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  <title>[filter] Australian electronic music, arts, media, project listings</title>
  <subtitle>Australian electronic music, arts, news, events, media, project listings, links</subtitle>
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  <updated>2008-02-20T22:25:22+00:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>THURSDAY CLUBS @ Goldsmiths - experimental cinema + more (UK)</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.aliak.com/content/thursday-clubs-goldsmiths-experimental-cinema-more-uk" />
    <id>http://www.aliak.com/content/thursday-clubs-goldsmiths-experimental-cinema-more-uk</id>
    <published>2008-02-20T22:23:47+00:00</published>
    <updated>2008-02-20T22:25:22+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>AliaK</name>
    </author>
    <category term="art" />
    <category term="books" />
    <category term="cinema" />
    <category term="event" />
    <category term="experimental" />
    <category term="film" />
    <category term="international" />
    <category term="internet" />
    <category term="london" />
    <category term="media art" />
    <category term="networked spaces" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>** NEW THURSDAY CLUBS: CHANGES and UPDATES **<br />
Supported by the Goldsmiths DIGITAL STUDIOS and the Goldsmiths GRADUATE<br />
SCHOOL<br />
6pm until 8pm, Seminar Rooms at Ben Pimlott Building (Ground Floor,<br />
right), Goldsmiths, University of London, New Cross, SE14 6NW<br />
FREE, ALL ARE WELCOME<br />
** PLEASE NOTE THAT THE DATE FOR ELENA COLOGNI'S CLUB SESSION HAS BEEN<br />
CHANGED FROM THE 28th of FEBRUARY TO THE 6th of MARCH **<br />
--<br />
*28 FEBRUARY with RAYMOND HARMON<br />
:<br />
Painting in Light: Experimental Film and the Advent of Improvisational<br />
Cinema*<br />
The traditional model for cinematic expression is as a controlled<br />
environment moving forward in a linear direction. From its inception the<br />
art of filmmaking has been dominated by a single form of chronological<br />
development. Each film exists as a series of frames that are static at the<br />
start of the film.<br />
Improvisation, a language largely defined within the practice of music, is</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>** NEW THURSDAY CLUBS: CHANGES and UPDATES **</p>
<p>Supported by the Goldsmiths DIGITAL STUDIOS and the Goldsmiths GRADUATE<br />
SCHOOL</p>
<p>6pm until 8pm, Seminar Rooms at Ben Pimlott Building (Ground Floor,<br />
right), Goldsmiths, University of London, New Cross, SE14 6NW</p>
<p>FREE, ALL ARE WELCOME</p>
<p>** PLEASE NOTE THAT THE DATE FOR ELENA COLOGNI'S CLUB SESSION HAS BEEN<br />
CHANGED FROM THE 28th of FEBRUARY TO THE 6th of MARCH **</p>
<p>--</p>
<p>*28 FEBRUARY with RAYMOND HARMON<br />
:<br />
Painting in Light: Experimental Film and the Advent of Improvisational<br />
Cinema*</p>
<p>The traditional model for cinematic expression is as a controlled<br />
environment moving forward in a linear direction. From its inception the<br />
art of filmmaking has been dominated by a single form of chronological<br />
development. Each film exists as a series of frames that are static at the<br />
start of the film.</p>
<p>Improvisation, a language largely defined within the practice of music, is<br />
something that has slowly grown from impractical experimentation to a<br />
living form of performance art over the past century.</p>
<p>Tracing the historic aspects of this new creative model this presentation<br />
will cover the many parallels between diverse genres of musical<br />
improvisation and the art of improvised cinema in the 21 century. From<br />
paint on celluloid, to live lights shows through to contemporary VJ<br />
culture "Painted in Light" explores the vast arena of the future of this<br />
new paradigm of creative expression.</p>
<p>RAYMOND HARMON is a Chicago-based cross-genre media artist, filmmaker,<br />
sound artist, and record producer, with a CV extending from performance<br />
based 16mm and 8mm film to video circuit-bending and analog feedback<br />
installations as well as sound and visual conceptual installations and<br />
guerrilla media actions. Utilizing new media, web based content and<br />
interactive architecture in coordination with public performance, graffiti<br />
style ad bombing, and web based social engineering Harmon's work has<br />
carved out an over arching form of contemporary media insurgency.<br />
raymondharmon.com<br />
--</p>
<p>*6 MARCH with ELENA COLOGNI<br />
:<br />
The Film As Document In (Of) Real Time*</p>
<p>A meta-linguistic performative experiment.</p>
<p>Key questions:<br />
1. In my video live installations I investigate the perception of time<br />
(psychological time ), non simultaneous artist and audience interchange in<br />
liveness, and the production of the video document. Live recording,<br />
pre-recording and their transmission, as overlapping layers of<br />
representation of time, unfold in duration.<br />
2. I am now starting to contextualising the recent work, which I believe<br />
challenges the early Bergsonian differentiation between memory and<br />
perception based on the assumption that the former is linked to the past<br />
(representation) and the latter to the present (action) (as in latest<br />
Deleuzean scholar Guerlac ’s book).<br />
3. I also contribute to the debate on performance documentation in<br />
parallel to recent Auslander’s publication : embedding the document (eg.:<br />
video recording) in the event allows audience to witness its very<br />
production, thus emphasising the document’s ‘performativity’ aspect.</p>
<p>ELENA COLOGNI is an art practitioner. Currently Research Fellow at York St<br />
John University, her PhD ‘The Artist’s Performative Practice Within The<br />
Anti-Oculatcentric Discourse’ is from Central Saint Martins College of Art<br />
and Design (CSM), London. After the post-doc AHRC and CSM awarded project<br />
'Present Memory and Liveness in delivery and reception of video<br />
documentation during performance art events', she was at Glasgow Centre<br />
for Contemporary Arts for a Creative Lab residency focusing on questions<br />
of migrations, remoteness and transmission of information over time and<br />
space. She is active in the debate on practice as research methodologies,<br />
as well as the relationship between performance and new media. Her artwork<br />
has been presented internationally.</p>
<p>--</p>
<p>*13 MARCH with ANNA HOWITT<br />
:<br />
The Empty Space Gallery*</p>
<p>The Empty Space Gallery exists to foster creativity, and encourage debate<br />
about what ‘art’ is and what ‘artists’ are. It’s a novel way of<br />
encouraging people to engage with this thing we call ‘art’ and what it<br />
might be. Ultimately it is an experiment in ‘art’, ‘artists’, those that<br />
believe in them and those that think they are. The Empty Space Gallery can<br />
also be considered an anonymous art fair, where more established and<br />
well-known artists share the same space and audience as unknown doodlers.</p>
<p>How does The Empty Space Gallery work?</p>
<p>Individuals, whether ‘artists’ or not, are invited to submit anything they<br />
deem to be ‘art’, in any medium whatsoever. The purpose of the experiment<br />
is to gain some insight into, not so much how work is created, but how it<br />
is received, consumed, and engaged with. The aim is to uncover some of the<br />
processes we employ in order to decide whether something is ‘art’ or not.</p>
<p>Once the ‘works’ are received they are catalogued and sealed in plain<br />
white A4 envelopes. Only these envelopes are placed on display; no details<br />
of the ‘artist’ are available at this time. Visitors to the gallery are<br />
invited to pick, at random, any envelope they choose and own whatever they<br />
find inside.<br />
In addition, visitors are also invited to create an ‘artwork’ there and<br />
then, for inclusion in the gallery, which is then passed on again to<br />
another visitor.</p>
<p>ANNA HOWITT is artistic director of The Forward Company, an<br />
interdisciplinary arts company based in Berkshire.  She also is an arts<br />
and literary reviewer.  She finished her MA in Contemporary Arts at the<br />
Manchester Metropolitan University in 2001 and has since had a residency<br />
at the South Street Arts Centre in Reading (2003-4).<br />
--</p>
<p>** PLEASE NOTE: KATE PULLINGER &amp; CHRIS JOSEPH (whose Club event had to be<br />
postponed for personal reasons) WILL BE KICKING OFF THE SUMMER TERM OF<br />
CLUB EVENTS ON 24 APRIL **<br />
::</p>
<p>*24 APRIL with KATE PULLINGER &amp; CHRIS JOSEPH<br />
:<br />
Flight Paths: a networked book*</p>
<p>"I have finished my weekly supermarket shop, stocking up on provisions for<br />
my three kids, my husband, our dog and our cat.  I push the loaded trolley<br />
across the car park, battling to keep its wonky wheels on track.  I pop<br />
open the boot of my car and then for some reason, I have no idea why, I<br />
look up, into the clear blue autumnal sky.  And I see him.  It takes me a<br />
long moment to figure out what I am looking at.  He is falling from the<br />
sky.  A dark mass, growing larger quickly.  I let go of the trolley and am<br />
dimly aware that it is getting away from me but I can’t move, I am stuck<br />
there in the middle of the supermarket car park, watching, as he hurtles<br />
toward the earth.  I have no idea how long it takes – a few seconds, an<br />
entire lifetime – but I stand there holding my breath as the city goes<br />
about its business around me until…<br />
He crashes into the roof of my car."</p>
<p>The car park of Sainsbury’s supermarket in Richmond, southwest London,<br />
lies directly beneath one of the main flight paths into Heathrow Airport.<br />
Over the last decade, on at least five separate occasions, the bodies of<br />
young men have fallen from the sky and landed on or near this car park.<br />
All these men were stowaways on flights from the Indian subcontinent who<br />
had believed that they could find a way into the cargo hold of an airplane<br />
by climbing up into the airplane wheel shaft.  No one can survive this<br />
journey. “Flight Paths” seeks to explore what happens when lives collide –<br />
the airplane stowaway and the fictional suburban London housewife, quoted<br />
above.   This project will tell their stories; it will be a work of<br />
digital fiction, a networked book, created on and through the internet.<br />
The project will include a web iteration that opens up the research<br />
process to the outside world, inviting discussion of the large array of<br />
issues the project touches on.</p>
<p>Questions raised by this project include: what are the possibilities for<br />
new narrative forms? How do we “write to be seen” or “write to be heard”<br />
when creating multimedia narratives, and can we imagine writing to be<br />
smelled, tasted, felt? What are the effects of collective authorship<br />
across multiple forms?</p>
<p>KATE PULLINGER works both in print and new media.  Her most recent novels<br />
include A Little Stranger (2006) and Weird Sister (1999).  Her current<br />
digital fiction projects include her collaboration with Chris Joseph<br />
(babel) on 'Inanimate Alice', a multimedia episodic digital fiction and<br />
'Venus Redemption', a game for female casual gamers.  Pullinger is Reader<br />
in Creative Writing and New Media at De Montfort University.</p>
<p>CHRIS JOSEPH is a digital writer and artist who has created solo and<br />
collaborative work as babel. His past projects include 'Inanimate Alice'<br />
(with Kate Pullinger), an award-winning series of multimedia stories; 'The<br />
Breathing Wall' (with Kate Pullinger and Stefan Schemat), a digital novel;<br />
and 'Animalamina', a collection of interactive multimedia poetry for<br />
children. He is editor of the post-dada magazine and network 391.org, and<br />
a founding member of The 404, a network of artists. He is currently<br />
Digital Writer in Residence at De Montfort University, Leicester.</p>
<p>--</p>
<p>THE THURSDAY CLUB is an open forum discussion group for anyone interested<br />
in the theories and practices of cross-disciplinarity, interactivity,<br />
technologies and philosophies of the state-of-the-art in today’s (and<br />
tomorrow’s) cultural landscape(s).</p>
<p>For more information email Maria X at <a href="mailto:drp01mc@gold.ac.uk">drp01mc@gold.ac.uk</a></p>
<p>To find Goldsmiths check <a href="http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/find-us/" title="http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/find-us/">http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/find-us/</a></p>
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