhibitions to see…

… first of all the Genesis exhibition in the Centraal Museum in Utrecht – curated by Emilie Gomart: http://www.centraalmuseum.nl/page.ocl?pageid=133&expo_id=154&filter=3. About “information” in arts and science, with amongst others works by Driessens & Verstappen, Lilian Schwartz, John Whitney, Stan VanderBeek, Karl Sims, Frieder Nake and Saskia Olde Wolbers.

… then, coming up, bit international . [Nove] Tendencije – Computer and Visual Research, at the Neue Galerie in Graz, Austria, curated by Darko Fritz, with all and everything from the ground-breaking New Tendencies-exhibitions from the sixties, that was early to showcase computer art – including works by Manfred Mohr, Francois Morellet, Edward Zajec, Stan VanderBeek, and 89 other artists. No info on this exhibition online yet: http://www.neuegalerie.at

… and well, I should mention here the DEAF-exhibition too, in Rotterdam (Las Palmas): http://www.deaf07.nl, with amongst other Marnix de Nijs, Garnet Hertz and Zachary Lieberman. Beautiful works, but the presentation could be better. There are really too many sounds of different installations bleeding over into each other. For most works this is not really a problem, but it does take a lot away from the experience of Ondulation.

… oh, and of course Meta_Epics II of telcosystems at Tag in The Hague. Superb. http://www.telcosystems.net and http://www.tag004.nl/new/system/main.php?pageid=301.

en,free publicity | April 21, 2007 | 19:48 | Comments Off on Exhibitions to see… |

Experience Design

Next year: experience design starts at the HKU, Utrecht: http://experiencedesign.hku.nl/index.php, looking at a world in which all things & everything will be connected.

en,free publicity,software | April 21, 2007 | 19:38 | Comments Off on Experience Design |

DEAF

Tonight is the official opening of DEAF, the Dutch Electronic Art Festival — in Rotterdam, organized and curated by my current ’employer’ V2_. So the next few days I’ll be busy with various thing at DEAF. Writing a few reports, to be published on the DEAF-blog, moderating one event (Connected Archives), presenting at another (Magnet Reader), following the symposium and finally on sunday I’ll be talking about my own research at the Ubiscribe colloquium. Check out http://www.deaf07.nl for everything & excuse my possible/probable silence here…

en,free publicity,research | April 10, 2007 | 11:43 | Comments Off on DEAF |
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License. | Arie Altena