2019. Media(S)cene Installation Program (original) (raw)

Media Space | Media Place

Vital organizations must draw participants to their events, as well as bring their initiatives out into the community, connecting audiences to work, and work to audiences. This text explores three seminars that took place in London, Ontario in 2015 and investigates the parameters of what constitutes media art as it expands to include computer-based practice and digital distribution, the question of how we make sense of past traditions in light of ever-changing technologies remains central. For educators and curators the role as a mentor, outside of post secondary education, is critical to determine the future forms media arts will take. Other models for media arts education cited in this text include: varying organizational structures, mentorship beyond the university and student-led educational models that are now accessing broader audiences. Part of the text focuses on producers, providing a comparison of different media arts organizations in Ontario. Questions regarding the long-term viability of creative spaces and strategies for sustainable collaboration and production are addressed in light of social, cultural, political, and economic realities.​

Installation: Genre, Medium, or What

RIHA Journal, 2020

Since its emergence at the international scene in the 1970s, installation has been one of the artforms central to the contemporary art system. Yet at the theoretical level the issue of its categorial framework remains unresolved, which in turn reflects the situation within contemporary art's categoriality in general. Concepts and terms such as "genre", "medium", "intermediality", "post-medium" and "postconceptual" condition have all been applied to installation art. This article attempts to analyze whether these labels are appropriate to the installation art phenomenon, especially with regard to the recent developments within genre, literary and media studies. Hence, the article provides the historical and modern definitions of the terms, while special attention is paid to their usage within art history and installation art discourse. The resulting conclusions are intended to situate installation art within a viable categorial framework and to shed light on several areas of contemporary art categoriality at large.

Post-Media Lab (2012-14)

PML documentation / portfolio, 2014

In less than two decades, digital networks have moved from providing a macro background environment – actively accessible by only a small coterie of scientists, experts, and state or corporate agents – to pervading and augmenting our lives at an increasingly micrological level. As our world is plugged into the matrix, we know from direct experience that the pace of change is feverish, the scope infinite and the effects in need of constant reckoning. The Post-Media Lab offers a space in which to examine, reflect and operate upon the networked, mediatised society from an unhurried perspective. The term ‘post-media’ was coined by Felix Guattari's and subsequently taken up by other critical theorists to describe social and medial assemblages, which unleash new forms of collective expression and experience. The Lab aims to build a place where the aesthetic and utopian moments of ubiquitous media can be recaptured, and the multilayered forces and textures of media space become newly legible. We take up 'post-media' as an inherently critical notion adequate to the media strategies of scenes, movements and collectives – rather than the individualities and normativities produced by commercial media – which construct and intensify social agencies, help develop new forms of relation and generate counter-meanings. Guiding principles of the Lab will be to maintain a wide historical perspective and to scrutinise established programmatic and strategic positions; the concepts, experiments and radical promise of past engagements with telecommunications, digital media and aesthetics will be kept in mind, as much to reprise their energies and enthusiasms as to create a gauge for where we find ourselves today. Between 2012 and 2013 the work of the Post-Media Lab was structured around four topics: Connecting People Apart (January to June 2012), The Subsumption of Sociality (July to December 2012), The Question of Organization After Networks (January to June 2013), Life versus Object. Comrade Things and Alien Life (July to December 2013). Post-Media Lab operates on different levels, working with different simultaneous tectonics:: * Building a peer community interested in post-media (inter alia through a system of 'Visiting fellows') * Translocal publics (extending collaboration between Lüneburg region and other localities on the planet) * Transnational networks (assembling and short-circuiting different spheres like civil society, media activism, media art, hacktivism, media based research) * Free, experimental and clandestine forms of publication (PML Books and other hybrid publications like 'Beyond the Timeline')