<br />RHIZOME DIGEST: August 7, 2005<br /><br />Content:<br /><br />+note+<br />1. Francis Hwang: Director of Technology report, July 2005<br /><br />+announcement+<br />2. Jeremy Turner: Karl Bartos on Greatestbits.com!<br /><br />+opportunity+<br />3. Felix Sattler: Call for Papers: Essay Competition "backup.plaintext"<br />4. slinn@artic.edu: Faculty Opportunity at SAIC<br />5. Paul Slocum: Readme 100 Deadline Approaching<br /><br />+interview+<br />6. Thomas Petersen: 10 Questions for 10 Nordic artists<br /><br />+commissioned for Rhizome.org+<br />7. Nathaniel Stern: Interview with Joshua Goldberg<br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />Rhizome is now offering Organizational Subscriptions, group memberships<br />that can be purchased at the institutional level. These subscriptions allow<br />participants at institutions to access Rhizome's services without<br />having to purchase individual memberships. For a discounted rate, students<br />or faculty at universities or visitors to art centers can have access to<br />Rhizome?s archives of art and text as well as guides and educational tools<br />to make navigation of this content easy. Rhizome is also offering<br />subsidized Organizational Subscriptions to qualifying institutions in poor<br />or excluded communities. Please visit <a rel="nofollow" href="http://rhizome.org/info/org.php">http://rhizome.org/info/org.php</a> for<br />more information or contact Lauren Cornell at LaurenCornell@Rhizome.org<br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />1.<br /><br />Date: 8.01.05<br />From: Francis Hwang <francis@rhizome.org><br />Subject: Director of Technology report, July 2005<br /><br />(or: what I did on my summer vacation, by Francis Hwang)<br /><br />For better or for worse, changes keep coming. Below are some of the<br />bigger ones that happened this past month:<br /><br />1. New front page<br />The new front page allows our superusers to cast a broader net,<br />collating interesting things both from Rhizome Raw and from the broader<br />world of new media arts online. The backend involved all sorts of<br />components stuck together inelegantly with chicken wire and duct tape,<br />but I won't bother you with the details (other than to thank the teams<br />behind the reBlog and Wordpress projects for putting out said<br />newly-sticky software). The end result is far more interesting: A front<br />page that pulls content from all corners of the web. And if you've got<br />a new-media-arts-related RSS feed out there, please email it to me, so<br />I can pass it on to all our superusers.<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rhizome.org/">http://rhizome.org/</a><br /><br />2. Location<br /> From time to time at Rhizome, I get emails that read like this: "Dear<br />omniscient webmaster, I just moved to [city that is not New York or<br />London], and would like to find out about the new media arts scene in<br />the area. Whaddya got for me?" Thus was born our new Location feature,<br />in which Members can opt-in to display their location. We hope this<br />will help people build and strengthen new scenes in places outside the<br />stereotypical art hubs. It's also just sort of cool; right now you can<br />see that there are at least two Rhizome Members living in Finland.<br />Shout-out to my peeps in Finland.<br /><br />Keep an eye out for more cool Location-y features in the future. In the<br />meantime, browse it all at:<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rhizome.org/location.rhiz">http://rhizome.org/location.rhiz</a><br /><br />3. Featured Member-curated exhibit<br /><br />Once a month, we're spotlighting a member-curated exhibit. When such an<br />exhibit is featured, that means it can be viewed by everyone (not just<br />Members), and the artworks it points to can be viewed by everyone else.<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rhizome.org/art/member-curated/">http://rhizome.org/art/member-curated/</a><br /><br />4. Featured Artwork<br /><br />We're also featuring an artwork once a month; this art will be out of<br />the Rhizome Archives and viewable to everybody. As of now, this work is<br />"Nio", by Jim Andrews.<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rhizome.org/object.rhiz?2441">http://rhizome.org/object.rhiz?2441</a><br /><br />5. Member RSS<br /><br />Every single Member can have an RSS feed, which will track their texts,<br />artworks, and member-curated exhibits. This was rolled out last month,<br />and it's pretty cool to see an extra 300 feeds added to our list of RSS<br />feeds … However, I have to admit this first phase of the features<br />isn't quite done, since I think there's something a little off about<br />the updating of this feeds … With any luck, I'll get the gremlins out<br />of this feature this week or the next.<br /><br />That's it for now. Please be generous with the feedback–do these<br />features makes sense? Are they easy to use? Are they useful to you at<br />all? etc., etc.<br /><br />best,<br />Francis Hwang<br />Director of Technology<br />Rhizome.org<br />phone: 212-219-1288x202<br />AIM: francisrhizome<br />+ + +<br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />2. <br /><br />Date: 8.07.05<br />From: Jeremy Turner <jerturner536@yahoo.ca><br />Subject: Karl Bartos on Greatestbits.com!<br /><br />Karl Bartos on Greatestbits.com!<br /><br />Karl Bartos (ex-Kraftwerk) has 1 second digital audio pieces on<br />Greatestbits.com<br /><br />Be sure to check them out and also to check out his webpage:<br />www.karl-bartos.de<br />To submit your own audiobit, please email a sound file in either .wav or<br />.mp3 to: transmitbit@yahoo.ca<br /><br />www.greatestbits.com - Jeremy Turner - Janne Vanhanen.<br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />Rhizome ArtBase Exhibitions<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rhizome.org/art/exhibition/">http://rhizome.org/art/exhibition/</a><br /><br />Visit the fourth ArtBase Exhibition "City/Observer," curated by<br />Yukie Kamiya of the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York and designed<br />by T.Whid of MTAA.<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rhizome.org/art/exhibition/city/">http://rhizome.org/art/exhibition/city/</a><br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />3.<br /><br />Date: 8.01.05<br />From: <felixsattler@web.de><br />Subject: Call for Papers: Essay Competition "backup.plaintext"<br /><br />Essay competition backup.plaintext â?? Theory and context of moving images<br /><br />Topic 2005: »Avant-garde today - beyond or beside film?«<br /><br />In which sense can the concept of avant-garde, originating from the first<br />decades of the 20th century and proclaimed dead several times, be formulated<br />in such a way that is plausible for films of the 21st century? Transcending<br />the common definition of art â?? that was one of the chief concerns of the<br />"classical avant-garde". Is it still legitimate today to try and transcend<br />film, as the exhibition "Future Cinema" at ZKM, Karlsruhe, proposed a few<br />years ago? Is experimental film looking for new spaces, places, ways of<br />presentation? Where are moving images moving to? Where can the filmic<br />avant-garde of 2005 be found â?? beyond film? Beside film? Offside? Is<br />filmic avantgarde shifting, out of the cinema, e.g. into galleries and<br />museums? Into television? Into the club scene? Is there any room or<br />potential left for an avant-garde in film/cinema? Has the avant-garde of<br />moving images become nothing but a technological project, recycling<br />traditional imagery and trying to reconstruct historical dispositives? Is<br />filmic avant-garde a social project? An aesthetic one? Might not the true<br />avantgarde exist not in the invention of new ideas, but rather in the<br />creative reprocessing of old ones? Could it be that montage, which was<br />judged the most important means of filmic avant-garde by Sergey Eisenstein,<br />has found its up-to-date equivalent in Copy&Paste?<br /><br />The submitted texts must be no longer than 10,000 characters, texts in both<br />German and English are acceptable (the festival catalogue is bilingual).<br />Submission via post or (preferrably) e-mail in PDF or RTF format.<br /><br />Jury members include Prof. Dr. Joseph Vogl (Weimar/Princeton), Roger<br />Behrens) & Dr. Ulrike Bergermann (Bochum), see PDF (below) for a full list<br />of jury members.<br /><br />The deadline for the submission of papers is Aug, 15th 2005<br /><br />Please review our PDF for detailed information on the background, topic,<br />selection criteria and jury members:<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.uni-weimar.de/~zintl/backup/b05_plaintext_en.pdf">http://www.uni-weimar.de/~zintl/backup/b05_plaintext_en.pdf</a><br /><br />or contact David&Felix: plaintext@backup-festival.de<br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />4. <br /><br />Date: 8.04.05<br />From: <slinn@artic.edu><br />Subject: Faculty Opportunity at SAIC<br /><br />The Department of Film, Video, and New Media at the School of the Art<br />Institute of Chicago invites applications from artists working in video to<br />teach and expand an innovative curriculum in moving image media. We are<br />looking for artists who work with various applications of video/digital<br />media, experimental narrative and non-fiction forms, installation, video<br />performance, interactive environments and web-based work. Candidates should<br />have a strong conceptual and historical grasp of contemporary issues in the<br />intersecting worlds of independent video production, experimental<br />filmmaking, and new media. The department is committed to alternative forms<br />and practices that emphasize experimentation, innovation, and the<br />hybridization of existing media and modes of presentation. Candidates should<br />demonstrate the ability and desire to participate in curricular initiatives;<br />should be able to work with undergraduate and graduate students in an<br />interdisciplinary, fine arts context; and should have advanced proficiency<br />in one or more areas of the media arts. Applicants must have an active<br />professional creative practice. Teaching experience preferred. The position<br />is full-time, tenure-track and begins in the fall of 2006. Rank and salary<br />are commensurate with experience.<br /><br />Please send a letter of application, curriculum vitae, artistâ??s statement,<br />teaching philosophy, portfolio samples which may include CD-Rom, DVD, VHS,<br />mini-DV, and/or website URLs, names and contact information for three<br />references, and an SASE (if you wish to have the materials returned) by<br />November 15, 2005 for priority consideration to:<br /><br />FVNM Search/Rhizome<br />School of the Art Institute of Chicago<br />Office of Deans and Division Chairs<br />37 South Wabash Avenue<br />Chicago, IL 60603<br /><br />For more information on the School and its programs, available faculty<br />positions, and details regarding application, consult<br />www.artic.edu/saic/public/jobs. For additional assistance, questions may be<br />directed to Shanna Linn at slinn@artic.edu, 312.899-7472.<br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />Rhizome.org 2005-2006 Net Art Commissions<br /><br />The Rhizome Commissioning Program makes financial support available to<br />artists for the creation of innovative new media art work via panel-awarded<br />commissions.<br /><br />For the 2005-2006 Rhizome Commissions, eleven artists/groups were selected<br />to create original works of net art.<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rhizome.org/commissions/">http://rhizome.org/commissions/</a><br /><br />The Rhizome Commissions Program is made possible by support from the<br />Jerome Foundation in celebration of the Jerome Hill Centennial, the<br />Greenwall Foundation, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, and<br />the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs. Additional support has<br />been provided by members of the Rhizome community.<br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />5.<br /><br />Date: 8.06.05<br />From: Paul Slocum <paul@treewave.com><br />Subject: Readme 100 Deadline Approaching<br /><br />Alexei Shulgin's Readme 100 (that's 4 for the posers) is contest format this<br />year and the deadline for submissions is Monday, August 8th! The festival<br />this year is in Dortmund, Germay and will take place in November.<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://readme.runme.org/">http://readme.runme.org/</a><br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />Support Rhizome: buy a hosting plan from BroadSpire<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://rhizome.org/hosting/">http://rhizome.org/hosting/</a><br /><br />Reliable, robust hosting plans from $65 per year.<br /><br />Purchasing hosting from BroadSpire contributes directly to Rhizome's fiscal<br />well-being, so think about about the new Bundle pack, or any other plan,<br />today!<br /><br />About BroadSpire<br /><br />BroadSpire is a mid-size commercial web hosting provider. After conducting a<br />thorough review of the web hosting industry, we selected BroadSpire as our<br />partner because they offer the right combination of affordable plans (prices<br />start at $14.95 per month), dependable customer support, and a full range of<br />services. We have been working with BroadSpire since June 2002, and have<br />been very impressed with the quality of their service.<br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />6.<br /><br />Date: 8.03.05<br />From: Thomas Petersen <thomas@crossover.dk><br />Subject: 10 Questions for 10 Nordic artists.<br /><br />10*10<br />10 Questions for 10 Nordic artists.<br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.artificial.dk/articles/10x10trine.htm">http://www.artificial.dk/articles/10x10trine.htm</a><br /><br />Artificial sets out to dig an alternative route through the activities on<br />the Nordic scene for computer based art. We wanted to find a way to sidestep<br />the restrictions in our own particular outlook so we are therefore launching<br />an unpredictable series of interviews, which will hopefully help us uncover<br />the hidden potentials out there.<br /><br />We handed Norwegian artist Trine Eidsmo a set of 10 questions and she will<br />in turn pass them on to an artist of her choice. After answering the same<br />questions, this artist will choose a new artist … and so forth. The only<br />criteria for the participants are that they live and work in Scandinavia and<br />create computer based art. In the end, 10 Nordic artists will have answered<br />10 questions about their art, working process and much more.<br /><br />Current artist: Trine Eidsmo:<br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.artificial.dk/articles/10x10trine.htm">http://www.artificial.dk/articles/10x10trine.htm</a><br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />7.<br /><br />Date: 8.03.05<br />From: nathaniel stern <nathaniel@hektor.net><br />Subject: Interview with Joshua Goldberg<br /><br />Joshua Goldberg was the Digital Artist in residence at Wits School of the<br />Arts, University of the Witwatersrand (Johannesburg, South Africa) for the<br />month of June, 2005<br /><br />the live visualist cometh<br />a Q&A with Joshua Goldberg, by nathaniel stern<br /><br />I remember meeting Joshua at a group interview for graduate school - we were<br />both trying to get in to New York University's "Interactive<br />Telecommunication Program" (ITP) - what Newsweek has called the "Harvard of<br />Interactive."<br /><br />We both did miserably, and neither of us thought we'd get in.<br /><br />After starting there the following year, we became pretty good friends;<br />although I, along with most of ITP, thought Josh and the software he was<br />using (Cycling74's "Max") to be more than a bit mad. We all believed it<br />wasn't going much anywhere. More than 5 years later, he's an expert in said<br />application, which is now a main focus at ITP as well as my own teaching at<br />the WSOA Digital Arts MA (Josh himself is still mad). I was pleased to have<br />Josh as our first Digital Artist in Residence at Wits School of the Arts<br />(with a full schedule of events all over town); after dinner one night, I<br />had a quick email discussion with him about his art, his curating, the party<br />scene, teaching, and what he was doing here.<br />Why would two geeks ever transcribe what could be typed in the first place?<br /><br />nathaniel stern: Joshua, talk about your work. How would you define<br />yourself? Does it differ for you in your hats as artist, curator and live<br />visualist?<br /><br />joshua goldberg: Right off the bat, you're encouraging me to get incredibly<br />pretentious.  Sometimes when I talk about my work I get frustrated, because<br />I find myself using such dry terms to describe my stuff.<br />But I'll try not to do too badly, bear with me.<br /><br />I'm a video artist who specializes in exploring abstract patterns.  These<br />patterns can come from found material, such as television or the motion of<br />bodies through space, or they can come from mathematical equations.  I love<br />working as a curator and encouraging other artists to think the same way,<br />and I love the visceral, exciting experience of doing it in real time, as a<br />performance.  How's that?<br /><br />NS: Perfect. But I have to add that said patterns are astoundingly beautiful<br />- and this coming from someone who isn't really into the VJ style or<br />culture. I think you once said about your work, something like, "at its<br />worst, my stuff is the best screen saver you have ever seen; at its best,<br />it's almost transcendental beauty." Tell me your schpeel about VJ vs live<br />visualist.<br /><br />JG: I'm being called a Super-VJ all across South Africa.  I love publicity,<br />but I really hate being called a VJ.  The VJ term comes from DJ, who is a<br />guy who plays records in clubs.  DJs almost always play other people's<br />stuff, and there's absolutely nothing wrong with that.  They know how to<br />manage a crowd by playing rhythms and melodies which veer from familiar to<br />new, and familiarity is one major tool in their arsenal.  When you listen to<br />a song you love over and over again, the emotional resonance grows.  The<br />song touches you in ways you did not anticipate when you first listened to<br />it.  It's just not the case with video.  When you watch a video, you rarely<br />want to watch it again fifteen times, even if it's short or you really love<br />it more than anything.  It becomes stale, it becomes less meaningful.  So<br />it's much more of a responsibility for people who do live visuals to only<br />work on their own content, because its freshness is so fleeting.  VJs play<br />other people's clips.  I craft a visual experience, I'm a visualist.<br /><br />NS: Just to clarify, not only do you make your own clips, but your self-made<br />software allows for a more improvisational performance which is always<br />different, right?<br /><br />JG: Exactly. I work between video feedback, different clips to start with,<br />and play with numbers and oscillating effects in the visuals to match the<br />feel and the rhythm in real time. In simplest terms, people can expect to<br />see trippy moving images that match the set.<br /><br />NS: I know it's hard to explain…. Let's get to Mark Shuttleworth and free<br />culture. He's a huge hero here in SA amongst the geeks, and we also just had<br />a big Creative Commons conference in Joburg. Shuttleworth promotes free<br />software available for use and change, and CC does the same for content -<br />re-usable and editable music, text, images, etc. What's your take on them in<br />the artistic and African contexts?<br /><br />JG: Shuttleworth's a worthy hero.  I've been reading quite a bit about him<br />since I got here; his actions are incredibly noble and inspiring with<br />reference to the push to develop Linux [the open source Operating System]<br />more in academic and governmental systems.  I think he's great.  I love<br />Creative Commons because it gives me a way to widely disseminate my work<br />with the purpose of inspiring and jumpstarting emerging artists without<br />being worried about losing credit for the pieces themselves.  And Africa is<br />a perfect match for CC- everyone can inspire everyone else without getting<br />bogged down in typically American stupidity like endless copyright.<br /><br />NS: It seems we've taken most advantage of your live visualization skills<br />while on your visit. Tell us about that. How did you get into that scene?<br />Burning man? From what you can see, why does that seem to turn people on<br />here in South Africa?<br /><br />JG: I got into visualization because music and movement in clubs seemed to<br />be a perfect match for the first visual programming experiments I began<br />making in early 2000.  I have my friend Carlos Gomez de la Llarena, the<br />architect and net.artist, to thank for that; he got me my first gigs and<br />gave me the confidence to keep on performing.  Doing work at Burning Man was<br />really more of a result of the joy i get from performing and showing;<br />Burning Man is all about sharing your absolute best strengths with as many<br />people you can.  I think South Africans love live visuals for the same<br />reason everyone else in the world gets into them; they enhance great music<br />and a great experience and a great party.  Who wouldn't like that?<br /><br />NS: A bit about your work as an artist and curator.  I know you've just<br />arrived, but what can you see in the new media scene here? Where do you<br />think it can, will and/or needs to go?<br /><br />JG: I think that there's one word which I can use to sum up what needs to<br />happen:  MORE.  But I can also say more.   To everyone who is interested in<br />doing new media work in a live context, or in a gallery context:  be<br />unafraid to fail.  Keep doing experiments, don't restrict yourself.  Don't<br />second-guess your own work, trust your own conceptual instincts, so that you<br />have the patience, bravery and energy to follow an idea through to<br />completion.  Getting started in work like this can be difficult because of<br />the complication and breadth of the tools.  Trust your instincts enough to<br />remember your original ideas, and be skeptical enough about every tool you<br />use so your ideas don't get lost in the tech.  Just because I use<br />Max/MSP/Jitter as a primary artistic tool doesn't mean it's perfect; it<br />means that it's the best thing for me until something better comes along.<br /><br />NS: OK, Josh, finally, tell us about your gigs here. You had a full weekend<br />here in Jozi (with four events!), something at the Johannesburg Art Gallery<br />the following Friday, and a gig in Cape Town that next night Saturday.<br /><br />JG: I lectured at Wits to the grad students all week, and I couldn't miss a<br />safari in the Kruger Park (with laptop). The other stuff  in Joburg and Cape<br />Town:<br /><br />Joburg:<br /><br />June 10th  15:00 ­ 16:30 ­ a public seminar -  ³Time and Abstraction -<br />Real-time video art²  -  The Friday Digital Soiree -  WSOA Digital Convent,<br />Wits Campus. <br /><br />June 10th  19:00 ­ 20:00 - a video art installation ­ ³Improv²  @ The Drill<br />Hall,  Joubert Park.  With electro-acoustic musician João Orrechia<br /><br />June 11th 10:00 ­ 14:00 -  a free workshop -   ³Dervish² @ The Bag Factory,<br />Newtown.  Learn how to use real-time free VJ software with Joshua Goldberg.<br /><br />June 11th 21:00 till late -   a dance party -   ³When Two Cities Collide² <br />@  Carfax, Pim Street, Newtown.  See Joshua Goldberg perform live with the<br />top JHB VJs and deep house DJs.<br /><br />Cape Town:<br /><br />June 18th 21:00 (sharp!) till late. IGNITE02: first a lecture on dervish,<br />then The Liquid Fridge presents a night of VJs, DJs and live electronic<br />music. At LB's Lounge, on Long Street, Cape Town.<br /><br />NS: So really you were just wasting your time here in Africa then?<br /><br />JG: Heh. Thanks for having me!<br /><br />NS: Thanks Josh. I was at every event - it was fantastic to have you here;<br />you've been amazing with your knowledge, generosity, and general attitude,<br />and our students and community at Wits gained a lot from you. Hope to have<br />you back, and that many others will follow….<br /><br />Joshua Goldberg was the Digital Artist in residence at Wits School of the<br />Arts, University of the Witwatersrand (Johannesburg, South Africa) for the<br />month of June, 2005<br /> <br /><br /> <br />nathaniel<br /> <br /><a rel="nofollow" href="http://nathanielstern.com">http://nathanielstern.com</a><br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />Rhizome.org is a 501©(3) nonprofit organization and an affiliate of<br />the New Museum of Contemporary Art.<br /><br />Rhizome Digest is supported by grants from The Charles Engelhard<br />Foundation, The Rockefeller Foundation, The Andy Warhol Foundation for<br />the Visual Arts, and with public funds from the New York State Council<br />on the Arts, a state agency.<br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />Rhizome Digest is filtered by Kevin McGarry (kevin@rhizome.org). ISSN:<br />1525-9110. Volume 10, number 32. Article submissions to list@rhizome.org<br />are encouraged. Submissions should relate to the theme of new media art<br />and be less than 1500 words. For information on advertising in Rhizome<br />Digest, please contact info@rhizome.org.<br /><br />To unsubscribe from this list, visit <a rel="nofollow" href="http://rhizome.org/subscribe">http://rhizome.org/subscribe</a>.<br />Subscribers to Rhizome Digest are subject to the terms set out in the<br />Member Agreement available online at <a rel="nofollow" href="http://rhizome.org/info/29.php">http://rhizome.org/info/29.php</a>.<br /><br />+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +<br /><br />