Conference

belhuis

Olia Lialina, Forever in the 90s

Presentation on Rotterdam’s cybercafés / belhuizen and related ‘low cultures’ of new media.

Wed., March 9th 2011, 19.00, Location: Goethe-Institut Rotterdam, Westersingel 9, Rotterdam (nearby the Central Station)

Rotterdam’s cybercafés (‘belhuizen’) have a bad reputation. They are associated with diverse illegal activities, from money laundering to support of terrorists. Research conducted by the city shows, however, that statistically, only minor nuisances show up as the problems they create.

In 2010, net artist Olia Lialina researched Rotterdam’s cybercafés and physical and online ‘low culture’ environments as part of her research fellowship of the Piet Zwart Institute and artist-in-residence work at Goethe-Institut Rotterdam. She will present, for the first time, the results of her research.

This event is a cooperation of the Research Programme Communication in a Digital Age and the Networked Media Master orientation of the Piet Zwart Institute, Willem de Kooning Academy, with Goethe-Institut Rotterdam.




On March 14 and 15 2011, Willem de Kooning Academy Rotterdam University will organise an international conference on the internationalisation of art education.

The past decade was characterised by many new connections, mainly based on international student mobility. Due to international developments in higher art education, we now observe an increased demand for new networks, joint ventures of art colleges focusing on solid international collaboration. During the two-day conference, experts and executives from the world of international arts education will meet to develop and share their visions on the future of international art education.

Speakers will be:

  • Dr. Rosa Becker, Senior Policy Officer / Researcher Nuffic, Knowledge & Innovation, Directorate Department of Studies: International education trends and developments
  • Drs. Gerard J. van Drielen, Member of Executive Board Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences: Internationalisation? What is global in the local?
  • Prof. Dr. Hans Peter Schwarz, Founding President em. Zurich University of the Arts: The Utopian Art School, some independent remarks on a possible future of higher education in the arts
  • Ass. Professor Li Keling, Dean Fashion Art & Design Institute Donghua University (Shanghai, China): International art education from a Chinese perspective
  • Dr. Ray Allen, Vice-President for Academic Affairs and Provost Maryland Institute College of Art: How the financial crisis and budget cuts change internationalisation strategies
  • Prof. Martin Rennert, President Universität der Künste Berlin Bachelor/Master/PhD: How it differs internationally and what it has practically meant for internationalisation
  • Prof. John Butler, Head of School of Art, Birmingham City University: On conclusions drawn from internationally auditing art school programmes
  • Prof. Mike Stevenson, University of Plymouth: Accrediting study programmes across national borders

The two-day conference will be moderated by drs. Jeroen J. L. Chabot, Chairman of the Board of Willem de Kooning Academy and Dr. J.J.F. (Florian) Cramer, head of WdKA’s research programme Communication in a Digital Age/Director Piet Zwart Institute.

If you are interested to participate, please be so kind and register through wdka.international@hro.nl (costs EUR 100 p.p.).

For more information, please visit IC2011.wdka.nl




Imagine an Audience Day 2, 01022011, a semi-live report

The second day focuses more on filmmaking in the fine arts, and the strings attached to that… The first panel is moderated by Edwin Carels – who worked on preparing the conference and came up with the title: Imagine an Audience. Many in the audience were not present yesterday, so Florian kicks off with a short recap of the first day.

On the panel are John Smith, Luke Fowler and Michel Chevalier. Each one does a short (10-minute) presentation, after which “the real discussion and fighting” can begin.

Luke Fowler

Luke Fowler (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luke_Fowler), (lux.org.uk/collection/artists/luke-fowler), (spikeart.at/index.php?option=com_magazine&func=show_article&id=104&lang=en), speaking with a beautiful Scottish voice, gives a brief introduction to his life as an artist. He has been quite fortunate to have his work shown both in art galleries and at film festivals. He has always resisted the new media – the Internet – as a way of distributing work.

One of his “seminal” moments as an artist was a friend giving him a videotape of “Wavelength” by Michael Snow. As he watched it alone in his flat in Dundee, he felt alienated, not knowing what to think of it – knowing nothing about the film or its context. (VHS also not being the right format for this film.) To him, a community is essential if one is to understand new ways of dealing with audiovisual content. British public television in the ’80s and ’90s was also an influence, particularly the documentaries shown there – in the days before the decline of  television programming. He also saw the work of Douglas Gordon in Glasgow. At that time he was not involved in the discourse of video art – not part of that community – and he found much of video art self-indulgent. He was looking for a way of making film that was less solipsistic, and would relate more to life. This is when he made his film “What You See is Where You’re At” about a psychiatric experiment – a film constructed mainly from interviews, using archive footage. He wasn’t particularly self-conscious about the form; because the film deliberately lacks a coherent narrative, it can be seen as challenging dogmatic ideas of documentary filmmaking.

Then his 10 minutes are over. He hasn’t even said a word about his later films.

Fine Art 2




Imagine an Audience Day 1, 31012011, a semi-live report by Arie Altena


Kino Climates: Micro-cinemas worldwide

At noon, on monday the 31st of January 20011 Florian Cramer starts off the conference Imagine an Audience. He states the general idea of the conference: looking at cinema in a post-television and post-cinema world. What has changed for cinema in a world in which television and cinema are not anymore the only and not even anymore the most important ways of distribution for audiovisual content? Cinema has to imagine its own audience, how is it doing that? During the conference, he says, we will speak about micro-cinema, about using Youtube for cinema, about filmmaking for art spaces and the future of low budget filmmaking. The idea is to look at what the future of filmmaking is in an artistic sense – and not speak about funding, money and economy too much, as economist can do this much better.

Simon Pummell (http://www.pummell.com), who co-organized the conference with Florian Cramer relates a story about bicycles, as a second introduction. With the ‘advent’ of the bicycle the space in which people traveled grew in size, and they came into contact with more different people. As a result the general genetic health of the people went up. The question is would what was true for genes, also be true for memes, for cultural ideas, for cinema? Is such a Darwinian perspective valuable or true for the field of filmmaking?

The imagined audience




imagine an audience

Artists’ filmmaking post-cinema & -tv
Jan. 31 – Feb. 1 + adjunct programme

For artists, making and distributing films is radically changing in a time where traditional pillars like theatrical screenings and tv co-production are breaking away. This conference will look at new spaces, audiences, modes and media for filmmaking beyond either YouTube or big budget: micro cinemas, the contemporary art system, alternative systems in the Internet. What kind of filmmaking is emerging here?

Location: Mauritsstraat 36, 3012 CJ Rotterdam
Admission: 5 euros/day (free for WdKA students & staff and for XL pass and IFFR industry passport holders)

Organised by the Piet Zwart Institute, Willem de Kooning Academy Rotterdam University in collaboration with Kino Climates, as part of the IFFR XL programme.

Watch the live video stream here.

Monday, January 31st
12:00 – 14:30
Introduction: Florian Cramer, Simon Pummell (Piet Zwart Institute)

Kino Climates: Micro cinemas worldwide

15:00 – 17:00
Giving it away? – the Internet

  • Tommy Pallotta, Amsterdam on bittorrent for independent film distribution
  • Paul Keller, Amsterdam on alternative systems for filmmakers in the Internet
  • Bregtje van de Haak (via Skype) on filmmaking in the digital commons

18:00 – 21:00
Opening Reception Cinegraphic / Photomatic
Location: BLAAK10 Gallery & Store
Witte de Withstraat 7a, Rotterdam

Tuesday, February 1st
12:00 – 14:00
Panel: Limited Editions – filmmaking for the Fine Art system
Moderated by Edwin Carels (IFFR)

  • Luke Fowler, Glasgow on 16mm filmmaking for art spaces
  • Rosa Barba, Rotterdam, on making moving images for art spaces and film festivals
  • John Smith, on filmmaking for cinema screens and art spaces
  • Michel Chevalier, target.autonompop Hamburg on what’s wrong with the contemporary art system

14:30 – 17:00
Concluding panel: What is a low budget feature? And where?

  • Michel Reilhac, Paris, ARTE
  • Keith Griffiths, film producer, London
  • + roundtable with Paolo Davanzo, Lisa Marr, Mervin Espina, Michel Chevalier, Luke Fowler and members of Kino Climates

Adjunct programme


Wednesday, February 2nd
19:30 – 22:00
John Smith, A selection of works, with lecture
John Smith will present a selection of his short films and talk about the ideas that have informed his work over the past 35 years.
(Organized by the Master of Fine Art, Piet Zwart Institute)

Throughout the IFFR
Cinegraphic / Photomatic
Location: BLAAK10 Gallery & Store, Witte de Withstraat 7a, 3012 BC Rotterdam

As moving images spill out of the cinemas, into the streets, leaking through mobile phones and media devices, much of the viewing experience has migrated to diverse spaces, both public and private. With these changes, contemporary image makers are pressed to rethink the traditional categories of moving and still image – photography, film and animation.

An exposition with work from the Lens-Based orientation of the Master Media Design & Communication of the Piet Zwart Institute at BLAAK10 Gallery & Store.

Regular opening hours: Tuesday-Friday 11-18, Saturday-Sunday 13-17, closed on Mondays
Exhibition Opening Reception: Monday, January 31st, 18:00

IFFR XL




Friday, Dec. 17th, 18:00-20:00
A one night event at Ace Teleboutique
Nieuwe Binnenweg 389A
Rotterdam

Hit an Internet-cafe, rent all computers they have and run a show on them for one night.
Excerpt from SPEED SHOW manifest by Aram Bartholl 2010

Speed Show: REBELHUIS

REBELHUIS is an exhibition featuring work from the Networked Media branch of the Piet Zwart Institute & CrossLab (Willem de Kooning Academy), hosted and inspired by Ace Teleboutique, an internet café situated in the city centre. The project has been initiated by Olia Lialina’s as part of her research fellowship on the media design culture of ‘belhuizen’ (internet cafes) in Rotterdam.

Some projects work with the technical restraints of the Internet café’s infrastructure, others explore its uncharted potential for alternative use, and others probe the peculiarities of remote communication. Loosening the perimeters of Bartholl’s structure, the group has opened up the format to both on- and off-line media, live performance, telephony, installation, and software programs especially designed and installed for the occasion. To read about the individual projects go to REBELHUIS.

The show takes place during normal opening hours (18:00-20:00). Ace, the owner will be selling Red Bull, Doritos and ice cream, and all visitors are welcome to enjoy the art and perhaps even steal some time to check email and chat with friends.

Special thanks to:
* Aram Bartholl for inventing the Speed Show format
* Goethe Institut Nederland for hosting the Digital Folklore workshop with PZI students and having Olia Lialina as an artist in residence.
* Aldje van Meer, Gordan Savicic and Danja Vasiliev for their conceptual input
* Ace for being open to our temporary invasion of his space
* And of course, the students and staff at Piet Zwart who worked around the clock to make the project come together




Demolish Serious Culture

Inaugural lecture by Florian Cramer as the director of the Piet Zwart Institute
Wednesday, Dec. 1 2010, 19:30
Piet Zwart Institute, Willem de Kooning Academy
Building Karel Doormanhof/ Mauritsstraat
Mauritsstraat 36, 3012 CJ Rotterdam

An inquiry into fine versus applied arts versus media versus retail, departing from Henry Flynt and George Maciunas, with some coverage of contemporary cultural politics.




mobiledes-555x269

Monday, November 15th, 2010
19.30
Location: De Unie, Mauritsweg 34-35, Rotterdam
Admission: 7 EUR; 5 EUR for WdKA staffers; 2.50 EUR for students

With the rampant popularity of “apps” for mobile media platforms, a new domain of design has materialized. How do mobile users, real-time information and small displays influence the practice of designers? One of the mobile app pioneers, the bureau Guppies in the Dark, gained a lot of media attention with its “JeePee app”, starring former Dutch prime minister Balkenend. Marc Shepard’s “Serendipitor” is a navigation app inspired by such art movements as Fluxus. With her “Palm Top Theatre i3DG”, Maki Ueda will show an iPhone mini installation that creates a 3D experience on the intimate medium of the small screen. Sander Veenhof will demonstrate how you can become a MOMA curator through “Augmented Reality” for smartphones. Finally, Marc Fonteijn will tell, via Skype, his future vision of design in the age of mobile media.

This even is the first in a series organized by CrossLab, the digital media platform of the Willem de Kooning Academie Hogeschool Rotterdam, within the research programme Communication in a Digital Age of the Piet Zwart Institute.

Reservations per mail (mention names and number of people): wdka-crosslab@hro.nl




Book cover Digital Folklore
Date: 28-10, 11.00 – 18.00
Location: Goethe-Institut, Westersingel 9, 3014 GM Rotterdam
Limited participation, please register by E-Mail to: l.j.drost-robbins@hro.nl

In this one day workshop, artist-in-residence Olia Lialina and the MODDR_ labs of WORM will introduce into various forms of digital folklore, from screen designs to hardware hacks: media that do not conform to the slick image of electronic high tech, and reveal interesting artistic qualities in their seeming bad taste and kitsch. Participants will be invited to build, break and broadcast the digital folklore of their own choice.

In collaboration with the Goethe-Institut Netherlands, the Master programme Networked Media of the Piet Zwart Institute, and the Image Festival Rotterdam.




professional session

blog posting by Todd Matsumoto

Now I’m at the Teldesign office, to hear short summaries about the presentations. The speakers were invited by Teldesign, who are ‘identity creators’ to share their knowledge of doing things using social media.

Not all the presentations are summaries. Amos (Alexander Maximilian Otto Serano) from vm-people (viral-marketing) is presenting a project they did for Pons dictionaries.

The project was to revamp the Pons dictionaries by getting people who make a living using words, to contribute and use the Pons dictionary. The thing that immediately got my attention about the approach was the initial introduction to the potential participants. This came in the form of a letter. The letter was, let’s say, a ‘mockument’. It looks just like a school report card that each German child received when in grade school. So the delivery method is instantly recognizable, and pulls heart strings. From that point on, those who reacted were placed in a carefully crafted environment where the participants were given the necessary tools to contribute to Pons.

Oh yes, something else to add to Darija Medic’s project about H1N1, she also studied paintings from Sienna that depicted gardens, before and after the plague, and says that the design of gardens certainly changed reflecting the effects of the plague. Only she didn’t show any of the paintings.

Again I’m going to throw out interesting subjects that came up.

Reaction is crucial if a company gets into trouble. It is possible with a companies reaction to turn negatives issues around into positives for the company.

Filtering… filtering unwanted profiles, and the presence of profiles you know are companies.

Today, you pay the social media by being open to advertising and marketing. So it really isn’t free.

There should be standards and protocols put in place for owning profiles and allowing profiles to exist across social media platforms.

Education comes up. How should advertising students be taught how to use all of this stuff. There is a complaint that many students still see a television styled commercial as viable. Or, and equally upsetting, many students understand the single social media platform they are using but do not yet understand how other ones should not be used in tandem with each other, rather than exclusive of each other. Meaning they are able to see each platform singularly as it is, but unable to see all the platforms put together.

Another observation made is the disconnect between how a student understands a representation of something in a program versus how the thing is in reality. I’m guessing the observer is talking about CAD programs.

With all this social media swirling around us is it now necessary to be trained in how to manage it?