Archive And Memory: Thematic Project Trimester 2, 2012
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IS THIS ON? – performance by Birgit Bachler and Inge Hoonte during UpStage Festival – 11:11:11
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Guest researcher Mark Terkessidis visits the Piet Zwart Institute
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archive

Archive & Memory
Thematic Project Trimester 2
Lead by Annet Dekker

An archive is a collection of documents and records, such as letters, official papers, photographs, recorded material, or computer files that is preserved for historical purposes. As such, an archive is considered a site of the past, a place that contains traces of a collective memory of a nation, a people or a social group. Artists have always shown an interest in archives, either as inspiration for their own work, or to use and re-appropriate material. An archive has therefore become a site of reproduction. Although often not recognised as archives, commercial sites like YouTube and Facebook are examples of this: documents are posted and reposted all the time in these environments. Previously regarded as tedious repositories of the past, with the additional stereotype of archivists as spinsters who were picky, hardworking, standoffish, and, by most accounts, pitiable enforcers of orders and structures, today the image of archives is changing. They are becoming exciting places where one can adapt and appropriate through processes of cut-and-paste.

An archive was once a place to preserve the past, to build legacies as well as to remember and recognise the roots from which to grow. However, as Michel Foucault reminds us, memories and archives do not survive by chance but are constructed to serve structures of power. Thus, the shape of an archive constrains and enables the content it encloses, and the technical methods for building and supporting an archive produces the document for collection. After all, the word ‘archive’ is derived from the Greek arkhē, which means government or order, origin and first place. However, digital technologies have changed and altered the status and meaning of an archive. The creation of documents and their aggregation into all sorts of different – especially online – archives has become part of everyday life. Archives are now being collectively built. As Arjun Appadurai asserts in his text Archive and Aspiration, ‘we should begin to see all documentation as intervention, and all archiving as part of some sort of collective project. Rather than being the tomb of the trace, the archive, is more frequently the product of the anticipation of collective memory.’

It could be argued that whether the archive is composed of print, photographs, film and/or digital media, the technologies used to organise, search and share documents have taken over the purview of a state, with the crowd acting as the control mechanism. Digital archives have changed from a stable entity into flexible systems, referred to with the popular term ‘Living Archives’. But in which ways do these changes affect our relationship to the past, present and future? What are the implications for this mode of forgetting, for memories, as well as for what is suppressed? Will the erased, forgotten and neglected be redeemed, and new social memories be allowed? Will the fictional versus factual mode of archiving offer the democracy that the public domain implies, or is it another way for public instruments of power to operate?

These and other questions will be addressed and discussed from the perspective of both lens-based and networked media, by looking at different topics that relate to archive and memory, from database to narrative, time, and the glitch, and through the works of (among others) Johan Grimonprez, Chris Marker, Geoffrey Bowker, Lynn Hershmann, Paul Otlet, Suzanne Briet, Rosa Menkman, Graham Harwood, Thomson & Craighead, David Lowenthal, Etoy, Walter Benjamin. There will be additional visits to Beeld & Geluid (home of the National Broadcasting Archives and owner of unique audio-visual collections), Hilversum; Sonic Acts Festival, Amsterdam; and Netherlands Media Art Institute (an institute dedicated to video and media art), Amsterdam.

Annet Dekker is independent curator and researcher. Subjects of interest are the influence of technology, science and popular culture on art and vice versa. Currently she works as webcurator for SKOR, as researcher on the project ”Born Digital art in Dutch art collections” for SBMK, VP, NIMk and DEN, as lecturer at Piet Zwart Academy for the thematic project “Archive & Memory” and new media theory at Rietveld Academy. In 2009 she initiated aaaan.net with Annette Wolfsberger. At the moment they organise the Artist in Residence programme at the Netherlands Media Art Institute in Amsterdam and they produced Funware, an international touring exhibition in 2010 and 2011 about fun in software (curated by Olga Goriunova). Since 2008 she is writing a PhD on strategies for documenting net art at the Centre for Cultural Studies, Goldsmiths, University of London, under supervision of Matthew Fuller. Read more here: http://aaaan.net




upstage-on

IS THIS ON?

By Birgit Bachler & Inge Hoonte
Developed as part of 11:11:11 UpStage, a web-based venue for online performance

Date: Friday, November 11, 2011
Time: 10:00 – 22:00 hrs
Location: Piet Zwart Institute, Large Project Room
Address: Karel Doormanhof 45, Rotterdam
This event is open for public and admission is free

UpStage is a venue for online performance events (Flash plug-in required). This year’s edition, 11:11:11, features people creating work on the web through drawings, photos, moving image, video, scripted movements with animations, etc.

IS THIS ON? projects a virtual apartment into a desktop computer, which are both displayed on the UpStage platform. Functioning like a dual-boot computer, the Proprietary family lives alongside the Open Source family. The script is inspired by conflicts between Apple, Windows and Linux. The characters bring to light various aspects of computing, such as communication issues between operating systems and their users, and the challenges one can face while interacting with, switching between, and working within these systems. The performance illustrates how the members of these groups communicate and seek connection in their differences and similarities through scripting, programs, software and analog means.

As such, little people appear to “live” inside the computer, as if operating tasks for you whenever you open a document, write an email, search for a file, etc. Some moments, physical becomes digital; body parts moving from the webcam onto the website. Other times, digital becomes physical, for example when part of an avatar’s body seems to materialize on screen.

Workshops! COME PLAY!
Come to one of our workshops to make your own avatars and props to operate on the website/stage! This way you will be able to interact with people who are present in the room, as well as visible on the screen through a live feed. Come join the fun! See schedule below.

TIME SCHEDULE
10:00-10:30 coffee tea COOKIES welcome
10.30-11:00 introduction UpStage
11:00-11:20 IS THIS ON? [1]
11:20-11:30 small break
11:30-13-30 WORKSHOP 1

13:30-14:15 lunch break

14:15-14:30 set-up Is This On? [2]
14:30-14:50 IS THIS ON? [2]
14:50-15:00 small break
15:00-18:00 WORKSHOP 2
18:00-19:00 break, preparation, mingling
19:00-19:30 set-up IS THIS ON? [3]
19:30-19:50 IS THIS ON? [3]

after eight beer & wine




Lecture Mark Terkessidis – open to all the Piet Zwart Institute students

Date: November 01 2011
Time: 10:00  – 11:30 hrs including Q&A
Location: Piet Zwart Institute – Large project room
Address: Karel Doormanhof 45, Rotterdam

Continental Europe never developed an original idea of cultural diversity. Diversity was introduced as a purely negative token, as rupture in the concept of the national. Diversity within societies was recognised either in terms of absence (post-holocaust) or as re-appearance (post-colonial).

But how can diversity be thought of as “post-migrational”? Cities have always been shaped by mobility and migration. So-called globalisation, however, has renewed and accelerated this process. Cities are no longer defined by dwelling but by movement. The city has hence become a vague entity, a “Parapolis”. What is the state of culture in the Parapolis? What is its position in space and time, its ethics and aesthetics, its legitimation and policies? Culture has become part of an urban environment that is defined a forced-upon, sometimes spooky historicity, coincidences and juxtapositions, arbitrariness of references and longing for new coherence.

For an ethics of culture in Parapolis, one may go back to founding texts of Western civilisation. In Homer’s Ulysses is typically seen as the bearer of the Western idea of individual freedom. But he is on a quest for home, which makes him a free human being and a citizen at the same time. The Ulysses of the “Ilias”, “at home” with his fellow Greeks and ready to expand their territory, is a brutal slaughterer. When he returns home at the end of the epic, he commits a massacre in order to be “at home” again and homogenise this territory. The quest for home therefore is the true state of civility.

In Parapolis, dwellers live a “Phililhellenism” of the kind described by Greek writer Mimika Cranaki during his emigration in Paris. The nation no longer works as a homeland, but is still there as an imaginary place. The search for home should therefore be no longer considered transitional, but the essence of civility. Culture has the potential of being the location for negotiating this search. Traditionally, aesthetics has close ties to the concept of emancipation – and its underbelly, the desire of nations and educated middle classes to set themselves apart from others. The aesthetics of culture in Parapolis needs to be more “conversational” and participatory along the lines of, for example, Grant H. Kester. In the aftermath of boding, there seems to be a need for more “banding”. It could therefore make sense to consider any utterance – whether art or not – culture, and focus on “atmospheres” rather than meaning. The culture of Parapolis is not just about diversity, but abundance.

On the basis of these considerations, this lecture will propose a programme of interculture, focusing on the individual with his/her diverse backgrounds and qualifications, and with the potential to open up a new space for negotiating community.

Mark Terkessidis is currently a guest researcher in the lectoraat Cultural Diversity within the research centre Creating 010 of the Rotterdam University.

From 1992 to 1994, he was an editor of the German pop culture magazine “Spex”. From 2003 to 2011 he worked as a host for the intercultural radio programme “Funkhaus Europa” of the West German public broadcasting service. Mark wrote numerous essays on youth and pop culture, migration and racism for German newspapers, magazines and public radio. Together with Tom Holert, he is the co-founder of the Cologne-based Institute for Studies in Visual Culture (isvc.org).




Networked Media Sampler
Trimester 1 September – December 2011
Programmed by Aymeric Mansoux, Michael Murtaugh and Renee Turner

Network_model

Thematic Project Description
Historically the “embroidery sampler” was a piece of fabric used to practice one’s skills and record favorite patterns to be shared with others. Rather than a cohesive design, its surface was embellished with “samples” or small embroidered demonstrations of embellished letters from the alphabet and decorative stitchery, which were intended to show the proficiency of the maker and uniqueness of the handcrafted designs.

As a thematic project, the Networked Media Sampler takes this model as its starting point. Rather than a singular theme, it is a collection composed of a series of workshops, talks and presentations. Each element in the series is intended to highlight key areas of interest within networked culture and open source media practices. Through hands-on explorations and theoretical enquiry, the Networked Media Sampler will look at the contrast between closed and open systems. It will examine the limitations of the contemporary idea of the “Web”, social media, and the so-called “Open Web”. Next to this the project will look at models of network topologies and protocols, play with DIY approaches to building your own tools, and explore the dynamics of peer-to-peer exchange.

Keeping with the tradition of the sampler, this thematic project is a means of testing the surface of a very rich and complex tapestry whose texture is constituted through intertwining threads, nodes and rhizomatic turns.

Guests
Seda Guerses
is a researcher working in the group COSIC/ESAT at the Department of Electrical Engineering in K. U. Leuven, Belgium. Her topics of interest include privacy technologies, participatory design, feminist critique of computer science, and online social networks. She has a keen interest in the subject of anonymity in technical as well as cultural contexts, the spectrum being anywhere between anonymous communications and anonymous folk songs. Beyond her academic work, she also collaborates with artistic initiatives including Constant vzw, Bootlab, De-center, ESC in Brussels, Graz and Berlin.

Nicolas Malevé (BE/ES) is an artist, software programmer and data activist who lives between Brussels and Barcelona. He develops multimedia projects and web applications for and with cultural organisations. His current research is focused on cartography, information structures, metadata and the means to visually represent them.

Since 1998 Nicolas collaborates with Constant, a non-profit association, based and active in Brussels since 1997 in the fields of feminism, copyright alternatives and working through networks. Constant develops radio, electronic music and database projects by means of migrating from cultural work to work places and back again.

<stdin> (FR/BE) is a graphic and media design studio, mixing visual design and programming for print and non-print design. They believe that programs make design, and programs are designed. Their projects are not only shaped by the tools they use, but ultimately their tools are shaped through their practice. <stdin> has a special interest in processes, education, theory and free software philosophy. They also collaborate on a regular basis with deValence and are part of Open Source Publishing. OSP (Open Source Publishing) is a graphic design collective that uses only Free, Libre and Open Source Software. <stdin> is Stephanie Vilayphiou and Alexandre Leray.

Marc Garrett (UK) is a net artist, media artist, curator, writer, street artist, activist, educationalist and musician. Emerging in the late 80’s from the streets exploring creativity via agit-art tactics. Using unofficial, experimental platforms such as the streets, pirate radio such as the locally popular ‘Savage Yet Tender’ alternative broadcasting 1980’s group, net broadcasts, BBS systems, performance, intervention, events, pamphlets, warehouses and gallery spaces. In the early nineties, was co-sysop (systems operator) for a while with Heath Bunting on Cybercafe BBS, dedicated to arts, technology and hacking.

Co-director and co-founder, with artist Ruth Catlow of the net arts collectives and communities- Furtherfield, Netbehaviour, also cofounder and co-curator/director of the gallery space called HTTP Gallery in London, UK. Currently involved in co-running, collaborating with many others on Node.London. Also co-curating various contemporary Media Arts exhibitions, nationally and internationally such as Game/play a touring exhibition.

Ruth Catlow (UK) is Head at Writtle School of Design. She is an artist, educator and co-founder and co-director of Furtherfield.org [6], a grass roots media arts organisation and its gallery HTTP Gallery in North London. She works at the intersection of art, technology and social change with artists, curators, musicians, programmers, writers, activists and thinkers from around the world. At Furtherfield she is currently developing the artistic programme and organisational infrastructure with a focus on Media Art Ecologies, aspiring to engender shared visions and infrastructures for other possible worlds.

She regularly contributes to publications, books and conferences and has participated in exhibitions at CCA, Glasgow, The Baltic, Gateshead, Limehouse Town Hall, London as well as galleries in Zagreb, Madrid and Detroit and has work featured on the Rhizome Artbase and The Digital Kitchen. She was a recipient of a 2003 Low-fi Net Art Commission. She is adviser to Tiltfactor an independent games production lab that focuses on critical play.

Collaboration, participation, learning and exchange are central to Ruth’s artistic practice and she is an experienced producer and commissioner of co-devised, participatory artworks that utilise social technologies and has developed Furtherfield.org’s Participation and Learning programme, working in diverse community and educational contexts. She has worked in Higher Education for over 15 years. In recent years she worked as part of a team at Ravensbourne College of Design and Communication to develop pedagogically-led approaches to developing and exploiting new emergent technologies and tools (e.g. social software, pervasive computing) in anticipation of shifts in future professional life within sustainable communities of practice.

Linda Hilfling is a Danish artist who makes problematic various claims of participation and free access professed in the burgeoning landscape of “social media”. Attentive to the latent forms of organization implicit in such networks (codes, organization and law), Hilfings’ investigations uncover gaps between the theory and practice of these structures.

Audrey Samson is a Rotterdam based media designer, artist and researcher. She manages the Digital Art Lab at the CKC culture/arts center (Zoetermeer, NL). She teaches at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie (Amsterdam, NL). She completed a BFA Major in Design Art from Concordia University in 2002 (Montreal, Canada), and a M.A. in Media Design from the Piet Zwart Institute in 2007 (Rotterdam, NL). Her research/practice focuses on: rethinking interfaces, the use of online media for mourning purposes, the concept of finality in reproducible media, women’s relationship to technology, the affordances of the internet medium in telematic performance, working from the products of planned obsolescence, and re-assembling objects to endow them with new functionalities. Audrey is co-founder of the Roger 10-4 project together with Sabrina Basten. She is part of the Genderchangers (gender & FLOSS) network and the Aether9 telematic performance group.

Eric Schrijver (Amsterdam, 1984) is a designer, theatre maker and author. He proposes artists and designers to get intimate with their toolset. He has lectured at the Libre Graphics Conference and written for Libre Graphics magazine.

Wendy Van Wynsberghe is a member of Constant vzw – a non-profit organisation for art and new media, based in Brussels, highly active in the field of open source, feminism and alternatives for copyright – from 2000 she started volunteering on regular basis for Constant, since 2004 she works for the organization as a core member, partly responsible for production, hard and software, audio archiving, and as a activator of the workshop network Linux & audio in collaboration with Radio Campus, Radio Panik, Radio Air Libre, collectifs.net, BxLug. She is also involved in a partnership that organizes open hardware workshops, called Ellentriek, together with De Pianofabriek and Ladda.

Walter Langelaar is a Dutch artist who lives and works in Rotterdam. He is one of the founding members of Moddr and runs Worm’s media lab. Next to these activities he is currently working in the field of post-interactive sculpture, he deploys dedicated machines into a variety of gallery, festival and party circuits. His working interests include open source game engines, bot AI and neural networks, and “strange loops” through virtual and physical realities. He works with a wide variety of media including computer games, hacked electronic devices, software, video, sculpture and performance.




recto1
Graduation Show
Opening: Friday, July 01 2011
Time: 19:00 – 23:00
Open: July 2 – July 15 2011
Wed – Fri: 11:00 – 18:00 hrs / Sat & Sun: 12:00 – 17:00
Finissage: Friday, July 15
Roodkapje, 119-133 Meent
3011 JH Rotterdam, Netherlands

Join us for the 2011 Graduation Show at Roodkapje, Rotterdam. Reflecting upon a variety of issues relevant to today’s networked media culture, the exhibition features works by Birgit Bachler (AT), Özalp Eröz (TR), Megan Hoogenboom (NL), Albert Jongstra (NL), Darija Medić (RS) and Renee Olde Monnikhof (NL).

The networks are abuzz; they are humming with high and low pitches. While some are visible, others are discretely at work “catching flies in the alternet”. Whether manifested online or offline, all of this year’s graduation projects engage in repurposing and reorienting networks to generate alternative perspectives. Birgit Bachler’s, Discrete Dialogue Network, is a telephony-based communication system designed for leaving anonymous voice messages in public space. The project by Özalp Eröz, Virtual Street Art, questions how online networked distribution impacts street art, and its beliefs in authentic local interventions. Megan Hoogenboom’s work, Huenet, physically demonstrates the differences between the public Internet, meaning the World Wide Web as we know it today and encrypted darknets. Exploring how we access the news online, Renée Olde Monnikhof´s Net News Now raises timely questions about professional journalism and the role of the amateur in an age of on-demand media. Albert Jongstra tackles participatory collaboration through a series of hands-on workshops entitled, Participator 3.0. Lastly, Attention: Recalculating!, a project by Darija Medić, challenges our unquestioned belief in technology. By modifying GPS navigation software, her project offers customized ways of taking longer routes through speculative scenarios.

discrete_dialogue_network
The Discrete Dialogue Network: a telephony-based communication system, Birgit Bachler (2011)




recto2

Thematic Project Exhibition: No Such Thing As Repetition
Opening: Friday, July 01 2011
Time: 19:00 – 23:00
Open: July 2 – July 15 2011
Wed – Fri: 11:00 – 18:00 hrs / Sat & Sun: 12:00 – 17:00
Finissage: Friday, July 15
Roodkapje, 119-133 Meent
3011 JH Rotterdam, Netherlands
Note: This exhibition takes place in conjunction with the Graduation Show: Catching Flies in the Alternet

Projects by: Amy Suo Wu (AU), Danny van der Kleij (NL), Dusan Barok (SK), Fako Berkers (NL), Inge Hoonte (NL), Laura Macchini (IT), Laurier Rochon (CA), Lieven Van Speybroeck (BE), Mirjam Dissel (NL), Natasa Siencnik (AT)

Curator: Inke Arns, Artistic Director of HMKV, Dortmund (DE)

“Is there repetition or is there insistence. I am inclined to believe there is no such thing as repetition. And really how can there be.” * Gertrude Stein’s remarks about repetition as insistence fit remarkably well the contemporary practice of artistic re-enactments.

History usually is experienced as something heavily mediated. Artistic re-enactments attempt to erase this distance, replacing it by direct experience establishing an affective relation to what is being repeated, and empathy. Artistic re-enactments are not simply affirming what has happened in the past, but rather they are questioning the present via repeating or re-enacting historical events that have left their traces in the collective memory. Re-enactments are artistic interrogations of media images that try to scrutinise the reality of the images, while at the same time pointing towards the fact that collective memory is essentially mediated memory.

The exhibition No Such Thing as Repetition focuses on current strategies of repetition and re-enactment. The projects presented discuss unlikely copies, claiming to be much more complex than the ‚original’ and carrying the seed of the uncanny, and fakes, questioning the usual relation between reality and fiction. The works in the exhibition invite visitors to perform their own moon landing or search for lost voices on the radio spectrum. Virtual creatures are being re-enacted out on the streets of Rotterdam, a money-making machine fails to make money, and a safe channel of data exchange through the internet is being provided. The exhibition also features a live Twitter feed from a ship sailing down to South Africa in 1820 and a daily performance of a short story by Ernest Hemingway in real time. Parts of the Eichmann trial of 1961 – the first trial in history broadcast on TV – as well as tapped telephone conversations from the “Rubygate” case are being re-enacted. Finally, while an orphaned photo album found on the flea market is made to reveal memories, fake or real, the sound of two record players stuck on endless repeat at the end of the record fills the space.

* Gertrude Stein, Portraits and Repetition, Lectures in America (1935), pp. 166–169




IMAGE


  • Upcoming application deadline: July 1st, 2011 for Dutch and European students (EU/EEA) (see list of countries)
  • You can find more information about our application procedure on this page.
  • If you have any last minute questions regarding your application, please feel free to contact project coordinators Vanessa Tuitel or Leslie Robbins





Open_Day_Invite.doc
Date: Saturday, 09/04/2011
Time:11:30-18:00
Location: Mauritsstraat 36, 3012 CJ Rotterdam
Entrance free

The Piet Zwart Institute, Master Media Design and Communication: Networked Media, welcomes you to the Open House & Mock Show!

Join us for live demos, informal performances and hardcore beta testing.

Open House: Projects presented range from experimental plotter printing, to narrative dérives, pre-Web 2.0 social networking, feats of scrape-technology virtuosity and various subtle, and not so subtle, acts of re-mediation.

The Mock Show: Birgit Bachler(AT), Özalp Eröz(TR), Megan Hoogenboom(NL) Albert Jongstra(NL) Darija Medic(RS) and Renée Olde Monnikhof(NL) will be showing prototypal projects in preparation for their graduation show this forthcoming July.

Next to these activities, Rotterdam’s own Worm.Shop and PrintRoom will be on site to talk about their activities and promote some of their unique printed & audio media.

Last but not least, bring your appetite, as our temporary autonomous soup kitchen will be open to all, plus we will be having a bake sale!

Aim at Mauritsstraat 36, 3012 CJ Rotterdam & follow!

Open_Day_Invite.doc




faceless
Faceless by Manu Luksch (2007 AT/UK)

Sniff, Scrape, Crawl…
Lecture: Steve Rushton
Followed by a screening of ‘Faceless’ by Manu Luksch
and Suicide Box by (BIT) the Bureau of Inverse Technology
Date: Tuesday, 22/03/2011
Time: doors open at 19:15, lecture begins at 19:30
Location: Mauritsstraat 36, 3012 CJ Rotterdam
Entrance free
Lecture will be streamed at: http://pzwart3.wdka.hro.nl/pzwart_video.html

*Sniff, Scrape, Crawl…* is a series of lectures examining the porous borders of privacy in the digital age.  The next lecture and screening will explore optical forms of surveillance in all of its ominous complexities and perversities.

Lecture by Steve Rushton:

Looking at social networking sites and reality TV shows, Steve Rushton will reflect on how the notion of ‘feedback’ works both as a metaphor and as a material condition in contemporary media. He will pay particular emphasis to reality TV as media that feeds back tropes from an array of cultural sites, such as the social psychology experiment, the ‘flying eye’ and Candid Camera. He will argue that non-scripted TV serves as an aid to the neo-liberal political reasoning which promotes a culture of self-performance, entrepreneurism, privatisation, volunteerism, and responsibilisation.

Steve Rushton is a founding member of *Signal:Noise*, an experimental cross-disciplinary research project that aims to explore the influence of cybernetics and information theory on contemporary cultural life by testing out its central idiom, ‘feedback’, through debates, artworks, publications, performances, events and exhibitions.  He has been a writer and editor for a range of projects with artists such as Rod Dickinson and Thomson & Craighead. His publications include the series ‘How Media Masters Reality’ for First/Last Newspaper, Issues 1-6, Dexter Sinister (2009); ‘New Walden,’ HB2, Issue 1, CAC, Glasgow (2008); ‘Experience, Memory, Re-enactment’, Piet Zwart Institute, Rotterdam/Revolver, Frankfurt (with Anke Bangma and Florian Wüst) (2005); ‘The Milgram Re-enactment’, Revolver, Frankfurt (2003). He also teaches at the Piet Zwart Institute.

Review of Signal:Noise: http://www.furtherfield.org/reviews/feedback-signalnois

Screening of Faceless by Manu Luksch (2007 AT/UK)

Trailer of Faceless

In a society under the reformed ‘Real-Time’ Calendar, without history nor future, everybody is faceless. A woman panics when she wakes up one day with a face. With the help of the Spectral Children she slowly finds out more about the lost power and history of the human face and begins the search for its future.

Faceless was produced under the rules of the ‘Manifesto for CCTV Filmmakers’. The manifesto states, amongst other things, that additional cameras are not permitted at filming locations, as the omnipresent existing video surveillance (CCTV) is already in operation. The UK Data Protection Act and EU directives give individuals the right to access personal data held in computer filing systems. This includes images captured by CCTV recording systems. For a nominal fee (£10), an individual can obtain a copy of this data: financial or medical records, or video recordings. Other legislation states that the privacy of third parties must be protected. In CCTV recordings, this is done by erasing the faces of other people in the images – hence the ‘faceless’ world.

Manu Luksch, founder of Ambient Information Systems (ambientTV.NET,) is filmmaker who works outside the frame. The moving image, and in particular the evolution of film in the digital or networked   age, has been a core theme of her works.   Characteristic is the blurring of boundaries between linear and hypertextual narrative, directed work and multiple authorship, and post-produced and self-generative pieces. Expanding the idea of the viewing environment is also of importance; recent works have been shown on electronic billboards in public urban spaces and open air cinemas in remote rural places.
see: http://www.manuluksch.com/
Ambient TV Net: http://www.ambienttv.net/content/index.php

Next to the film, we will be handing out the CCTV Manifesto:
cctv2_manifesto

Then there will be a short screening of a classic surveillance project from the Bureau of Inverse Technology:

data
The Suicide Box by (bit) the Bureau of Inverse Technology (1966 UK)

A documentary about the BIT Suicide Box, a motion detection video system designed to capture vertical activity. The Unit includes BITcamera, motion capture card, analysis software and utility concealment casing. In standard operation any vertical motion in frame will trigger the camera to record to disk. The Bureau installed the Suicide Box for trial application in range of the Golden Gate Bridge, California 1996; an initial deployment period of a hundred days metered seventeen bridge events.

Bureau of Inverse Technology [BIT] Incorporated 1991 with limited liability Cayman Islands. The Bureau is an information agency servicing the Information Age.
see: http://www.bureauit.org/

The Sniff, Scrape, Crawl… public lecture series has been realised with the collaboration of Research Programme (Lectoraat) Communication in a Digital Age.




Public Lecture: Joris van Hoboken, Nicolas Malevé and Aymeric Mansoux
Date: Wednesday, 16/03/2011

Time: doors open at 18:45, lecture begins at 19:00
Location: Mauritsstraat 36, Rotterdam
Entrance free

streamed at: http://pzwart3.wdka.hro.nl/pzwart_video.html
sheepfield
Screenshot of Naked on Pluto, a multiplayer text adventure game on Facebook

Bringing together artists, programmers and theorists, *Sniff, Scrape, Crawl…* is a series of lectures examining the porous borders of privacy in the digital age. Previous public events  in this series have touched upon a wide rage of topics such as surveillance, data-mining, the function and limits of anonymity, and the profound influence of network architecture on social, political and legal issues.

The next three talks will continue to explore and expand upon these ideas from different perspectives. Joris van Hoboken will be looking at search engines, how they track queries and what impact data retention and profiling has on our civil liberties.  Nicolas Malevé will be speaking about social network platforms and the evolution of national and international legal agreements, while drawing parallels between the processes of homogenization of the web and the processes of legislative harmonization within the EU. Lastly, Aymeric Mansoux will be talking about *Naked on Pluto*. The project, which is a collaboration between Mansoux, Dave Griffiths and Marloes de Valk, is a multiplayer text adventure game on Facebook that explores the perils of centralized social networks.

Joris van Hoboken (NL) is a Ph.D. candidate at the Institute for Information Law, and his thesis focuses on regulatory aspects of search engines. He graduated cum laude in both Theoretical Mathematics (2002) and Law (2006) from the University of Amsterdam. His LL.M. thesis dealt with the new Dutch regulations on access to personal data in criminal proceedings, i.e. an analysis of how citizens’ interests are implicated in the limitation of such access. Until 1 September 2006, he worked as a paralegal at the Hogeschool van Amsterdam and as a co-director of Bits of Freedom, a digital civil rights organisation.
Main site: http://www.jorisvanhoboken.nl/

Nicolas Malevé is an artist, software programmer and data activist developing multimedia projects and web applications for and with cultural organisations. His current research work is focused on cartography, information structures, metadata and the means to visually represent them. He lives and works in Barcelona and Brussels. Since 1998 Nicolas collaborates with Constant, a non-profit association, based and active in Brussels since 1997 in the fields of feminism, copyright alternatives and working through networks. Selection of works: *Copy.cult and the Original Si(g)n*, a project of investigation on the alternatives to author’s rights. www.constantvzw.com/copy.cult/home
*Yoogle!* an online game that allows users to play with the parameters of the Web 2.0 economy and the marketing of personal data. http://yoogle.be

Aymeric Mansoux (FR) is an artist, musician, media researcher and core tutor at the Piet Zwart. In 2003, he founded GOTO10 with Thomas Vriet, a non profit organization and artist collective, with the goal to promote the use and support of free software in electronic music and media art creation. Aymeric has been active in the collective until 2010 and initiated several projects such as: ‘make art’, a yearly international no nonsense festival for software artists using and writing free software; ‘Puredyne’, a popular live GNU/Linux distribution for creative media and the ‘FLOSS+Art publication’, the first collection of essays on FLOSS and digital art production.
Main site: http://su.kuri.mu/
Naked on Pluto: http://pluto.kuri.mu/

The *Sniff, Scrape, Crawl…* public lecture series has been realised with the collaboration of Research Programme (Lectoraat) Communication in a Digital Age.