Tag Archives: Virtuality

Art in Your Pocket

Art In Your Pocket – Panel Discussion

Rhizome’s New Silent Series

Friday September 21 7PM

New Museum, 235 Bowery, New York, NY

The computer we carry in our pockets is also an emerging platform for interactive screen-based art. Art In Your Pocket takes its name from a series of texts Jonah Brucker-Cohen wrote for Rhizome on art made for smartphones. This panel will assemble leading media artists working with mobile devices and discuss current trends relating to this practice.

Moderated by Jason Eppink, Assistant Curator of Digital Media at the Museum of the Moving Image. Panelists include artist, programmer, and founder of iPhone app company SOFTOFT TECHECH, Paul Slocum; Mimi Sheller, leading theorist on mobilities research and Professor of Sociology and Director of the Center for Mobilities Research and Policy at Drexel University; LoVid, 2011 Rhizome commissioned artists for their location-specific art app project iParade #2: Unchanged When Exhumed; and Jonathan Vingiano, Co-founder of OKFocus.

Organized by Rhizome, the New Silent Series receives major support from The Rockefeller Foundation, and The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. Additional support is provided by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, and the New York State Council on the Arts.

To purchase tickets please visit:

http://rhizome.org/events/art-in-your-pocket/

New Interaction Orders

New Interaction Orders, New Mobile Publics?

13-14 April 2012

Imagination Lab, Lancaster University, UK

This workshop explores the emergence of ‘mobile publics’, inspired by Goffman’s studies of  public places as the performative locus of social orders and William Holly Whyte’s investigations of the social life of small urban spaces. We bring theory and empirical research, everyday lived practice, design, policy and politics together through collaborative analysis  of multi-sited, mobile, ethnographic or otherwise qualitative studies of behavior in today’s public spaces.

Guest Speakers: Christian LicoppeKeith HamptonMimi Sheller

mCenter Director Mimi Sheller will be speaking at 10am (ET) Friday

Watch Live Webcast here http://www.lancs.ac.uk/fass/events/new_interaction_order/webcast.htm

Equipped with mobile technologies, people connect in ways that were unthinkable when Goffman wrote Behaviour in public spaces (1963) and William Whyte explored The social life of small urban spaces (1980). The momentous Arab Spring events, London riots and ’2011 Occupy’ demonstrations are extreme examples that pose old questions about the ‘interaction order’ and its relation to social order and the public sphere in new ways. On the one hand, mobile connectivity enables micro-coordination of increasingly mobile everyday lives, new modulations of co-presence, absent presence and present absence, and transformations of socio-material practices of availability, obligation, intimacy and strangerhood in public. Some of the social innovations involved also shape emergent new practices of mobilising people in protests and crises. Arguably new, agile, local and globally networked communities and ‘mobile publics’ are forming. On the other, worries over a loss of civility, community, privacy, and new forms of surveillance enabled by the ever closer intermeshing of digital technology and everyday ‘movement-spaces’ fuel fears over an erosion of civil liberties and ‘capital P’ politics.

Goffman’s insistence that ‘the interaction order’ is the performative locus of such utopian and dystopian transformations and his and Whyte’s attention to detail are the motivation for this two-day interdisciplinary workshop. We would like to bring micro and macro, theory and empirical research, everyday lived practice, design, policy and politics together through collaborative analysis of multi-sited, mobile, ethnographic or otherwise qualitative studies of behaviour in today’s public spaces, zeitdiagnostic theory and avantgarde design. We invite researchers, designers, technology developers, architects, urban planners, artists and urban communities to submit contributions that explore aspects of new and old ‘behaviour in public spaces’, including (but not limited to):

  1. the ‘osmotic’ relationship between physical and virtual spaces, connectivity and mobility
  2. the social life of such spaces
  3. emergent principles and practices of the 21st Century interaction order
  4. augmented embodied and sensory phenomenology and material agency
  5. links between the interaction order, public engagement, and public space
  6. tensions between mobile informationalized everyday lives and movement-spaces and principles of privacy and civil liberty, security, splintering and sorting of ‘access’
  7. examples, practices and impacts of improvised communities and mobile publics, and collective intelligence
  8. examples and methods of collaborative, experimental, radically careful and carefully radical design of new practices, technologies, forms of public engagement and spaces
  9. reflections on the links between theory, empirical studies, design and politics in the broadest sense

Organisers: Chris Boyko, Monika Büscher, Tim Dant, Jill Ebrey, Pauline Feron, Karenza Moore, Jen Southern, Katherine Willis

Contact: p.feron@lancaster.ac.uk

http://www.lancs.ac.uk/fass/events/new_interaction_order/index.htm

Net-Cultures Symposium Vimeo

Net Cultures symposium on Mobility and Location in Social Networks (April 29, IT University of Copenhagen) now available on Vimeo at:

http://vimeo.com/channels/networkculture#23194824

Slides from Mimi Sheller’s talk on “Mobile Art” are now posted here:

Mobile Art [Powerpoint Slides]

Invited Speakers:

• Mimi Sheller (Drexel University, USA), KEYNOTE

• Christian Licoppe (Telecom Paristech, France)

• Ana Maria Nicolaci-da-Costa (Pontificial Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio), Brazil)

• Larissa Hjorth (RMIT University, Australia)


Speakers will address topics, such as:

• Mobile communication and location awareness in everyday life practices;

• New urban spatialities developed with mobile gaming and locative social media;

• Privacy and surveillance issues as they relate to location-based social networks;

• Identity and spatial construction through locative media art / performance design;

• Civic engagement and political participation through mobile social media, new mapping practices and location-aware technologies.


IT University of Copenhage, Auditorium 1
Rued Langgaards Vej 7
DK-2300 Copenhagen S
Denmark

The organizing committee:
Adriana de Souza e Silva
Bjarki Valtysson
Isabel Froes
Ida Toft (RA)
Amani Naseem (RA)
________________________
Adriana de Souza e Silva, Ph.D
Associate Professor
IT University of Copenhagen, Digital Culture and Mobile Communication Group
North Carolina State University, Department of Communication
http://www.souzaesilva.com

AR Panel 4/26

Augmented Reality Check: Seeing the Future Now

April 26th, 6:00-8:00 pm

Van Pelt Auditorium
Philadelphia Museum of Art

In this panel, cutting-edge artists and software developers working at the intersection of art, technology and science, the real and the imaginary, offer us a tour through the potentials for an augmented future.

Opening Remarks

Gary Steuer – Chief Cultural Officer of Philadelphia; Director, Office of Arts, Culture &Creative Economy

Moderator

Dr. Mimi Sheller – Professor of Sociology, Director of the Center for Mobilities Research and Policy at Drexel University

Panelists

Deb Boyer – Public historian and Project Manager, Sajara and the PhillyHistory project

Dr. Paul Diefenbach – Associate Professor, Digital Media, Co-founder of RePlay Lab, Drexel University

John Craig Freeman – Artist, Professor of Visual and Media Arts, Emerson College, Boston

Chris Manzione – Artist, Founder of the Virtual Public Art Project

Josh Marcus – Software developer,  Technical Lead for Decision Tree

Mark Skwarek – New media artist

Virtual Art Walking Tour
Following the event Chris Manzione will lead a Virtual Art Walking Tour along the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.  Original AR artwork will be on view as part of Breadboard’s city-wide Virtual Art Project in partnership with the Philadelphia International Festival of Arts (PIFA). Newer models of iPhone and Android smart phones will be needed to view the art work.

Augmented Reality Check: Seeing the Future Now is a Breadboard production in coordination with the Philadelphia Science Festival , Philly Tech Week and Philadelphia International Festival of the Arts. More information on this event can be found on the official PIFA events calendar

CAA 2012 Call for papers

Call for papers on Mobile Art

The 100th College Art Association Annual Conference will be held February 22–25, 2012, in Los Angeles. We invite submissions for the following session. Abstract Submission due date: May 1, 2011. Full paper due: Dec. 1, 2011.

CAA100Mobile Art: The Aesthetics of Mobile Network Culture in Place Making

Session Co-chairs: Hana Iverson, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; and Mimi Sheller, Drexel University; hiverson@rci.rutgers.edu and mbs67@drexel.edu

The integration of mobile and locational technology into physical place has broadened the possibilities for the creation of new spaces of interaction and opened the disciplinary boundaries used to define and understand the public arena. When real places are merged with virtual worlds, or augmented with interactive digital media, the result is a completely new “hybrid” environment where physical and digital objects coexist in real time. We seek proposals from artists, scholars, or interdisciplinary collaborative teams that engage art that incorporates cell phones, GPS, and other mobile technologies. What are the potentials of mobility spaces as new sites for integrating creative invention, public participation, and social interaction? This panel focuses on emergent forms of mobile art that engage, subvert, or recombine perceptions of the definable (visible) and indefinable (invisible) aspects of place that simultaneously reveal and construct their stabilities and instabilities, their materiality and nonmateriality.

Please send submissions to Mimi Sheller at mbs67@drexel.edu by May 1st, 2011.

Augmented Reality Check

Augmented Reality Check: Seeing the Future Now

April 26th, 6:00-8:00 pm

Van Pelt Auditorium
Philadelphia Museum of Art

In this panel, cutting-edge artists and software developers working at the intersection of art, technology and science, the real and the imaginary, offer us a tour through the potentials for an augmented future.

Opening Remarks

Gary Steuer – Chief Cultural Officer of Philadelphia; Director, Office of Arts, Culture &Creative Economy

Moderator

Dr. Mimi Sheller – Professor of Sociology, Director of the Center for Mobilities Research and Policy at Drexel University

Panelists

Deb Boyer – Public historian and Project Manager, Sajara and the PhillyHistory project

Dr. Paul Diefenbach – Associate Professor, Digital Media, Co-founder of RePlay Lab, Drexel University

John Craig Freeman – Artist, Professor of Visual and Media Arts, Emerson College, Boston

Chris Manzione – Artist, Founder of the Virtual Public Art Project

Josh Marcus – Software developer,  Technical Lead for Decision Tree

Mark Skwarek – New media artist

Virtual Art Walking Tour
Following the event Chris Manzione will lead a Virtual Art Walking Tour along the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.  Original AR artwork will be on view as part of Breadboard’s city-wide Virtual Art Project in partnership with the Philadelphia International Festival of Arts (PIFA). Newer models of iPhone and Android smart phones will be needed to view the art work.

Augmented Reality Check: Seeing the Future Now is a Breadboard production in coordination with the Philadelphia Science Festival , Philly Tech Week and Philadelphia International Festival of the Arts. More information on this event can be found on the official PIFA events calendar

Mobilities Visiting Speaker: Hana Iverson

The Neighborhood Narratives Project: Investigating Public Sites for New Encounters

by Hana Iverson

Hana

Hana Iverson

Visiting Scholar, Institute for Women and Art, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

Monday, October 18th, 2010, 6:00-8:00pm

Behrakis Hall, Creese Student Center, Drexel University (32nd & Chestnut St.)

Location aware art and media technologies expand the dialogue around concepts such as place, space, and location. Art that incorporates cell phones, GPS and other mobile technology encourages the viewer/user to unearth the layers of information that occupy a space and make known the complex influences that affect location specific interactions. In this layering of space and place, the definition of public site opens to new interpretation. In this paper I discuss the Neighborhood Narratives project and its relationship to these concepts. Neighborhood Narratives is an international education project that explores the issues that surface when new ideas made possible by locative media technologies are applied to space and place. http://neighborhoodnarratives.net/

Iverson VPAP piece

Hana Iverson also has work in Breadboard’s Virtual Public Art Project (VPAP), which is opening this week at Esther Klein Gallery and throughout the city. VPAP Philadelphia will  locate eight unique virtual artworks (created by Philadelphia artists) at various locations around the city (see map here). These works will be viewable through the camera on any smart phone equipped with free downloaded VPAP application software. The VPAP Philadelphia indoor exhibit at the Esther Klein Gallery is an informative multimedia exhibit that introduces the Philadelphia community to the technology behind Augmented Reality and virtual art, and to recent VPAP projects in other cities around the world.

The Mobilities Visiting Speaker Series is a forum for leading scholars invited by the Center for Mobilities Research and Policy to present new research in the fields of mobilities research, tourism studies, migration and border studies, mobile communications, new mobile media, and related interdisciplinary areas. The talks are open to the entire Drexel community and invited guests from the region. Refreshments will be served. For more information about this free series, please contact Mimi Sheller at mimi.sheller@drexel.edu.

Virtual Public Art

VPAP Q&A between Chris Manzione, founder of Virtual Public Art Project (VPAP), and Mimi Sheller, director of the mCenter@Drexel. The Q&A was conducted via email and is the first in what will be an ongoing conversation with Chris Manzione about VPAP and future applications of augmented reality.

Sheller will also be a Mellon Regional Fellow in the Penn Humanities Forum at University of Pennsylvania, where this year’s theme is “Virtuality”.

Breadboard has two projects planned with VPAP, one of which is set to launch in the Fall of 2010.