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_________________________________________________________________
FINEART Forum October 1, 1992 Volume 6 : Number 10
_________________________________________________________________
Contents: Editorial: Roger Malina
ARTEC 93: Roger Malina
FISEA: Roman Verostko
International Sculpture Exhibition: Alexandre Vitkine
Networked Virtual Art Museum: Carl Loeffler
Exhibit: Wade Riddick
MANIFESTATION FOR THE UNSTABLE MEDIA IV: Wim van der Plas
Call for Papers: Michael Benedikt
Lecture by Michele Emmer: Roger Malina
Vilem Flusser Network: Roger Malina
Telenoia: Alex Adriaansens
Correction: Nancy Nelson
New Subscribers: Nancy Nelson
__________________________________________
Fineart Forum to suspend publication; Leonardo Electronic News to Continue
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Roger Malina, Executive Editor, Fineart Forum.
I regret to inform our readers that we have been informed by
CRSS Architects Inc that they are terminating prematurely
their grant to Leonardo. CRSS Inc is having severe financial
difficulties due to the continuing recession and have terminated
a number of programs initiated with Leonardo last year.
As a result of the loss of this financial support, Leonardo
is forced to suspend temporarily the publication of
Fineart Forum. Fineart Forum is published by Leonardo on
behalf of the Art, Science, Technology Network. Interested
organisations who may be interested in taking over
publication of Fineart Forum should contact me at
rmalina@cea.berkeley.edu. Fineart Forum is a free electronic
newsletter published from information submitted by
its readers and re-disseminated as a service to the community.
Leonardo will continue to publish it's electronic newsletter
Leonardo Electronic News on a monthly basis and encourages
readers of Fineart Forum and Leonardo Electronic News to
continue to submit electronically items for publication in Leonardo
Electronic News. Items which cannot be accommodated in
Leonardo Electronic News will continue to be posted
on Leonardo's on-line data base FAST and published on
the FAST diskette. Many of these items will also be included
in the Leonardo Resource Directory to be published by
MIT Press in 1993.
We also encourage our readers to send in suggestions on
how electronic newsletters such as Fineart Forum and
Leonardo Electronic News can find ways to obtain earned
income to defray the publication costs. Leonardo has
published electronic newsletters biweekly since 1988 in
the belief that these services are of great value to the
art and technology community. In the past we have been
fortunate to receive corporate support from the Maxwell
Foundation, the Macmillan Foundation and CRSS Architects Inc
which have defrayed the costs of these newsletters which
have been provided free to the readers. We continue to be
committed to finding ways to continue these electronic
newsletters, but feel that at this point innovative
approaches will be needed to ensure that these services
can continue.
We thank readers of the electronic newsletters who have
sent small donations to Leonardo in response to previous
calls for contributions. Even small donations from
a fraction of the 1000s of readers of Fineart Forum
and Leonardo Electronic News would make it possible
for us to continue these services. Leonardo is a
501 (c)(3) non profit corporation so that in the US donations
are tax deductible to the extent allowed by law. Your
contributions, as well as ideas on the future of how
electronic newsletters can be developed and survive may
be sent to: Dr Craig Harris, Executive Director, Leonardo/ISAST,
672 South Van Ness, San Francisco, Ca 94110, USA.
Phone 1-415-431-7414, Fax 415-431-5737. Donations may
also be sent by email with a Visa or Mastercard number
with expiration date to isast@garnet.berkeley.edu
Attention: Annie Lewis.
We look forward to hearing from you !
___________________________________________
Date: 24 September 1992 From: Roger Malina
Subject: Artec '93
ARTEC '93
The Third International Biennale in Nagoya
23 April - 6 June 1993
An event of art and technology, consisting of four main
parts; international competition & exhibition, open
competition & exhibition, lighting & illumination and
a symposium.
Closing date for entries: 31 October 1992
Send enquiries to: The Open Competition, The Council for the International
Biennale in Nagoya, c/o the Chunichi Shimbun, 1-7-1, Sannomaru, Naka-ku,
Nagoya, 460-11, Japan, tel: 052 221 0753, fax: 052 221 0739.
___________________________________________
Date: 09 June 1992 From: Roman Verostko
Subject: FISEA
FISEA 93 * Fourth International Symposium on Electronic Art
Minneapolis, Minnesota/USA/November 3-7, 1993
Hosted by the Minneapolis College of Art and Design
The Minneapolis College of Art and Design, host for FISEA 93, is
coordinating regional, national and international initiatives to make this
a lively "state of the art" forum.
The Inter-Society for the Electronic Arts and Leonardo, the International
Society for Art Science and Technology, endorse this Symposium which will
build on foundations established at Utrecht (FISEA 88), Groningen (SISEA
90), and Sydney (TISEA 92). Committed to an exchange of ideas among
professionals on the practice and theory of electronic art, this symposium
presently plans to:
- exhibit recent art which uses electronics: animation, 2-D art,
"tele-art", and concert/performance arts.
- present papers and panels on research, technology and theory
related to art and electronics.
- present workshops (Nov 3-4) on "state of the art" research and
technology associated with art and electronics.
- present papers and panels on historical and philosophical issues
related to this art.
- publish proceedings and documentation of exhibitions.
- provide a forum for professional poster sessions.
- provide a trade show.
Through a call for participation, to be issued later this year, this
Minneapolis symposium will draw electronic artists and scientists into
greater dialogue with humanities scholars and vice versa. Papers
addressing philosophical issues, critical language and historical context
will be included. We anticipate a lively mix of exhibitions and
installations with discussions exploring continuities between these on-
going electronic arts activities and historical art traditions. The
symposium welcomes artists, scientists, philosophers and art historians to
participate in this critical dialogue.
Preliminary program plans are now under way. If you or your organization
ia able to contribute some service, please be in touch with us.
FISEA 93
Minneapolis College of Art & Design
2501 Stevens Avenue, South
Minneapolis, MN 55404 USA
tel: 01 612 874 3754
fax: 01 612 874 3732
email: fisea93@mcad.edu
Roman Verostko
tel/fax: 01 612 822 3800
email: roman@mcad.edu
___________________________________________
Date: 24 June 1992 From: Alexandre Vitkine
Subject: International Sculpture Exhibition
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
An INTERNATIONAL COMPUTER SCULPTURE EXHIBITION is planned to take
place in Paris in the near future. An art gallery in Paris seems
interested, and several artists, including Masaki Fujihata, are
ready to participate. The purpose of the exhibition is to make the
project for the International Computer Sculpture Atelier more
widely known, especially to potential sponsors.
Purpose of the Computer Sculpture Atelier:
In this Atelier, artists will be able to produce sculptures on
computer-controlled machines. Graphic artists could add a third
dimension to their works, sculptors could experiment with a new
tool and students could be trained.
This symbiosis of Science, Industry and Art may be of universal
interest, since apparently only a few experiments of this kind have
been carried out. Therefore the Atelier could provide a prestigious
showcase for manufacturers' most recent equipment.
Various techniques may be used, such as milling, loviformage
(coilforming by welding), stereolithography, joining or stacking of
plates cut out with tools such as lasers or water jets.
Current status of the Atelier project: Artists in several countries
and schools are already interested. A technical school near Paris,
which has produced several sculptures for the originator of the
project, is willing to produce the Atelier if funds are provided.
More potential participants, as well as sponsors willing to donate
funds or equipment, are still being sought.
Artists who have produced computer sculptures or who intend to
produce some in 1992 and are interested in participating in the
exhibition are encouraged to contact:
Alexandre Vitkine
66, rue d'Auguesseau
92100 Boulogne
FRANCE
___________________________________________
Date: 22 August 1992 From: Carl Loeffler
Subject: Networked Virtual Art Museum
STUDIO FOR CREATIVE INQUIRY
FAX: (412) 268-2829
TEL: (412) 268-3452
ANNOUNCING:
Networked Virtual Art Museum Technical Demonstration,
to be conducted at Expedition 92: Launching New Worlds
of Learning, Munich, Germany, September 10-11, 1992
The Networked Virtual Art Museum is a project directed by
Carl Eugene Loeffler, Research Fellow, at the Studio
for Creative Inquiry, College of Fine Arts, CMU.
The pioneering project investigates telecommunications and
virtual reality, and provides a basis for multiple users located
in distant geographical locations to be conjoined in the
same virtual, immersion environment. The project employs
telecommunication hardware, as well as the hardware
associated with virtual reality: data eyephones and
multi-directional navigation devices.
The immersion environment is an art museum, which contains
galleries offering exhibitions. The exhibition presented for the
Munich demonstration is conceived by Director Carl Eugene Loeffler
and is titled Fun House. While based on the traditional concept of
the fun house, the exhibition features advanced programming
concepts such as agents with Artificial Intelligence, mirrors
offering reflections, and a game room which explores gravity and
other aspects of physics illustrated by thrown objects.
Considered as a whole, the project is on the advancing edge of
telecommunications thru the exploration of immersion environments,
networked over long distance, while supporting multiple users. The
use of agents, and the articulation of physics and other details
like reflective mirrors, places the project at the forefront of the
design of virtual worlds.
The Networked Virtual Art Museum utilizes the WorldToolKit, a
virtual world development software, available from Sense8
Corporation. The Virtual Research head mounted display, and the
Ascension Technology 6-D mouse (The Bird), and 486/50 compatible
with DVI and MIDI comprise the basic system hardware.
The first public demonstration of the project will take place
September 10-11, in conjunction with Expedition 92: Launching
New Worlds of Learning, held in Munich, Germany., under the
auspices of UNESCO and the Commission of the European Community.
Expedition 92 conducts two days of keynote addresses, workshops,
and technical demonstrations.
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:
Carl Eugene Loeffler
Project Director
Telecommunications and Virtual Reality
Studio for Creative Inquiry
College of Fine Arts
Carnegie Mellon University
Tel: (412) 268-3452
FAX: (412) 268-2829
Email: cel@andrew.cmu.edu
___________________________________________
Date: 31 August 1992 From: Wade Riddick
Subject: Exhibit
Wade Riddick will be showing his interactive abstract kinetic computer art
in the 6th floor gallery of the Bass Concert Hall at the University of
Texas during the run of "Evita" (Sept.8-13). His program, "Video
Crawlpaper" runs on a 24bit color Macintosh equipped with a touch screen.
Users can use their fingers to tour various abstract shapes, control their
motions, their colors and a number of other things. The software is part
of a display of graduate student art and can be seen one hour before the
show and during the intermission. "E vita" runs Tuesday - Friday starting
at 8p.m. and Saturday at 2p.m. and 8p.m. and Sunday at 2p.m. and 7p.m.
Those interested can contact Wade Riddick at his email address for more
information. A demonstration version of the software is available for
free.
___________________________________________
Date: 4 September 1992 From: Wim van der Plas
Subject: MANIFESTATION FOR THE UNSTABLE MEDIA IV
MANIFESTATION FOR THE UNSTABLE MEDIA IV
---------------------------------------
V2 Organisation
September 26th-October 4th, 's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands
The annual festival of the V2-Organisation is this year focussed
to the influence of electronic media on visual arts and
architecture. We would like to establish a relation between art
and architecture, because both have come across similar problems.
There is a newly created electronic space where immateriality
rules. The disintegration of traditional time and space questions
our rapidly vanishing social structures (social, political and
cultural) as constructed last centuries and which have always
been the motivation for art and architecture. In different ways
the artwork is under question. Traditional relations and the
hierarchy between the artwork, the observer and the artist are
put to question by an artform that is time based and interactive.
The shift is from a closed decision-defined work to an open and
non-defined system, from object oriented art to a context and
observer oriented art. The fragmentation caused by the new media
devaluates ideology (as a base for society) or better put: it
makes it possible for all ideologies to be valid at the same
time. The western cities with their pluriform content in both
ethnical and religious aspect show this already. How does all
this affect our architecture? How can our art and architecture
deal with the immaterial tendencies in our society that seems to
deny the body or gives a different view on the human body as
being a big failure and far from sufficient in the frame of the
possibilities that new technologies give us. Or should we see
these developments more positive and cross new frontiers by
applying the new technologies as prosthesis that can help us
cross these borders? How can we establish an art and architecture
that deals with the new conceptions of time and space?
Symposium.
On Friday October 2nd an international group of artists,
architects and writers will discuss issues as mentioned above.
Interactive Artworks
An exhibition os artworks will be presented at the V2 building.
The works demonstrate what kind of art the new conceptions of
time and space as performed in electronic space could bring. Most
of them also question the traditional relationship between the
artwork-observer-artist. The works vary from VR based works to
videoworks.
Maquette Exhibition
A small maquette exhibition will be realized in cooperation with
the Technical University of Eindhoven(NL). The maquettes will
show the change in interpreting time and space in models in the
last century. There will be models of the military academy, road
constructions and models from the TU in Eindhoven. This
exhibition will take place outside the V2 building.
For more information please contact:
V2 Organisation
Muntelstraat 23, 5211 PT 's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands.
Tel : 31-73-137958, Fax : 31-73-122238
___________________________________________
Date: 16 September 1992 From: Michael Benedikt
Subject: Call for Papers
******************* A n n o u n c e m e n t ***************
a n d
-------- CALL FOR PROPOSALS, ABSTRACTS, AND PAPERS ---------
3 C Y B E R C O N F
THE THIRD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CYBERSPACE
MAY 14 and 15, 1993
AT
THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN
**********************************************************************
The Third Conference on Cyberspace will be held May 14 and 15, 1993 at
The University of Texas at Austin. This is a call for proposals for
performances and demonstrations as well as for extended abstracts and
papers, approximately twenty four of which will be selected by the
Program Committee for development and presentation at the Conference.
Selected papers, abstracts, and proposal documents will be published
as The Collected Papers of the Third Conference on Cyberspace and
available at the Conference. Arrangements are being made to broadcast
parts of the Conference on National Community Cable Television.
Papers should be around 6,000 words. Abstracts and proposals for
performances and demonstrations should be between 800 and 1000 words,
with illustrations and photographs where necessary. All are due in
hard copy and digital form at the address below by January 1, 1993.
Videotapes and recordings are also encouraged. Selectees will be
notified by February 15, 1993.
For more information, and a copy of the full announcement and call for
papers, write
|3CYBERCONF
|THE THIRD International CONFERENCE ON CYBERSPACE
|Submissions
|School of Architecture
|The University of Texas at Austin
|Austin, Texas, 78712
|email: 3cyberconf@bongo.cc.utexas.edu
|PHONE: 512-471-6619
|FAX: 512-471-0176
___________________________________________
Date: 24 September 1992 From: Roger Malina
Subject: Lecture by Michele Emmer
LEONARDO/YLEM LECTURE: MICHELE EMMER ON VISUAL MATHEMATICS
Professor Michele Emmer From Italy will give a talk on
Visual Mathematics and other aspects of art and mathematics
on Monday October 12 at 7:30pm. The talk will be given at the Center
for EUV Astrophysics, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
The street address is 2150 Kittredge Stret, Berkeley. Professor Emmer
is the Guest Editor of the Leonardo Special Issue on
Visual Mathematics that has just been published. For further
info contact Roger Malina : rmalina@cea.berkeley.edu
___________________________________________
Date: 24 September 1992 From: Roger Malina
Subject: Vilem Flusser Network
Dear friends,
Vilem Flusser left us some time ago. His thought and work have
marked and influenced us profoundly. He gave us a link between scientific,
artistic and philosophical reflections, thus enriching and inspiring us.
Vilem Flusser's death deprives us of the creative development of his
thought by himself, but it also threatens our own development by depriving
us of the net which had been formed around him.
In order to counteract this danger and to allow Vilem Flusser's work
to remain alive and develop further, we have decided to create the
international society called "Suppose/Angenommen-Network/Reseau des Amis de
Vilem Flusser".
We would like this network to be formed by all those who feel they
have been directly or indirectly influenced by Vilem Flusser's work. By
all those who seek to deepen their knowledge of his thought. By all those
who wish to benefit from the participation in an international,
interdisciplinary network. By all those from whom activities and projects
sponsored by this network may also mean an enrichment of their thoughts and
activities.
Vilem Flusser's Network is above all a network. Each participant
will receive the addresses of all other participants, Each participant
shall, as soon as our means allow us, receive periodical information on
artistic, scientific and philosophical projects and questions of the other
participants.
Vilem Flusser Network will itself also organize meetings, seminars
and projects of different kinds, as well as take part in outside projects.
Vilem Flusser's legacy, which will later become "Vilem Flusser's
Archives" and which is now in preparation, will be made available to the
associates of this network.
Network del Amis de Vilem Flusser
17 route de Saint Leonard, 67530, Boersch, France
tel: 33 88 95 94 88, fax: 33 88 95 99 99
___________________________________________
Date: 24 September 1992 From : Roy Ascott
Subject: Telenoia
Telenoia - a V2 Organization project by Roy Ascott
artists online from 00.12h 31 October 1992 to 00.12h 1 November 1992
Telenoia is about telematic connectivity, mind-to-mind across the globe.
Artists worldwide making images, texts, music together. We want to make
authoring a collective experience and a collaborative process.
The themes we hope will weave their way through our networking will
recognize that it's Halloween - a kind of electronic, metaphysical, out-of-
body trick or treat.
We also want to use this 24 hour period, noon Saturday to noon Sunday, to
create a new day of the week - the eighth day of the week.
We'll use email like Earn, Bitnet, as well as Picturetel and fax. We'll
use Macs and Amigas, modems and fax machines.
Contact Alex Adriaansens, tel: 31 73 137958, fax: 31 73 122238.
___________________________________________
CORRECTION
This conference was listed in the calendar section of the last Leonardo
Electronic News (LEN 2:9) with incorrect information.
24-27 October 1992
Music Analysis, 3rd European Conference of Music Analysis
Trento, Italy
Contact: Academia Filarmonica Trentian, Via Oriola 12, Trento 38100,
Italy, tel: 39 0461 238008, fax: 39 0461 238166.
**** The 3rd conference is to take place in 1993 and the place has not been
defined yet (it may be in Marseille or Madrid or ???) My apologies.********
___________________________________________
New Subscribers
Ron Ansbach ransbach@web.apc.org
Rosemary Bryan serials@ucscm.ucsc.edu
David Buchanan dbb@virginia.edu
Stephanie Frontz sfrz@db1.cc.rochester.edu
Alexis Grosofsky grosofsky@beloit.edu
Doug Gruber doug_gruber@theater.baylor.edu
Gary Howell ghowell@sfsuvax1.sfsu.edu
Susan Jurist susan_jurist@ucsdlibrary.ucsd.edu
Scott Lesser lesser%quasar.decnet@faxon.com
Xia Li xli@uvmvm.bitnet
Tom McNulty mcnulty@acfcluster.nyu.edu
Dana Paxon 71201.2213@compuserve.com
Vedder Wright vwright@world.std.com
___________________________________________
Exec. Editor: Roger Malina Editor: Nancy Nelson
ASTN President: Annick Bureaud, ASTN, 57 Rue Falguiere, Paris, France
Correspondents:
Canada - Jeff Mann {intacc!fineart@cs.utoronto.ca}
Italy - Francesco Giomi {conserva@ifiidg.fi.cnr.it}
Japan - Hiroshi Okuno {okuno@ntt-20.ntt.jp}
USA - Judy Malloy {jmalloy@well.sf.ca.us}
Susan Kirchman {smk@archone.tamu.edu}
ISEA - Wim van der Plas {ISEA@rug.nl}
Published by:
Leonardo, the International Society for Arts, Sciences and Technology
(ISAST) on behalf of: The Art, Science and Technology Network (ASTN)
with support from: The Inter-Society for the Electronic Arts (ISEA)
and the Visualization Laboratory, Texas A&M University.
___________________________________________
Send requests for subscription to Fineart Forum to:
Europe: CONSERVA@IFIIDG.FI.CNR.IT Asia: OKUNO@NTT-20.NTT.JP
USA and all others: fast@garnet.berkeley.edu or FAST@UCBGARNE.bitnet
with the message: SUB FINE-ART your email address,
first-name, last-name, and postal address.
Paper copies available for USD $65 per year subscription. Payment
is to ISAST, 672 South Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94110, USA.
Send submissions of items to be published in Fineart Forum to
fast@garnet.berkeley.edu or FAST@UCBGARNE.bitnet.
___________________________________________
*****************************
End of Fineart Forum 6(10)