<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
		xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd"
	xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"
>

<channel>
	<title>Daniel G. Andujar Archive &#187; Transmediale</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/transmediale/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.danielandujar.org</link>
	<description>by Technologies To The People</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Fri, 13 Jan 2012 19:59:59 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1</generator>
	<copyright> </copyright>
	<managingEditor>daniel@irational.org (Daniel G. Andujar Archive)</managingEditor>
	<webMaster>daniel@irational.org (Daniel G. Andujar Archive)</webMaster>
	<ttl>1440</ttl>
	<image>
		<url>http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/podpress/images/powered_by_podpress.jpg</url>
		<title>Daniel G. Andujar Archive</title>
		<link>http://www.danielandujar.org</link>
		<width>144</width>
		<height>144</height>
	</image>
	<itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
	<itunes:summary>by Technologies To The People</itunes:summary>
	<itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
	<itunes:category text="Society &#38; Culture" />
	<itunes:author>Daniel G. Andujar Archive</itunes:author>
	<itunes:owner>
		<itunes:name>Daniel G. Andujar Archive</itunes:name>
		<itunes:email>daniel@irational.org</itunes:email>
	</itunes:owner>
	<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
	<itunes:image href="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/podpress/images/powered_by_podpress_large.jpg" />
		<item>
		<title>transmediale 2012 Programme Overview</title>
		<link>http://www.danielandujar.org/2012/01/13/transmediale-2012-programme-overview/</link>
		<comments>http://www.danielandujar.org/2012/01/13/transmediale-2012-programme-overview/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jan 2012 19:59:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[English]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2012]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Berlin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Germany]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jacob Lillemose]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Transmediale]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.danielandujar.org/?p=1237</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[/ Tuesday 31 Jan 2012 - Opening Night 17:00 transmediale 2012 Exhibition Vernissage Dark Drives. Uneasy Energies in technological Times curated by Jacob Lillemose with artworks from Ant Farm, William S. Burroughs and Antony Balch, Art 404, Bjørn Erik Haugen, Bureau of Inverse Technology (B.I.T.), Chris Burden, Chris Cunningham/Aphex Twin, Constant Dullaart, Costanza Candeloro and <a href='http://www.danielandujar.org/2012/01/13/transmediale-2012-programme-overview/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>/ Tuesday 31 Jan 2012</strong> <strong>- Opening Night</strong></p>
<p><em>17:00</em><br />
<a href="http://www.transmediale.de/node/20271/" target="_blank">transmediale 2012</a> Exhibition Vernissage<br />
<strong>Dark Drives. Uneasy Energies in technological Times</strong> curated by <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/jacob-lillemose/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Jacob Lillemose">Jacob Lillemose</a></p>
<p>with artworks from <em>Ant Farm</em>, <em>William S. Burroughs and Antony Balch</em>, <em>Art 404</em>, <em>Bjørn Erik Haugen</em>, <em>Bureau of Inverse Technology (B.I.T.)</em>, <em>Chris Burden</em>, <em>Chris Cunningham/Aphex Twin</em>, <em>Constant Dullaart</em>, <em>Costanza Candeloro and Luca Libertini</em>, <em>Daniel García Andújar / Technologies To The People</em>, <em>Heath Bunting</em>, <em>Jack Caravanos (Blacksmith Institute)</em>, <em>Vibek Raj Maurya</em>, <em>Jaromil</em>, <em>Jennifer Chan</em>, <em>JK Keller</em>, <em>JODI</em>, <em>jon.satrom</em>, <em>Junko &amp; Mattin</em>, <em>Marcelina Wellmer</em>, <em>Matteo Giordano</em>, <em>Karla Grundick and Mistress Koyo</em>, <em>Paidia Institute</em>, <em>Peter Luining</em>, <em>Ruth White</em>, <em>SPK</em>, <em>Steina and Woody Vasulka</em>, <em>Sture Johannesson</em>, <em>Nikola Tesla</em>, <em>Jay Dahl</em>, <em>TR Kirstein</em>, <em>Tracy Cornish</em>, <em>UBERMORGEN.COM</em>, <em>VNS Matrix</em>, <em>[epidemiC]</em>, <em>Franco Berardi, Eva and Franco Mattes aka 0100101110101101.ORG</em></p>
<p><span id="more-1237"></span><br />
<strong>Steam Machine Music &#8211; live construction</strong> | performance with Morten Riis</p>
<p>Screening<br />
<strong>Re-enactment Videospiegel</strong> | The first programme of VideoFilmFest &#8217;88</p>
<p><em>18:30</em></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/transmediale/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Transmediale">transmediale</a> 2012 Opening Ceremony</strong> | presentation with Kristoffer Gansing, Hortensia Völckers, Bernd Scherer and performance by jon.satrom</p>
<p><em>20:30</em></p>
<p>Labor <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/berlin/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Berlin">Berlin</a> 8 / Studio Weise7 Exhibition<br />
<strong>The in/compatible Laboratorium</strong> | Vernissage with Kristoffer Gansing, Valerie Smith, Studio Weise 7 (Servando Barreiro, Brendan Howell, Gordan Savičić, Bengt Sjölén, Julian Oliver and Danja Vasiliev)</p>
<p>reSource Opening<br />
<strong>R15N</strong> | presentation with Dmytri Kleiner, Baruch Gottlieb, introduced by Tatiana Bazzichelli<br />
<strong>Steam Machine Music</strong> | with Morten Riis</p>
<p>Performances</p>
<p><strong>The Future of Creativity</strong> | by Jeremy Bailey</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>/ Wednesday 01 Feb 201</strong></p>
<p><em>10:00 – 22:00</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 Exhibition <strong>Dark Drives – Uneasy Energies in technological Times</strong></p>
<p><em>10:30 – 16:00</em></p>
<p>reSource Methods <strong>in/compatible research practices</strong> | presentation with Robert Jackson, Andrew Prior, Magda Tyzlik-Carver, Morten Riis, Carolin Wiedemann, Marie Thompson, Nina Wenhart, Magnus Lawrie, Christian Ulrik Andersen, Tatiana Bazzichelli, Geoff Cox, Thomas Bjoernsten Kristensen, Rosa Menkman, Gabriel Menotti, Lasse Scherffing, Matthias Tarasiewicz, Baruch Gottlieb, Morten Breinbjerg, Zach Blas + <strong>Steam Machine Music</strong> | performance with Morten Riis</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>11:00 – 17:00</em></p>
<p>reSource <strong>Floppy Films Workshop. Moving Images on 1.44 MB day #1</strong> | with Florian Cramer</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>12:00 – 18:00</em></p>
<p>reSource Methods <strong>In-compatible material</strong> | intervention with Martin Howse, Anthony Iles, Jonathan Kemp, Mattin, Baruch Gottlieb, Shu Lea Cheang</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>15:00 – 17:00</em></p>
<p>25 years of transmediale <strong>web.video &#8211; the new <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/netart/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with net.art">net.art</a>?</strong> | panel with Robert Sakrowski, Constant Dullaart, Igor Štromajer, Petra Cortright</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>17:00 – 18:00</em></p>
<p>reSource Methods <strong>Launch of the publication &#8220;News Paper – The Greatest Peer-Reviewed Newspaper of In/compatible Research in the World&#8221;</strong> | presentation of the collaborative peer-reviewed publication, the thematic publication of transmediale 2012 a.o. with Christian Ulrik Andersen, Geoff Cox, Kristoffer Gansing</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>18:00 – 20:00</em></p>
<p><strong>Marshall McLuhan Lecture 2012</strong> | with Andrew Feenberg moderated by Kristoffer Gansing</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>20:00 – 22:00</em></p>
<p>Marshall McLuhan Salon exhibition Vernissage <strong>The Jeremy Bailey Collection</strong> | video installations by Jeremy Bailey</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>18:30 – 21:00</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 video programme <strong>Satellite Stories</strong><br />
<strong>Guided Economics </strong>| screening a.o. in presence of Harun Farocki , René Frölke</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>20:00 – 20:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 performance programme <strong>The Ghosts in the Machine</strong><br />
<strong>this is a boys club pt. 3: scream: lack! lack! I am missing the gap</strong> | by Flora Könemann</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>21:00 – 22:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 performance programme <strong>The Ghosts in the Machine</strong></p>
<p><strong>The Joshua Light Show</strong> | featuring Supersilent</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>/ Thursday 02 Feb 2012</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>10:00 – 22:00</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 Exhibition <strong>Dark Drives – Uneasy Energies in technological Times</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>10:30 – 16:30</em></p>
<p>reSource <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/activism/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Activism">Activism</a> <strong>Activism Beyond the Interface: The Sandbox Project </strong>| discussion a.o. with Roberta Buiani, Alessandra Renzi, Nicola Angrisano and others</p>
<p>part 1 <strong>The Sandbox Project (open session)</strong> | workshop</p>
<p>part 2 <strong>The Sandbox Project</strong> <strong> (An Itinerant Production Lab)</strong> | open discussion&amp;presentation</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>11:00 – 14:00</em></p>
<p>25 years of transmediale <strong>VIDEOMAKERS UNITE!</strong> | An open conversation about video art and net culture, media collectives and counter-publics | panel with Florian Wüst, Kathy Rae Huffman, Eckart Lottmann, Pit Schultz</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>11:00 – 17:00</em></p>
<p>reSource <strong>Floppy Films Workshop. Moving Images on 1.44 MB day #2</strong> | with Florian Cramer and guests</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>14:00 – 17:00</em></p>
<p>reSource <strong>Google – One Week Piece worlshop</strong> | workshop with Johannes P. Osterhoff</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>14:30 – 17:00</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 video programme <strong>Satellite Stories</strong></p>
<p><strong> Suspension</strong> | screening a.o. in presence of Andreas Schneider</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>16:00 – 18:00</em></p>
<p>reSource Methods <strong>CODED CULTURES &#8211; Subcuratorship beyond Media Arts</strong> | discussion a.o. with Georg Russegger, Michal Wlodkowski, Luise Reitstätter, Joasia Krysa, Sidney Ogidan, Eva Fischer</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>18:00 – 19:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 <strong>in/compatible symposium</strong><br />
<strong>in/compatible systems: Everything Is Not Connected</strong> | Keynote by Graham Harman, moderated by Christopher Salter</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>18:30 – 20:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 video programme <strong>Satellite Stories</strong></p>
<p><strong>I&#8217;m the Enemy</strong> | screening a.o. in presence of Neozoon, Bjørn Melhus, Roee Rosen</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>20:00 – 21:00</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 performance programme <strong>The Ghosts in the Machine</strong></p>
<p><strong>Liquid State Machine</strong> | by Wolfgang Spahn, Martin Howse</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>21:00 – 22:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 performance programme <strong>The Ghosts in the Machine</strong></p>
<p><strong>The Glitch Moment(um)</strong> | by Rosa Menkman</p>
<p><strong>ideomotoric chatroom</strong> | by Billy Roisz, dieb13, Mario de Vega</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>/ Friday 03 Feb 2012</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>10:00 – 22:00</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 Exhibition <strong>Dark Drives – Uneasy Energies in technological Times</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>11:00 – 14:00</em></p>
<p>reSource Networks <strong>Isolation and Empowerment after Web 2.0</strong></p>
<p>part 1 <strong>Trapped and Tracked</strong> | presentation with Geoff Cox, Aymeric Mansoux, Johannes P Osterhoff</p>
<p>part 2 <strong>Mobilizing the Unrepresentable</strong> | presentation with Geoff Cox, Victoria Estok, Salvatrice Settis</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>11:00 – 14:00</em></p>
<p>reSource Networks<strong> Fluid Nexus</strong> | workshop with Nicholas Knouf</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>11:00 – 17:00</em></p>
<p>reSource <strong>Floppy Films Workshop. Moving Images on 1.44 MB day #3</strong> | with Florian Cramer and guests</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>11:30 – 13:00</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 <strong>in/compatible symposium </strong></p>
<p><strong>in/compatible systems: War Machines: Military Technologies between Civility and Authority</strong> | panel with Tsila Hassine, Ziv Neeman, NN, moderated by Christopher Salter</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>14:00 – 15:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 <strong>in/compatible symposium </strong></p>
<p><strong>in/compatible publics: Disruptive Publics – Anonymity as a non-public Intervention Strategy</strong> | panel with Tatiana Bazzichelli, Gabriella Coleman, Jacob Appelbaum, Dana Buchzik, moderated by Krystian Woznicki</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>14:30 – 16:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 video programme <strong>Satellite Stories</strong></p>
<p><strong>Aiming at the Sky</strong> | screening a.o. in presence of Stefan Zeyen</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>15:00 – 18:15</em></p>
<p>reSource Markets <strong>Crashed Economy: Debugging and Rebooting</strong><em><br />
</em></p>
<p>part 1 <strong>What Capitalism?</strong> | presentation with Elanor Colleoni, Steve Lambert, Daniel G. Andújar / Technologies To The People</p>
<p>part 2 <strong>Hacking Finance, Rethinking Trade</strong> | presentation with Elanor Colleoni, Jaromil, Kate Rich, Shintaro Miyazaki</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>15:00 – 18:00</em></p>
<p>reSource Networks <strong>R15N &amp; Technologies of Miscommunication</strong> | workshop &amp; discussion a.o. with Dmytri Kleiner, Baruch Gottlieb + The Telekommunisten Network</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>16:00 – 17:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 <strong>in/compatible symposium</strong></p>
<p><strong>in/compatible aesthetics: Uncorporated Subversion: Tactics, Glitches, Archeologies</strong> | panel with Jussi Parikka, jon.satrom, Michael Dieter, Julio d&#8217;Escrivan, moderated by Rosa Menkman</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>18:00 – 19:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 <strong>in/compatible symposium </strong></p>
<p><strong>in/compatible publics: The incompatible public is occupied</strong> | keynote by Jodi Dean, moderated by  Krystian Woznicki</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>18:30 – 20:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 video programme <strong>Satellite Stories</strong></p>
<p><strong>Vertical Distraction</strong> | screening a.o. in presence of Dennis Feser , Nina Kurtela, Jeremy Bailey, Bjørn Melhus, Till Nowak , Thomas Mohr, Isabelle Hayeur</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>20:00 – 20:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 performance programme <strong>The Ghosts in the Machine</strong></p>
<p><strong>Thermal</strong> | by Mario de Vega</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>21:00 – 22:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 performance programme <strong>The Ghosts in the Machine</strong></p>
<p><strong>The Joshua Light Show</strong> | featuring Oneohtrix Point Never</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>/ Saturday 04 Feb 2012</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>10:00 – 22:00</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 Exhibition <strong>Dark Drives – Uneasy Energies in technological Times</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>11:00 – 12:30</em></p>
<p>reSource Sex <strong>Sexuality of Machines</strong> | discussion with Gabriella Coleman, Sergio Messina, Karla Grundick, Julianne Pierce</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>11:00 – 14:00</em></p>
<p>reSource Sex <strong>Bio-Game</strong> | workshop with Shu Lea Cheang &amp; Martin Hug</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>11:30 – 13:00</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 <strong>in/compatible symposium</strong></p>
<p><strong>in/compatible systems: Business as Unusual: Financial Crisis, Computing and Money Machines</strong> | panel with Georgios Papadopoulos, Orit Halpern, Stefan Heidenreich, Ralph Heidenreich, moderated by Christopher Salter</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>13:30 – 15:30</em></p>
<p>reSource Sex <strong>Commercialising Eros</strong> | discussion with Jacob Appelbaum, Liad Hussein Kantorowicz, Aliya Rakhmetova , Zach Blas, moderated by Gaia Novati + <strong>Watch Me Work</strong> | performance by Liad Hussein Kantorowicz, Kate Erhardt</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>14:00 – 15:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 <strong>in/compatible symposium</strong></p>
<p><strong>in/compatible publics: Publics in Crisis – Production, Regulation and <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/control/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Control">Control</a> of Publics</strong> | panel with Norifumi Ogawa, Liza Tsaliki, Anthony Iles, moderated by Krystian Woznicki</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>14:30 – 16:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 video programme <strong>Satellite Stories</strong></p>
<p><strong>Parallel Worlds </strong>| screening a.o. in presence of RASKIN (Rotraut Pape &amp; Andreas Coerper) , Laura Horelli , Sophie Kahn</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>15:00 – 18:00</em></p>
<p>reSource Sex <strong>Words of Advice for Young Pornographers</strong> | workshop with Sergio Messina</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>16:00 – 17:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 <strong>in/compatible symposium</strong></p>
<p><strong>in/compatible aesthetics: Unstable &amp; Vernacular: Vulgar &amp; Trivial Articulations of Networked Communication</strong> | panel with Florian Cramer, Olia Lialina, Camille Paloque-Berges, Dragan Espenschied, moderated by Rosa Menkman</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>16:30 – 18:00</em></p>
<p>reSource sex <strong>Porn, Patriotism and Paranoia on the Chinese Internet</strong> | presentation with Francesco Macarone Palmieri aka WARBEAR, Katrien Jacobs</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>18:00 – 19:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 <strong>in/compatible symposium</strong></p>
<p><strong>in/compatible aesthetics: Knotty Problems in the Fables of Computing</strong> | keynote by Matthew Fuller, moderated by Rosa Menkman</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>18:30 – 20:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 video programme <strong>Satellite Stories</strong></p>
<p><strong>The Sound of the End of Music</strong> | screening a.o. in presence of Aura Satz</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>20:00 – 20:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 performance programme <strong>The Ghosts in the Machine</strong></p>
<p><strong>The Shunted House</strong> | by Valerio Tricoli</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>21:00 – 22:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 performance programme <strong>The Ghosts in the Machine</strong></p>
<p><strong>The Joshua Light Show</strong> | featuring as a special highlight Manuel Göttsching (Ash Ra Tempel/Ashra)</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>/ Sunday 05 Feb 2012</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>10:00 – 22:00</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 Exhibition <strong>Dark Drives – Uneasy Energies in technological Times</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>11:00 – 13:30</em></p>
<p>25 years of transmediale <strong>transmediale Unarchived</strong> | presentation with Kristoffer Gansing, Dieter Daniels, Thomas Munz, Rudolf Frieling, <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/susanne-jaschko/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Susanne Jaschko">Susanne Jaschko</a>, moderated by Baruch Gottlieb</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>12:00 – 16:00</em></p>
<p>reSource <strong>Paperduino-Uno a paper PCB Workshop</strong> | workshop with Wolfgang Spahn</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>13:00 – 17:00</em></p>
<p>reSource Launch <strong>Zombie Play in the Ludic Salon: reSourcing an Exquisite Media Corpse</strong> | a game with Mark Butler, Daphne Dragona, Georg Russegger, Mathias Fuchs, Natascha Adamowsky, Gregor Sedlag, Roberta Buiani, Alessandra Renzi, Prayas Abhinav, Linda Hilfling, Ricardo Amaral, Pod</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>14:30 – 16:30</em></p>
<p>25 years of transmediale <strong>Search For A Method</strong> | panel with Wolfgang Ernst, Siegfried Zielinski, Inke Arns, Jussi Parikka, moderated by Timothy Druckrey</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>14:30 – 16:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 video programme <strong>Satellite Stories</strong></p>
<p><strong>Burning Symbols</strong> | screening a.o. in presence of Dellbrügge &amp; de Moll , Tom Holert</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>17:30 – 19:30</em></p>
<p><strong>beyond in/compatible</strong></p>
<p>part 1 <strong>the official launch of „resource for transmedial culture“ project</strong> | presentation with Tatiana Bazzichelli, Stephane Bauer, Jan Rohlf, Clemens Apprich, Oliver Lerone Schultz, moderated by Kristoffer Gansing</p>
<p>part 2 <strong>The Vilém Flusser Residency Programme</strong> | presentation by Claudia Becker and performative lecture by Georgios Papadopoulos (our 1st Flusser resident)</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>18:30 – 20:30</em></p>
<p>transmediale 2012 video programme <strong>Satellite Stories</strong></p>
<p><strong>A State of Fluidity</strong> | screening a.o. in presence of Maha Maamoun, Sarah Rifky</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=transmediale%202012%20Programme%20Overview" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=transmediale%202012%20Programme%20Overview" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><a class="a2a_button_tuenti" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tuenti?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;linkname=transmediale%202012%20Programme%20Overview" title="Tuenti" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tuenti.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tuenti"/></a><a class="a2a_button_tumblr" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tumblr?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;linkname=transmediale%202012%20Programme%20Overview" title="Tumblr" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tumblr.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tumblr"/></a><a class="a2a_button_linkedin" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/linkedin?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;linkname=transmediale%202012%20Programme%20Overview" title="LinkedIn" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/linkedin.png" width="16" height="16" alt="LinkedIn"/></a><a class="a2a_button_meneame" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/meneame?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;linkname=transmediale%202012%20Programme%20Overview" title="Meneame" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/meneame.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Meneame"/></a><a class="a2a_button_email" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;linkname=transmediale%202012%20Programme%20Overview" title="Email" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/email.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Email"/></a><a href="javascript:print()" title="Print" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/print.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Print"/></a><a href="javascript:if(document.all){window.external.AddFavorite('http://www.danielandujar.org/2012/01/13/transmediale-2012-programme-overview/','transmediale%202012%20Programme%20Overview')}else{var%20b=a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions%20||%20'Press%20Ctrl+D%20to%20bookmark%20this%20page';alert(a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions)}" title="Bookmark/Favorites" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/bookmark.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Bookmark/Favorites"/></a><a class="a2a_dd a2a_target addtoany_share_save" href="http://www.addtoany.com/share_save#url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2012%2F01%2F13%2Ftransmediale-2012-programme-overview%2F&amp;title=transmediale%202012%20Programme%20Overview" id="wpa2a_2">Share</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.danielandujar.org/2012/01/13/transmediale-2012-programme-overview/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>The Art of Hacking – or: Communication Guerrilla as Artistic Practice with New Media</title>
		<link>http://www.danielandujar.org/2004/05/01/the-art-of-hacking-%e2%80%93-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media/</link>
		<comments>http://www.danielandujar.org/2004/05/01/the-art-of-hacking-%e2%80%93-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 01 May 2004 09:19:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[English]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2004]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hack]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hacktivism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Phoney]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Susanne Jaschko]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Transmediale]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.danielandujar.org/?p=338</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In May 2004 Susanne Jaschko gave a lecture on &#8216;The Art of Hacking – or: Communication Guerrilla as Artistic Practice with New Media&#8217; and a presentation of selected video art pieces of last year&#8217;s transmediale festival during which they discussed both the aesthetics and exhibition formats of the works Introduction In 1998 a 21 year <a href='http://www.danielandujar.org/2004/05/01/the-art-of-hacking-%e2%80%93-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In May 2004 <a href="http://www.sujaschko.de" target="_blank">Susanne Jaschko</a> gave a <a href="http://www.sujaschko.de/en/research/leh/oslo.html" target="_blank">lecture</a> on &#8216;The Art of Hacking – or: Communication Guerrilla as Artistic Practice with New Media&#8217; and a presentation of selected video art pieces of last year&#8217;s <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/transmediale/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Transmediale">transmediale</a> festival during which they discussed both the aesthetics and exhibition formats of the works</p>
<p>Introduction</p>
<p>In 1998 a 21 year old guy named ïto messed up the world of marketing by inventing a very unconventional marketing campaign for a Macintosh computer: the so called “<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/hack/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Hack">hack</a>- Mac”.  This design for a computer cited a military look with camouflage pattern and a solid-defensive casing, thus looking like both a fancy accessoire and a possible weapon. Consequently, the campaign was made up with the obvious slogan “think weapon” in the original Apple Macintosh-fond and the apple motive in slightly darkened colours. <span id="more-338"></span></p>
<p>About 80 years before the 32 year old shooting star of the American art scene, Marcel Duchamps, started a campaign featuring good old Mona Lisa with a fashionable moustache. Duchamps used a postcard of the Mona Lisa painting and added the beard with pencil. He then sent out the so treated postcards and claimed them to be art.</p>
<p>Both projects are classical examples of use of guerrilla strategies in communication and art, the latter could even be taken for the first communication guerrilla activity in art history.</p>
<p>So what makes those two activities guerrilla campaigns?</p>
<p>Let’s start with Duchamps’ mail art action: his intention was to dodge the commercial art market and its traditional distribution channels by both bringing the art directly to the recipient and by pointing at the commercialisation and trivialisation of art. Therefore he uses the industrial product of an art postcard and deflowers the icon of Mona Lisa with a moustache. Naturally this provocative strategy arrested a lot of attention and lead to the aspired discussion. Thus Duchamps attacked the art system by the use of an ordinary communication system, the mail, and became a predecessor of the mail art movement that reached its zenith in the 50’s with the smart and provocative mails by Ray Johnson.</p>
<p>Coming back to the “hac-Mac”, ïto designed it without any commission by Apple Macintosh, though it looks like a real advertisement for a real computer, neither the computer existed nor was it published for Apple Macintosh’s commercial purpose. Instead it was only invented for the commercial purpose of the designer ïto, who at that time was rather unknown and who applied this campaign for the promotion of his freshly founded design label “Ora-ito”. Besides ïto designed a number of other virtual products and campaigns like a Gucci-house and promoted them on his website. From there those products were quickly picked up by design magazines that spread the information widely and provided ïto with international attention. In fact, ïto made use of a classical marketing strategy: the so-called “guerrilla marketing” that intends to achieve attention through surprising, extraordinary and entertaining actions with only a tiny budget.</p>
<p>Guerrilla Marketing was invented around the mid 60’s in the US first as a strategy of attack and attrition and the term “guerrilla marketing” referred to the then held dispute about the guerrilla tactics used in the Vietnam war. Since then guerrilla marketing has become a popular practice especially for small and financially weak companies as it promises maximum attention with a minimum capital invested.<br />
Significantly, Ito did not only apply guerrilla marketing tactics but created a fictional tool for guerrilla communication activities: a computer specifically designed for hacking.</p>
<p>Explaining the term</p>
<p>But what do I exactly mean by this catchy term communication guerrilla, which art projects and activities can be summarised under this idea in a meaningful way?</p>
<p>Starting with the semiotic roots of the composite term, the word ‘communication’ implicates ‘the act of communicating; transmission; the exchange of thoughts, messages, or information, as by speech, signals, writing, or behaviour’, whereas the term ‘communications’ stands for ‘a means of communicating, like a system, such as mail, telephone, or television, for sending and receiving messages or a network of routes for sending messages and transporting troops and supplies’.</p>
<p>‘Guerrilla’ means ‘an irregular, usually indigenous military or paramilitary unit operating in small bands in occupied territory to harass and undermine the enemy, as by surprise raids.’</p>
<p>Connecting both terms, the ‘Communication Guerrilla’ term describes an irregular, aggressive unit, operating with the help of communications and media to harass and undermine the power of the enemy who occupies (public) territory.</p>
<p>In the younger past, a huge number of strong media projects have been realised that make use of guerrilla tactics in order to intrude on social, political, economic or communication systems, and to infiltrate, misuse and alter them finally. Intrusion is usually achieved by hacking the borders of the respective system, and here the term ‘hacking’ is used regarding to its both meanings, which are ‘to break up the surface’ and ‘to gain access to a system or network illegally or without authorisation’.</p>
<p>Particularly in media culture, political <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/activism/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Activism">activism</a> and art melt into one another due to the quality of the Internet serving as a distribution channel both for information and for art, and its ability to connect communities of artists and activists globally. Internet is fiercely embattled public territory that after some initial moments of cultural and legal liberty progressively was understood by entrepreneurship and the <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/global/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Global">global</a> market leaders as economic space where the old juridical and capitalist system should be applied.</p>
<p>This occupation of territory caused a vivid and diverse countermovement that today is labelled with terms like ‘net piracy’ or ‘net activism’ which have the creation of an innovative economic, political and cultural system in view including the account for copy left and open source. In his article ‘pirates in the kingdom of data’ Bernhard Günther illuminates the history of piracy and its connection to net activism and comes to the surprising conclusion that pirates’ republics were ancestors of welfare states because of their distinct court system and progressive democracy. Consequently it is stated, that ‘net piracy’ could have the same potential of pointing to a future social and economic system.<br />
So does Communication Guerrilla Art, which is not limited to the Internet as public domain only and creates space for new utopias by radical means.</p>
<p>Whilst some guerrilla art activities are executed in reality, others just quote guerrilla tactics in order to confuse and operate indirectly. Often the amateur recipient or viewer cannot recognise the difference between the real and the fictional hack.</p>
<p>In order to illustrate what Guerrilla Art is all about I would like to show one first example from 1999 that exactly sounds the boundaries between fiction and real attack. The video by the Spanish Manuel Saiz is entitled ‘Video Hacking’ and a suitable beginning for it shifts between a satire with its humorous and entertaining qualities and a documentary that can be taken for serious. It focuses on the question of authorship and intellectual property in art.</p>
<p>Pre-requisites of Guerrilla Art</p>
<p>In Media Art, we can detect four mayor pre-requisites for the emergence of communication guerrilla tactics:<br />
-    the availability of the medium<br />
-    the deep impact of technology on life<br />
-    the cultural and economic surplus in society<br />
-    the politicisation of art in general</p>
<p>The first point, the availability of the medium, is evident: since the computer has become an affordable machine in the 90’s, it rapidly became a medium for artistic expression. With the Internet, it quickly evolved into a networked communication machine, thus offering artists a new channel for distribution of art and for forming new audience groups.</p>
<p>Secondly, computer technology has a deep impact on our everyday live: it led to sustainable changes of working processes, communication, medicine, travelling etc. This dependence on technology has deeply affected personal value systems and interpersonal relationships. The actual scope of the implied consequences is by no way clear, but is by common consent taken for the biggest societal shift since the industrial revolution.</p>
<p>Thirdly, I would argue that we live in times of a large cultural and economic surplus in the western world: we produce more cultural content and goods than we can consume or even need. In face of both, mass media creating an oversupply of aesthetic appeals, and the everyday encounter and consumption of art in urban environment, the use of guerrilla tactics in art and in economy promises attention. In his publication “Reiz und Rührung – über ästhetische Empfindungen” (appeal and emotion – about aesthetic sensation), Konrad Paul Liessmann who teaches philosophy at the Vienna University) puts it like this: “One could risk the thesis that the efforts in contemporary art first and foremost aimed at evoking mixed feelings in radical and intensive forms through pushing the boundaries of the general understanding of art.”</p>
<p>Finally, we can observe a general and international politicisation of art and culture. Current shows like documenta or Venice Biennial document a large field of art production dealing with political, social or economic topics whilst it remains fairly unclear if it’s the present curatorial trend that entails this specific art production or if curators just pick up an enhancing trend in art readily. However, art and culture undergo a noticeable shift of content and form towards a reflection of the everyday reality and its potential conflicts.</p>
<p>Hacking legal borders</p>
<p>The discussion about copy left, open source, liberty of information has had a deep impact on the creative work with technology and results in a couple of outstanding pieces that do not only cross the borders of legality but also undermine the current concept of art.</p>
<p>As a kind of introduction to this chapter I will show a short video by Robert Luxemburg that is taken from the film ‘Matrix’. In Matrix the hero Leo fights against a system of machines ruling the world and exploiting humans. Luxemburg took one of the key scenes of Matrix in which Leo learns about the ‘system’ that he should counter. By ripping the movie (which explains its bad quality) and framing it anew, Luxemburg cleverly employs the protagonist’s statement about the ‘system’ against the economic Hollywood system in which it was born.</p>
<p>In this year’s transmediale competition Luxemburg was nominated with a piece titled ‘The Conceptual Crisis of Private Property as a Crisis in Practice’ for the so-called Software Art Award. The piece’s title is derived from a quote from the book ‘Empire’ by Michael Hardt and Toni Negri: &#8220;The conceptual crisis of private property does not become a crisis in practice, and instead the regime of private expropriation has tended to be applied universally.” In the main, the book‘Empire’supposes a reorganisation of the global society and economic system based on the idea of a global network. In this network the principle of sharing dominates and leverages the ancient capitalist profit orientated system.</p>
<p>Luxemburg’s piece is in its core a software programme that is not distributed in binary format, but as a screenshot which can be printed and actually is for sale. The screenshot shows the complete source code which, if executed, transforms the screenshot into the full text of the novel ‘Cryptonomicon’ by Neal Stephenson. This novel not only deals with cryptography, but was actually subject to U.S. export restrictions since it contained a cryptographic algorithm that was considered a trade secret. As you can see, again a download window of ‘Matrix’ appears as a reference to the ‘system’ that should be fought against.<br />
The screenshot, as an artistic work, may be the ‘intellectual property’ of Robert Luxemburg, but, as a piece of software, inherits the free software license.<br />
So on the one hand the screenshot is a circumvention device exploiting the structural flaws in the concept of ‘intellectual property’; on the other hand it is a highly complex, almost labyrinthine and conceptual piece of art.</p>
<p>There isn’t a long history in crime as art, maybe the Russian Alexander Brener can be named as one of its ancestors.  His spraying of a green dollar sign on Kasimir Malevich’s painting Suprematism’ and adjacent hunger strike were aiming at fighting art as commodity.</p>
<p>Though media art in big parts opposes the traditional art market and the common notion of art indirectly, there are only few examples of direct fight against the art system.<br />
Instead the hack of legality in media art takes place in various juridical grey zones. I would like to give two more examples of hacking legal borders:</p>
<p>RE-CODE.COM was a free web service that allowed its customers to share product information and create barcodes that can be printed and used to re-code items in stores by placing new labels over existing barcodes to set a lower price.  RE-CODE.COM at its core was a shared database, update able by customers.</p>
<p>It was meant so be a satire and a mockery of the website PRICELINE.COM, made to look nearly identical to its counterpart that uses as they call it “revolutionary&#8221; advertising approach to entice people to name their own price for goods and services.</p>
<p>After going live on March 12th, 2003, the RE-CODE.com web site went unnoticed for close to 10 days when suddenly it began receiving attention. The project was presented on March 23 at the Museum of Contemporary Arts in Chicago. On April 10th, RE-CODE.com received a cease and desist letter from attorneys representing the world&#8217;s largest retail employer, Wal-Mart.<br />
The video shows an extract of the project’s documentation by the authors that was made after the website was taken down.</p>
<p>Another project called ‘Minds of Concern’ by the artist group Knobotic Research was equally stopped when it was first exhibited in May 2002 at the New Museum of Contemporary Art New York. Minds of Concern determines the borders of what is and what is not legal in the (US) public domain and tries to seek out the areas of friction between an active construction of the public domain, the expansive US legal system, and the dimensions of an intensively patrolled, supposedly open communication and information infrastructure like the Internet. The art project consists of a spatial installation designed by Peter Sandbichler and a web interface. The installation is build with a woven hyperbolic matrix out of the risk factor band which creates a border in the space, closes the passage through the space. Knowbotic Research designed a software, the so called, ‘Public Domain Scanner’ which remotely audits the server of Non-Governmental Organisations and inquires their state of security. This act of scanning the public domain on the Internet is on view in the installation, and insecure servers which are easily to attack are published. After the opening of the show and heavy press coverage, the Museum was set under pressure and finally decided to cut it of from the Internet. Though the Public Domain Scanner did not actually harm any of the NGOs servers, the hack itself was assesses to be illegal.</p>
<p>Hacking Technical Borders</p>
<p>The core of the ‘Minds of Concern’ project was the hack of the servers’ security system, so to say the hack of a technical border. The next step would be the infiltration of a virus into a system. Actually, the artistic potential of viruses was nicely on show in the exhibition ‘I love you’, first shown at the Frankfurt Museum for Applied art in 2002. It put the conflicting and divers scene of virus culture on display and presented a recommendable chronology of computer viruses. Beside parasitic viruses that are built in order to destroy data, particularly the 90’s gave birth to a number of artistic software programmes designed and acting like viruses. Maybe the ‘Cascade Virus’ could be taken as a starting point for this emerging field. This virus was released in 1988 and produces a waterfall effect with letters raining down on the display screen. Today, activists and artists like Jaromil or epidemiC create virus programmes that still search for the weaknesses of the system and direct our attention towards their loopholes but at the same time produce an aesthetic result. For most virus programmers no borderline between art and programming does exist. In the catalogue of the ‘I love you’ show, Massimo Ferronato states for the virus scene that he is part of: ‘The viruses are manifestation of creative brain work, which projects the name of its creator in the scene and in the outside world, a replicant capable of travelling in a way that sends out a message about the accomplishment of its inventor.’ And furthermore: ‘Programming is not seen as a means for producing art but an art form in its own right, valued using criteria of beauty, elegance, proportion and effectiveness.’<br />
A first encounter of the two rather hermetic scenes of contemporary art and the art of programming took place in 2001 at Venice Biennial when the representatives of Slovenia, epidemiC collective and the group 01001101110101101.org, launched the biennale.py virus that attached itself to rather rare Macintosh .py and .pyw files in the Biennial’s network but caused no real damage. During the Biennial the source code of biennale.py was on show at the Slovenian Pavilion.<br />
In their press release the artists’ collective state about the function and impact of the virus:</p>
<p>“…a virus wants to exist instinctively and without mediations, and it is just this the main and only function of &#8220;biennale.py&#8221;: to survive. A new idea of a &#8220;virus that is not just a virus&#8221; is gaining acceptance, and that it can represent the outbreak of the social into the most social thing of all: the Net. (…)The paradox becomes even clearer if you think that the virus, a vague and dangerous entity by definition, is for sale to adventurous curators and collectors. To buy a computer virus is probably one of the most exciting investment one could make today.”</p>
<p>But as the virus was relatively harmless and easy to remove, and there wasn’t any aesthetic output, Biennale.by did not arrest big attention – which made it to one of the weak communication guerrilla projects.</p>
<p>Hacking Surveillance Systems</p>
<p>One of the favourite targets for hacks is definitely the ubiquitous surveillance system. Long time ago, public sphere has lost its innocence when surveillance cameras entered almost unnoticed, and wiretapping and <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/control/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Control">control</a> of data traffic on the Internet became standard under protection of law especially after the tightening up in the follow-up of 9-11. Artists strongly responded to this increase of surveillance with their artistic work or campaigns, often by using the same technology as the one that they were acting against or by revealing and attacking the respective system’s weak point. A good survey of works can be found in the exhibition <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/control/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Control">Control</a> space that was shown at he ZKM in Karlsruhe <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/germany/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Germany">Germany</a> in 2002.</p>
<p>With the reproduction of a famous spy software called DCS1000 used by the FBI to perform electronic wiretaps a whole field of artistic experimentation evolved. The Radical Software Group improved the programme and offered it publicly under the title ‘Carnivore’ for artistic use. At the heart of the project is CarnivorePE, a software application that listens to all Internet traffic (email, web surfing, etc.) on a specific local network. Next, CarnivorePE serves this data stream to interfaces called &#8220;clients.&#8221; A number of artists have designed clients that animate, diagnose, or interpret the network traffic in various ways. So does the client ‘Back and White CNN’ by the famous Net Art veteran Mark Napier. It connects to the internet traffic on the website of CNN.com and transforms the data into clouds of black and white pixels. This visualisation of data can be altered interactively, so that not only the clouds change their appearance due to the individual data passing the client but also though manipulation of the visitor.<br />
In 1996, a group named Surveillance Camera Players began to create made-for Closed-Circuit-Television versions of avant-garde plays, such as Alfred Jarry’s ‘Ubu Roi’and Samuel Beckett’s ‘Waiting for Godot’ and performed the so edited plays in front of surveillance cameras in public space. In 1998 the last literary work, ‘1984’ by George Orwell was adapted, since then the group shifted to performances for the benefit of members of the public who stop to watch their plays in the street or the subway and less for those monitoring the screens. Whilst before 1998 the plays were silent versions only made for the guard staff in front of the monitor, the newer performances directly address also the people on the street and convey a much simpler message.<br />
The participatory network project Track the Trackers is designed to target the same CCTV system, but with a different technology and tactical media components. The work makes use of existing personal technologies in conjunction with the satellite GPS infrastructure to provide participants with an expanded audible experience of the proliferation of video surveillance in the urban public sphere. The mobile unit, a bag containing a laptop, GPS-receiver, earphones, and a generic mouse is taken on a walk through the city. The sound in the headphones changes whenever the participant enters the vicinity of a surveillance camera. This effect is not automatic but created by other participants who are continuously adding new locations to the existing database.<br />
The Internet platform servers as an exchange point for these coordinates: the data gathered in this way is made available to the other participants by uploading it.</p>
<p>The conjoined hack</p>
<p>‘Track the Trackers’ made use of what has been labelled by Geert Lovinck and David Garcia as ‘tactical media’ which are ‘media of crisis, critics and opposition’ and which direct our attention towards a system’s sore point and demanding for the better, often for the utopia, for the unreachable.</p>
<p>The potential of tactical media lies in its quality to build communities as solid structures of participation in which artistic activism evolves. Often artists only design a process or tool whereas active participants carry out the real action. Beside Track the Trackers, another good example for this is the public participatory performance ‘Radioballett’ (radio ballet) by the German radio group Ligna which was premiered at the Hamburg central station in 2002. Its subheading was ‘Übung in unnötigem Aufenthalt’ (exercise in superfluous stay). The performance took action against the practise of the railway company Deutsche Bahn to ban people who want to stay at the station without consuming or travelling. The project used the radio aside the usual way and aimed at constituting a kind of counter-public in quasi public space. In the up-run of the performance leaflets were distributed inviting people to turn up at the station and to bring a radio and headphones. Over 300 people without any intention to buy or travel finally appeared, dispersed at the platforms and the adjunct shopping centre and executed the performance. They moved simultaneously after the instructions transmitted by the local and non-commercial radio channel FSK. Thus gestures and behaviour that the Deutsche Bahn tries to eliminate were brought back to what is usually still perceived as public space.<br />
This occupation of space to some degree likens the occupation of web-servers for instance through the community of users of the ‘AntiMafia’ Software. The AntiMafia program was created by the group epidemiC and is a software programme for co-ordination of collective actions as social events and campaigns. Once the programme is installed on your PC, your computer acts as a node in the AnitMafia community of users. Exchange of information takes place through the Gnutella protocol, so anyone in the community can easily initiate new actions like server blockades and any community member can participate just by registering at the AntiMafia list for the blockade. The rest, which in case of blockade is the connecting to the respective server, is done by your computer automatically.</p>
<p>The channel Internet is a perfect place for collecting and distributing information which was formerly difficult to access. With the Internet an huge number of alternative, participatory information services like for instance ‘Guerrilla News’ popped up, and a couple of artists developed work into a similar direction. Out of these two of the most exposed ones are They Rule by Josh on and the Future farmers and BorderXing Guide by the British Heath Bunting. They Rule was extremely covered by press and widely shown in art shows because it reveals the closely interwoven power structure of the US American economy reminding one of a secret society. This information is open to all Internet users and can even be filled with new maps. Instead the Borderxing Guide allows only access to registered users and can only be visited on a couple of computers around the world that are admitted by Bunting. On the website of Borderxing Guide Bunting publishes information about his illegal crossings of European borders, together with directions of walking, photographs and maps of the area and lists of equipment and do’s and don’ts.<br />
So Bunting addresses questions of immigration, illegality, national state and makes possible visitors to his website painfully experience borders, limited access and registration procedures.</p>
<p>Hacking Human Borders: Deceit and Hoaxes</p>
<p>I want to close my lecture by coming back to the fictional projects that do not primarily aim at hacking technical borders but instead successfully hack human borders. These are artistic works that predominantly pretend and act as a sort of virus which infects man instead of machine, or like Armin Medosch put it: ‘creep in the human feeling world like a Trojan horse.’<br />
I guess we all have experienced virus hoaxes that flood our E-mail accounts since its first breed in 1988, and nearly everyone at least once has been taken in by hoaxes like the Japanese kittens in glass bricks or the famous Internet cleaning day hoax.<br />
Political hoaxes like the online auction of votes for George W. Bush by the activist group Ubermorgen arrested enormous attention such as 400 press articles and finally led to 4 charges and the shutdown of the site.<br />
Naturally virus hoaxes are a very effective marketing tool for anti-virus software sales, because they make people feel insecure and stir their fear of losing control. Fictional guerrilla art uses the same strategy and takes advantage of the illiteracy of the recipient. In order to deceive him, artists try to provoke strong emotions and follow the formal rules and conditions of a real event -  just as E-mail hoaxes do that pick up the semiotic and semantic schemes of real E-mails.<br />
Within the Net Art scene there have been a couple of hoaxes that in a very smart way pretended professional debates for example between the theoretician Timothy Druckery and the net artist and poet Mark Amerika or the argument between the renown net activist Geert Lovink and ICANN expert Ted Byfield.<br />
In 2000 the fictional artist Netochka Nezvanova appeared on the stage of media art. Named after a famous character in a novel fragment by Dostojewski, Nezvanova started to post on net art mailing lists. Her postings were extremely polemic, provocative and arty; additionally she authored some artistic software with which she won several awards like the transmediale software award in 2001. To those occasions every time someone else showed up as Netochka Nezvanova and never did what had been agreed upon. So for example at transmediale, the person who claimed to be Nezvanova came for a lecture about her Nebula software in a white dress containing living insects. She successfully hacked the transmediale programme as she preferred to read poems instead of explaining the artistic software.</p>
<p>In 1999 the Spanish artist, Daniel Andujar distributed and exhibited a CD-ROM called ‘<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/phoney/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Phoney">Phoney</a>’ that in case of execution of its programmes would attack telecommunication networks through dialling in and launching viruses or spy programmes like Trojan horses. The actual processes that any amateur user of the CD-ROM could easily set going were visible on the computer screen and looked so authentic that it caused maze and fear among users. Most people, who started the programme out of curiosity, ignoring the initial warnings, were convinced to really hack the network and became frightened of the possible consequences of this illegal action. Thus the project achieved what it was aiming at: growing awareness of the weakness of computer networks, recognition of a missing technical or a personal inhibition threshold.</p>
<p>The last project that I want to refer to is a video by the Bureau of Inverse Technology which in 2001 won the International Media Art prize of the ZKM in Karlsruhe, Germany. The video ‘Bit plane’ was recorded by mini camera attached to a model aircraft that flew over the area of the Silicon Valley. It recorded pictures of famous hardware and software company buildings like Xerox and HP, thus moving to an allegedly inaccessible air space and illegally collecting modern effigies of the real. The bad quality of the video and its drop-outs support its authenticity and improve its abstract quality. The commentary supposes that the disturbances actually are caused by companies’ air shield and thus evokes associations of military protection systems.</p>
<p>These fictional projects that infect us like viruses reinforce our immune system and sustain our scepticism. They all aim at stopping us to believe ourselves safe and to attract our attention to the obscurity of categories and simple explanations. When facing such a project we are forced to practice our abilities to judge and become alert the next time we have an encounter with apparently easy-to-judge incidents.</p>
<p>Resume</p>
<p>This leads me to some final thoughts about the type of work that I have shown and contextualised during the past hour: As I have said already in the beginning, the presented projects are very difficult to categorise simply as art or as political activities, many lie just in between or oppose to any of those classifications. Actually most project authors don’t understand themselves as artists and try to avoid any kind of statement on their type of work – or even further any kind of contact with the contemporary art system. So it does not surprise that institutions like contemporary art museums or galleries often refuse to exhibit and contextualize communication guerrilla art projects. The deepness of that gap between the institutions and media art practice is emphasized in a statement by Friedrich Kittler, who teaches aesthetics and history of media at the <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/berlin/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Berlin">Berlin</a> Humboldt University. In his comment on the winners of the International Media Art Prize of the ZKM in 2001, where ‘Bit Plane’ won and he was on the jury, he demands for a computer art that eventually should drop the old concepts of the ‘oeuvre’ or and the ‘object’, be it a CD ROM or a video tape.</p>
<p>Evidently a large segment of media art and some parts of the contemporary visual art reject any labelling and ask strongly for a different treatment on both levels: sensual perception and intellectual analysis. Those content-heavy, often process-based and participatory projects that we have seen do not address the art sensorium like eyes and ears predominantly. This might be regarded as a weak point and to some degree I share this view. But the neglect of beauty and the overemphasis of the real and righteous is a current trend in art that is evident throughout all media.</p>
<p>Using technology for artistic purposes has broadened the playground and expanded the forms of artistic expression as well as the way of working creatively. The quantity of works with new media do not fit to ordinary and traditional concepts of art but ask for new ways of thinking, judging and understanding. This kind of artistic media practice takes place outside the museum mainly, and finds only a forum in bottom-up organisations like media art festivals or media labs and initiatives which still operate aside the main contemporary art scene.</p>
<p>These festivals, media art associations and exhibition spaces are ‘attention machines’ in their field, comparable to what contemporary art museums are for their audiences. Once a piece or project has accessed this platform successfully, the media art community notices and very often salvages the creative work. The media art system to some degree is still like a parallel world beside the ‘real’ art system that is more compatible to the market and the audience.</p>
<p>It should be asked whether guerrilla art projects are still effective if they don’t leave the media art ghetto. Projects like re-code.com or Minds of concern hit the public because they leave the art system and multiply its effect though press publishing.<br />
Videos like Bit Plane or Video Hacking only function in the small ghetto of the media art system, thus reaching only a rather limited audience which is already critical and shares the views of their authors.</p>
<p>However, beside the variety of projects (and I’ve shown only parts) which might be summarized under the term of communication guerrilla and which may be labelled as art or not in the future, there is interesting creative artistic work with new media that waits to be discovered and experienced.</p>
<div class="ngg-related-gallery"><a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/IMGP1447.JPG" title="" rel="lightbox[related-images-for-the-art-of-hacking-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media]" ><img title="IMGP1447.JPG" alt="IMGP1447.JPG" src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/thumbs/thumbs_IMGP1447.JPG" /></a>
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/IMGP1473.JPG" title="" rel="lightbox[related-images-for-the-art-of-hacking-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media]" ><img title="IMGP1473.JPG" alt="IMGP1473.JPG" src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/thumbs/thumbs_IMGP1473.JPG" /></a>
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/IMGP1471.JPG" title="" rel="lightbox[related-images-for-the-art-of-hacking-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media]" ><img title="IMGP1471.JPG" alt="IMGP1471.JPG" src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/thumbs/thumbs_IMGP1471.JPG" /></a>
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/sevilla.JPG" title="" rel="lightbox[related-images-for-the-art-of-hacking-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media]" ><img title="sevilla.JPG" alt="sevilla.JPG" src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/thumbs/thumbs_sevilla.JPG" /></a>
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/IMGP1442.JPG" title="" rel="lightbox[related-images-for-the-art-of-hacking-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media]" ><img title="IMGP1442.JPG" alt="IMGP1442.JPG" src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/thumbs/thumbs_IMGP1442.JPG" /></a>
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/projects/sevilla/IMGP1460.JPG" title="ESPACIO ABIERTO SEVILLA (INDIVIDUAL CITIZEN REPUBLIC PROJECT).Open Space Sevilla" rel="lightbox[related-images-for-the-art-of-hacking-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media]" ><img title="IMGP1460.JPG" alt="IMGP1460.JPG" src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/projects/sevilla/thumbs/thumbs_IMGP1460.JPG" /></a>
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/IMGP1456.JPG" title="" rel="lightbox[related-images-for-the-art-of-hacking-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media]" ><img title="IMGP1456.JPG" alt="IMGP1456.JPG" src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/thumbs/thumbs_IMGP1456.JPG" /></a>
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/projects/sevilla/IMGP1465.JPG" title="ESPACIO ABIERTO SEVILLA (INDIVIDUAL CITIZEN REPUBLIC PROJECT).Open Space Sevilla" rel="lightbox[related-images-for-the-art-of-hacking-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media]" ><img title="IMGP1465.JPG" alt="IMGP1465.JPG" src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/projects/sevilla/thumbs/thumbs_IMGP1465.JPG" /></a>
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/IMGP1443.JPG" title="" rel="lightbox[related-images-for-the-art-of-hacking-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media]" ><img title="IMGP1443.JPG" alt="IMGP1443.JPG" src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/thumbs/thumbs_IMGP1443.JPG" /></a>
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/IMGP1453.JPG" title="" rel="lightbox[related-images-for-the-art-of-hacking-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media]" ><img title="IMGP1453.JPG" alt="IMGP1453.JPG" src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/gallery/album/sevilla/thumbs/thumbs_IMGP1453.JPG" /></a>
</div>
<p><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=The%20Art%20of%20Hacking%20%E2%80%93%20or%3A%20Communication%20Guerrilla%20as%20Artistic%20Practice%20with%20New%20Media" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=The%20Art%20of%20Hacking%20%E2%80%93%20or%3A%20Communication%20Guerrilla%20as%20Artistic%20Practice%20with%20New%20Media" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><a class="a2a_button_tuenti" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tuenti?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;linkname=The%20Art%20of%20Hacking%20%E2%80%93%20or%3A%20Communication%20Guerrilla%20as%20Artistic%20Practice%20with%20New%20Media" title="Tuenti" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tuenti.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tuenti"/></a><a class="a2a_button_tumblr" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tumblr?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;linkname=The%20Art%20of%20Hacking%20%E2%80%93%20or%3A%20Communication%20Guerrilla%20as%20Artistic%20Practice%20with%20New%20Media" title="Tumblr" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tumblr.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tumblr"/></a><a class="a2a_button_linkedin" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/linkedin?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;linkname=The%20Art%20of%20Hacking%20%E2%80%93%20or%3A%20Communication%20Guerrilla%20as%20Artistic%20Practice%20with%20New%20Media" title="LinkedIn" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/linkedin.png" width="16" height="16" alt="LinkedIn"/></a><a class="a2a_button_meneame" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/meneame?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;linkname=The%20Art%20of%20Hacking%20%E2%80%93%20or%3A%20Communication%20Guerrilla%20as%20Artistic%20Practice%20with%20New%20Media" title="Meneame" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/meneame.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Meneame"/></a><a class="a2a_button_email" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;linkname=The%20Art%20of%20Hacking%20%E2%80%93%20or%3A%20Communication%20Guerrilla%20as%20Artistic%20Practice%20with%20New%20Media" title="Email" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/email.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Email"/></a><a href="javascript:print()" title="Print" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/print.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Print"/></a><a href="javascript:if(document.all){window.external.AddFavorite('http://www.danielandujar.org/2004/05/01/the-art-of-hacking-%e2%80%93-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media/','The%20Art%20of%20Hacking%20–%20or:%20Communication%20Guerrilla%20as%20Artistic%20Practice%20with%20New%20Media')}else{var%20b=a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions%20||%20'Press%20Ctrl+D%20to%20bookmark%20this%20page';alert(a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions)}" title="Bookmark/Favorites" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/bookmark.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Bookmark/Favorites"/></a><a class="a2a_dd a2a_target addtoany_share_save" href="http://www.addtoany.com/share_save#url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2004%2F05%2F01%2Fthe-art-of-hacking-%25e2%2580%2593-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media%2F&amp;title=The%20Art%20of%20Hacking%20%E2%80%93%20or%3A%20Communication%20Guerrilla%20as%20Artistic%20Practice%20with%20New%20Media" id="wpa2a_4">Share</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.danielandujar.org/2004/05/01/the-art-of-hacking-%e2%80%93-or-communication-guerrilla-as-artistic-practice-with-new-media/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>lux ziffer #3</title>
		<link>http://www.danielandujar.org/2002/08/27/lux-ziffer-3-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.danielandujar.org/2002/08/27/lux-ziffer-3-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Aug 2002 09:07:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[English]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lux ziffer#01]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Phoney]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Transmediale]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.danielandujar.org/?p=336</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[an anonymous award for those who feed or fight the digital dragon the lux ziffer award was first assigned at transmediale.01. lux ziffer #1went to Daniel Garcia Andujar for his CD-Rom Phoney TM, which in adisquieting way pretends to unlawfully access private data and to executeother illegal Internet actions . now the prize, which is <a href='http://www.danielandujar.org/2002/08/27/lux-ziffer-3-2/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>an anonymous award for those who feed or fight the digital dragon</p>
<p>the lux ziffer award was first assigned at <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/transmediale/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Transmediale">transmediale</a>.01. lux ziffer #1went to Daniel Garcia Andujar for his CD-Rom <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/phoney/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Phoney">Phoney</a> TM, which in adisquieting way pretends to unlawfully access private data and to executeother illegal Internet actions .</p>
<p>now the prize, which is awarded by an anonymous person, is again presentedat transmediale.03: it implies a cash prize of 666 euro for projects whichpursue a &#8216;cannibalistic, digital concept for the future&#8217;.</p>
<p>lux ziffer #3 addresses artists who do not subordinate themselves to anapparent system of rules of the digital universe, but feel provoked tocircumvent, to break, to reinterpret or to subvert these rules in askillful and creative manner.</p>
<pre>information at
<a href="http://www.geocities.com/luxziffer/">http://www.geocities.com/luxziffer/</a>
<a href="http://www.transmediale.de/">http://www.transmediale.de</a></pre>
<p><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=lux%20ziffer%20%233" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=lux%20ziffer%20%233" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><a class="a2a_button_tuenti" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tuenti?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;linkname=lux%20ziffer%20%233" title="Tuenti" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tuenti.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tuenti"/></a><a class="a2a_button_tumblr" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tumblr?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;linkname=lux%20ziffer%20%233" title="Tumblr" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tumblr.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tumblr"/></a><a class="a2a_button_linkedin" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/linkedin?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;linkname=lux%20ziffer%20%233" title="LinkedIn" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/linkedin.png" width="16" height="16" alt="LinkedIn"/></a><a class="a2a_button_meneame" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/meneame?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;linkname=lux%20ziffer%20%233" title="Meneame" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/meneame.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Meneame"/></a><a class="a2a_button_email" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;linkname=lux%20ziffer%20%233" title="Email" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/email.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Email"/></a><a href="javascript:print()" title="Print" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/print.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Print"/></a><a href="javascript:if(document.all){window.external.AddFavorite('http://www.danielandujar.org/2002/08/27/lux-ziffer-3-2/','lux%20ziffer%20#3')}else{var%20b=a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions%20||%20'Press%20Ctrl+D%20to%20bookmark%20this%20page';alert(a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions)}" title="Bookmark/Favorites" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/bookmark.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Bookmark/Favorites"/></a><a class="a2a_dd a2a_target addtoany_share_save" href="http://www.addtoany.com/share_save#url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3-2%2F&amp;title=lux%20ziffer%20%233" id="wpa2a_6">Share</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.danielandujar.org/2002/08/27/lux-ziffer-3-2/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>lux ziffer #3</title>
		<link>http://www.danielandujar.org/2002/08/27/lux-ziffer-3/</link>
		<comments>http://www.danielandujar.org/2002/08/27/lux-ziffer-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Aug 2002 09:03:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Deutsch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lux ziffer#01]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Phoney]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Transmediale]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.danielandujar.org/?p=334</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[an anonymous award for those who feed or fight the digital dragon zum ersten mal wurde der lux ziffer award bei der transmediale.01 vergeben.lux ziffer #1 ging an Daniel Garcia Andujar für seine CD-Rom Phoney TM, dieillegale zugriffe auf nicht-oeffentliche daten und andere ungesetzlicheinternet-aktionen beunruhigend realistisch vortaeuschte. nun wird der preis, der von einer anonymen <a href='http://www.danielandujar.org/2002/08/27/lux-ziffer-3/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>an anonymous award for those who feed or fight the digital dragon</p>
<p>zum ersten mal wurde der lux ziffer award bei der <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/transmediale/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Transmediale">transmediale</a>.01 vergeben.lux ziffer #1 ging an Daniel Garcia Andujar für seine CD-Rom <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/phoney/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Phoney">Phoney</a> TM, dieillegale zugriffe auf nicht-oeffentliche daten und andere ungesetzlicheinternet-aktionen beunruhigend realistisch vortaeuschte.</p>
<p>nun wird der preis, der von einer anonymen person vergeben wird, zurtransmediale.03 neu aufgelegt: es winkt ein preisgeld von 666 euro fuersolche projekte, die ein &#8216;kannibalistisches, digitales konzept fuer diezukunft&#8217; verfolgen.</p>
<p>der lux ziffer #3 richtet sich vor allem an diejenigen kuenstler, die sichkeiner scheinbaren gesetzmaessigkeit des digitalen universums unterordnen,sondern sich herausgefordert fuehlen, diese geschickt und kreativ zuumgehen, auf zu heben, neu zu deuten oder gar gegen sich selbst zu wenden.</p>
<pre>infos unter
<a href="http://www.geocities.com/luxziffer/">http://www.geocities.com/luxziffer/</a>
<a href="http://www.transmediale.de/">http://www.transmediale.de</a></pre>
<p><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=lux%20ziffer%20%233" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=lux%20ziffer%20%233" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><a class="a2a_button_tuenti" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tuenti?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;linkname=lux%20ziffer%20%233" title="Tuenti" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tuenti.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tuenti"/></a><a class="a2a_button_tumblr" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tumblr?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;linkname=lux%20ziffer%20%233" title="Tumblr" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tumblr.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tumblr"/></a><a class="a2a_button_linkedin" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/linkedin?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;linkname=lux%20ziffer%20%233" title="LinkedIn" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/linkedin.png" width="16" height="16" alt="LinkedIn"/></a><a class="a2a_button_meneame" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/meneame?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;linkname=lux%20ziffer%20%233" title="Meneame" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/meneame.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Meneame"/></a><a class="a2a_button_email" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;linkname=lux%20ziffer%20%233" title="Email" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/email.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Email"/></a><a href="javascript:print()" title="Print" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/print.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Print"/></a><a href="javascript:if(document.all){window.external.AddFavorite('http://www.danielandujar.org/2002/08/27/lux-ziffer-3/','lux%20ziffer%20#3')}else{var%20b=a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions%20||%20'Press%20Ctrl+D%20to%20bookmark%20this%20page';alert(a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions)}" title="Bookmark/Favorites" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/bookmark.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Bookmark/Favorites"/></a><a class="a2a_dd a2a_target addtoany_share_save" href="http://www.addtoany.com/share_save#url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2002%2F08%2F27%2Flux-ziffer-3%2F&amp;title=lux%20ziffer%20%233" id="wpa2a_8">Share</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.danielandujar.org/2002/08/27/lux-ziffer-3/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>transmediale 01 award ceremony</title>
		<link>http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/02/10/transmediale-01-award-ceremony/</link>
		<comments>http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/02/10/transmediale-01-award-ceremony/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 10 Feb 2001 09:57:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[English]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2001]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lux ziffer#01]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Phoney]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Transmediale]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.danielandujar.org/?p=226</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Presentation of the awards, February 10th, 8.30 pm The award ceremony of this year&#8217;s transmediale.01 for the categories Video, Interactive and Artistic Software took place on Saturday evening. Together with all the shortlisted artists, artist&#8217;s groups and numerous international guests, the State Minister for Culture and Media Prof. Julian Nida-Rümelin awaited the announcement of the <a href='http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/02/10/transmediale-01-award-ceremony/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Presentation of the awards, February 10th, 8.30 pm</p>
<p>The award ceremony of this year&#8217;s <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/transmediale/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Transmediale">transmediale</a>.01 for the categories Video, Interactive and Artistic Software took place on Saturday evening. Together with all the shortlisted artists, artist&#8217;s groups and numerous international guests, the State Minister for Culture and Media Prof. Julian Nida-Rümelin awaited the announcement of the prizewinners. In his introduction, Nida-Rümelin pointed out the necessity to consider and foster media art as an integral part and critical mirror of the information society.</p>
<p>The prize in the category Artistic Software, a prize which was awarded at the transmediale for the first time at an international festival, was split between Adrian Ward/Signwave (UK) for his program „Auto-Illustrator“ [www.signwave.co.uk] and Netochka Nezvanova for her very idiosyncratic internet browser „Nebula.M81 &#8211; Autonomous“ [www.eusocial.com]. The prize in the category Interactive went to Herwig Weiser and Albert Bleckmann (D) for their installation „zgodlocator“ [phosphen.org/zgodlocator]. The prize in the category Video was split as well between Istvan Kantor (CDN) for „BROADCAST“ and Sylvie Laliberté (CDN) for „L’Outil n’est pas toujours un marteau“.<span id="more-226"></span></p>
<p>The laudatory speeches were held by Prof. Siegfried Zielinski of the Kunsthochschule für Medien Köln for the Interactive Award, Prof. Anne-Marie Duguet of the Sorbonne in Paris for the winners of the Video Award and Gerfried Stocker of the Ars Electronica Center in Linz for the award in the category Artistic Software.</p>
<p>Prior to the festival, three international juries of media experts shortlisted 18 works and decided on the prize winners. All 18 projects were presented by the artists in the afternoon of the day of the award ceremony. &#8220;Young artists could put their work into contest on a par with the stars of the international media art scene&#8221;, explained the new artistic director of the transmediale Dr. Andreas Broeckmann, &#8220;thus, the transmediale.01 supports the development of quality standards in media art and enables new and surprising discoveries.&#8221;</p>
<p>The prizes, each worth 10.000 DM, were sponsored by different companies (Artistic Software by PLEX, Video by av.f medienprojekte, Interactive by CONGA Communications). The winners of the software prize are pioneers of a new artistic genre: artistic creation by programming software. &#8220;Auto-Illustrator“ is a graphic program in which the tools are resisting the user&#8217;s routine and develop their own will. &#8220;Nebula.M81 &#8211; Autonomous“ is a net-based browser program which transforms the webpage&#8217;s HTML code into animated text, graphics or sound. Chris Csikszentmihalyi (US), Antoine Schmitt (F), Golan Levin (US) and Daniela A. Plewe (D) received honorable mentions for their software projects.</p>
<p>The provoking video &#8220;BROADCAST“ by Istvan Kantor stages sexuality and force as ways of self assertion in a world of media overload. The demolition grounds in the periphery of urban technical society become the headquarters for an excessive performance of a machine-sex action group. &#8220;L’Outil n’est pas toujours un marteau“ presents a story of life as ultra-pop: Sylvie Laliberté muses on the meaning of life and ways to improve the imperfections of creation. Pekka Niskanen (FIN), Simon Ellis (UK), Kit Hung (HK) and Manon Labrecque (CDN) received honorable mentions for their works.</p>
<p>In the interactive installation &#8220;zgodlocator“, landscapes of metallic granules are activated by magnets and get transformed into dynamic structures of sound and material. The granules derive from recycled computer junk which here is revived anew in some primordial technoid situation. Honorable mentions for their works in the category Interactive went to: Blast Theory (UK), Anne Niemetz (D), Marnix de Nijs and Edwin van der Heide (NL), Time’s Up (A) and Daniel G. Andújar (E). For his work &#8220;<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/phoney/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Phoney">Phoney</a> ™“, Andújar also received the anonymously sponsored prize lux ziffer #01, whose statement says: “lux ziffer is an award for those who fight and feed the dragon“. &#8220;<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/phoney/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Phoney">Phoney</a> ™“, like a modern information weapon, illustrates the dangers in an information socitey which has become obsessed about security concerns.</p>
<p>7000 visitors and 400 artists, scientists, producers and journalists met at 30 regularly sold out events at transmediale.01. The visitors had the opportunity to find out about the position of electronic art and media culture and get inspired by the artworks and screenings. With this transmediale.01, curator <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/susanne-jaschko/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Susanne Jaschko">Susanne Jaschko</a> is convinced to &#8220;have provided important impulses for the future of creative work with new media.&#8221; On Sunday, February 11th, the festival finishes its program with a video screening on the festival&#8217;s theme <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/diy/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with DIY">DIY</a> [do it yourself!].</p>
<p><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=transmediale%2001%20award%20ceremony" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=transmediale%2001%20award%20ceremony" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><a class="a2a_button_tuenti" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tuenti?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;linkname=transmediale%2001%20award%20ceremony" title="Tuenti" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tuenti.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tuenti"/></a><a class="a2a_button_tumblr" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tumblr?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;linkname=transmediale%2001%20award%20ceremony" title="Tumblr" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tumblr.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tumblr"/></a><a class="a2a_button_linkedin" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/linkedin?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;linkname=transmediale%2001%20award%20ceremony" title="LinkedIn" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/linkedin.png" width="16" height="16" alt="LinkedIn"/></a><a class="a2a_button_meneame" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/meneame?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;linkname=transmediale%2001%20award%20ceremony" title="Meneame" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/meneame.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Meneame"/></a><a class="a2a_button_email" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;linkname=transmediale%2001%20award%20ceremony" title="Email" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/email.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Email"/></a><a href="javascript:print()" title="Print" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/print.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Print"/></a><a href="javascript:if(document.all){window.external.AddFavorite('http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/02/10/transmediale-01-award-ceremony/','transmediale%2001%20award%20ceremony')}else{var%20b=a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions%20||%20'Press%20Ctrl+D%20to%20bookmark%20this%20page';alert(a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions)}" title="Bookmark/Favorites" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/bookmark.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Bookmark/Favorites"/></a><a class="a2a_dd a2a_target addtoany_share_save" href="http://www.addtoany.com/share_save#url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F10%2Ftransmediale-01-award-ceremony%2F&amp;title=transmediale%2001%20award%20ceremony" id="wpa2a_10">Share</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/02/10/transmediale-01-award-ceremony/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>El cielo -cargado de nuevas tecnologías- sobre Berlín</title>
		<link>http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/02/04/el-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin/</link>
		<comments>http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/02/04/el-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Feb 2001 19:08:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Español]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2001]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alba Colombo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Berlin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DIY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lux ziffer#01]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Phoney]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Transmediale]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/02/04/el-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Alba Colombo, artszin Transmediale.01, Internacional media art festival DIY (do it yourself) Berlín La Transmediale, como una pequeña gota cargada de nuevas tecnologías, cayó encima del Podewil, centro de cultura contemporánea de Berlín. En comparación con años anteriores, la Transmediale.01 dejó sorprendidos a muchos de sus habituales espectadores. Este año algo había cambiado. Normalmente se <a href='http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/02/04/el-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.artszin.net/vol2/transmediale.html" target="_blank">Alba Colombo, artszin</a><br />
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/transmediale/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Transmediale">Transmediale</a>.01, Internacional media art festival<br />
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/diy/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with DIY">DIY</a> (do it yourself)<br />
Berlín</p>
<p>La Transmediale, como una pequeña gota cargada de nuevas tecnologías,          cayó encima del Podewil, centro de cultura contemporánea          de Berlín. En comparación con años anteriores, la          Transmediale.01 dejó sorprendidos a muchos de sus habituales espectadores.          Este año algo había cambiado.</p>
<p>Normalmente se desarrollaba en días paralelos al Berlín          Film Festivale (Berlinale), ya que surgió como parte de éste          aunque desde su primera versión se independizó. Muchos de          los berlineses identifican la Transmediale con una desenfrenada proyección          de vídeos, ya que en versiones anteriores las proyecciones se desarrollaban          durante los diez días que duraba el festival, sin pausa alguna          desde el mediodía a entrada ya la noche.<span id="more-71"></span></p>
<p>Este año la organización ha dado un giro de 180 grados          al festival. Se dejó al que antes era innovador y atrevido vídeo,          cómo un formato pasado y ya antiguo, dejando paso a los bites,          los impulsos electrónicos, las proyecciones controladas por los          internautas, etc.</p>
<p>&#8220;&#8230; empezamos a trabajar con un equipo completamente nuevo, la          mayoría de nosotros nunca habíamos trabajado juntos (&#8230;)          nos planteamos muchas preguntas, no respuestas, pero sí muchas          preguntas, que nos conducieron a encontrar ideas de todo aquello que teníamos          que cambiar, (&#8230;) mucha gente tenía diferentes opiniones de lo          que podía llegar a ser este festival.&#8221; Comentaba Andreas Broeckmann,          por primera vez director del festival.</p>
<p>Se replanteó todo el festival organizando de otra manera su desarrollo.          La competición fue absolutamente diferente a años anteriores,          ya que se crearon categorías especificas, Artistic Software, Video,          Interactive, con nominaciones para cada una de ellas . Los premios, aunque          ya estaban decididos antes que empezara el festival, no se hicieron públicos          hasta el día de su entrega. También se replanteó          la duración del festival ya que 10 días resultaba excesivamente          largo y se redujo a una semana.</p>
<p>Otra de las novedades de este año, fue que la organización          intentó en todo momento lograr una atmósfera de debate entorno          a las artes y las nuevas tecnologías, invitando a todos los artistas          nominados y a conferenciantes de alto prestigio.</p>
<p>Dentro de un marco absolutamente internacional, la presencia española          estuvo formada por Jorge Cosmen con su video In Memoriam presentado en          la sesión titulada &#8220;love in the age of digital nomadism&#8221;          (amor en la era del nomadismo digital) y Daniel G. Andújar, con          su obra <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/phoney/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Phoney">Phoney</a>. Este último obtuvo un premio adicional, concedido          por un sponsor anónimo, llamado <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/lux-ziffer01/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with lux ziffer#01">lux ziffer#01</a>.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.artszin.net/imgs/vol2/transmed2.gif" align="right" height="222" hspace="10" width="250" />Phoney          es una arma, un supermercado de virus o incluso una tentación para          cualquier navegante a delinquir. Con la obra de Andújar el visitante          tiene acceso a un concentrado de armas informáticas como por ejemplo          los virus. También tiene acceso a información habitualmente          inaccesible y puede hacer movimientos que están penados por la          ley en muchos países. Para poder activar todo este arsenal, el          visitante-espectador tiene que conocer los códigos y lenguajes          que habitualmente usan los hackers. Si posee estos conocimientos, el visitante          puede llegar a provocar catástrofes informáticas, infecciones          masivas a través de servidores, hacer movimientos bancarios totalmente          ilegales y escuchar conversaciones telefónicas. Por lo tanto podemos          llegar tan lejos como nuestros conocimientos lo permitan ya que las herramientas          están allí.</p>
<p>Pero no tenemos que valorar la obra de Andújar como una simple          acumulación de herramientas, ya que plantea muchas cosas más,          como el libre acceso a la información, uno de los poderes más          valorados en la sociedad actual. Por un lado Andújar cree que esta          libertad de información es provocadora en muchas ocasiones de grandes          debates de moralidad y de ética, pero por otro es una de las ventajas          que se nos han abierto con la red. Muchas veces encontramos &#8220;filtros&#8221;          que nos limitan el acceso a ciertos sitios Web, por ejemplo en la mayoría          de páginas de uno de los mercados más potentes dentro de          la net, la pornografía. Pero ¿dónde hay que colocar          estos &#8220;filtros&#8221;? Actualmente se está valorando la posibilidad          de instalar &#8220;filtros&#8221; personalizados en cada ordenador. Entonces          ¿qué estamos limitando?</p>
<p>El navegante, ya cansado de estos &#8220;filtros&#8221; considerándolos          simples trámites burocráticos, pasa a la pantalla siguiente          sin tener conciencia de la responsabilidad que aceptar estos &#8220;filtros&#8221;          conlleva. En Phoney se informa constantemente del peligro que el visitante          puede causar con sus movimientos. Pero este pasa los &#8220;filtros&#8221;          sin darles mayor importancia. Aquí se encuentra la crítica          de Andújar, ya que en su obra los &#8220;filtros&#8221; no se pueden          entender como simples tramites burocráticos, ya que están          advirtiendo del daño real que el visitante puede causar.</p>
<p>Por otro lado Andújar plantea lo que yo llamaría la violencia          pasiva. Ésta se lleva a cabo en el momento en que un espectador-visitante          desarrolla toda una serie de actos violentos a través de la net,          estando tranquilamente en casa. Andújar lo llama la violencia electrónica          ya que tenemos acceso a estos movimientos por medio de softwares o interfaces.          Pero en todo caso accedemos a esta violencia en un ambiente totalmente          privado y que creemos seguro. El diseño de Phoney, fondo negro          con letras verdes, recuerda a los primeros interfaces o incluso a partes          internas de un software o un lenguaje de programación. Con esto          Andújar pretende crear un ambiente de clandestinidad y supuestamente          de ilegalidad para dar conciencia a los visitantes del peligro real de          Phoney.</p>
<p>Podemos llevar a cabo esta violencia pasiva, ya que creemos poseer una          de las grandes ventajas de la red actual; la anonimidad. Esta, uno de          los temas más polémicos en entornos de teorización          sobre la influencia de la red en la sociedad y viceversa, fue debatida          en la conferencia Social Software de la Transmediale.01. La anonimidad          ha sido replanteada ya que nos hemos dado cuenta de la necesidad de una          identidad dentro del Ciberespacio. Por ejemplo el Prof. Dr.Dieter Otten          (D) valoraba la posibilidad, como defensor de la democracia digital, de          votar a través de internet. Por lo tanto, analizaba las formas          de creación de identidades públicas y privadas ya que serían          necesarias para desarrollar unas elecciones a través de la red.</p>
<p>¿Cómo podemos imaginarnos una identidad genérica,          genética y cultural dentro del ciberespacio, un mundo en que dominan          como características principales la comunicación globalizadora          y la antimaterialización?</p>
<p>Respecto a estas teorías de identidades inmateriales, encontramos          la posición de los ciberpunks. Personajes como Visual Mark de la          novela Synners de Pat Cadigan o el muy conocido Case de la novela Neuromante          de William Gibson, nos ejemplifican la voluntad de inmaterialidad del          movimiento, ya que estos consideran que la carne se ha convertido en un          infierno. Si en el mundo real el primer impacto identificativo que tenemos          con otra persona es su materialidad, su cuerpo o su aspecto, entonces          que tipo de identidad seria o es la &#8220;ciber-identidad&#8221; inmaterial?</p>
<p>Por otro lado tenemos la identidad cultural esta caracteriza a la persona          por su manera de entender el mundo y relacionarse con él: ¿debemos          creer que esta identidad cultural también se puede virtualizar?</p>
<p><img src="http://www.artszin.net/imgs/vol2/transmed1.gif" align="left" height="165" hspace="10" width="250" />Durante          la Transmediale.01 se nos ejemplificó una identidad digital que          existe actualmente, pero que personalmente calificaría de simple          base de datos o de almacén informativo. Como se dijo durante la          Transmediale, esta identidad digital puede influir a la persona real.          Se puso como ejemplo el caso de una empresa aseguradora que quiere investigar          a un cliente. La empresa entra en una bases de datos de un hospital, por          casualidad se ha producido un error informático y el expediente          al que tiene acceso la empresa no corresponde a la realidad, entonces          la persona virtual influencia a la real.</p>
<p>¿Que tipo de identidad tendremos en el ciberespacio? Crearemos          una materialidad ficticia o simplemente, la crearemos con códigos          de información accesible por toda la comunidad virtual? ¿Identidad          o anonimidad? ¿Materialidad o inmaterialidad?</p>
<p>En campos más específicos dentro del ciberespacio, también          encontramos planteamientos y cuestiones como éstas que afectan          de igual manera a sus contenidos. Por ejemplo el caso del arte digital,          ciberart o el llamado <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/netart/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with net.art">net.art</a>.</p>
<p>&#8220;El artista tiene la posibilidad de experimentar procesos de creación,          <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/control/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Control">control</a> y comunicación nuevos basados en una peculiaridad significativa          del medio digital: la expansión o la modificación de la          sensorialidad. Con la llegada de lo digital, el arte puede separarse definitivamente          de las imposiciones del mundo físico&#8221;</p>
<p>El arte dentro del interfaz no tiene materia, ya que cómo dice          Carles Tomàs se separa del mundo físico. Pero por otro lado,          net.art como tendencia artística de actualidad tiene que promover          el debate y los nuevos planteamientos artísticos. ¿Como          puede lograrlo un arte inmaterial?</p>
<p>En relación con su inmaterialidad, la problemática de la          exposición ha sido muy debatida. En muchas ocasiones se considera          que la colectivización de la experiencia artística traiciona          los moldes de privacidad para los que han estado pensadas las obras. La          Transmediale.01 poseía la &#8220;media lounge&#8221;, espacio diseñado          por B VIER (arquitectos) donde el espectador podía consultar documentación          de las obras interactivas y obras del Artisitcs Software. Pero a pesar          de la voluntad de los diseñadores de crear unos espacios más          intimistas para poder visualizar las obras, no dejaba de parecer una exposición          de los últimos modelos de hardware.</p>
<p>Aspectos como el libre acceso a la información, la anonimidad,          la identidad, la inmaterialidad y otros más relacionados con el          mercado del arte, están siendo las cuestiones principales de debate          planteadas en foros internacionales, festivales, presentaciones&#8230;etc.          Ya que el arte digital:</p>
<p>&#8220;&#8230;.actúa de un modo más radical en la transformación          del sistema estético cerrado del objeto artístico moderno          hacia un sistema abierto post-moderno de campos de acción&#8221;,          como dijo Peter Weibel, director del ZKM, en ocasión de la exposición          net.condition.</p>
<p>El arte digital en sus inicios, al igual que muchas otras tendencias,          quiere romper fronteras establecidas. Un buen ejemplo es el grupo 0100101110101101.org.          que nos cuestiona dónde están actualmente los derechos de          copyright. Otro ejemplo Adrian Ward/Signwave con Auto-Illustrator, una          de las obras ganadoras en la categoría Artistic Software de la          Transmediale.01, cuestiona dónde están los límites          del creador: en el software o en el hombre.</p>
<p>Por lo tanto podemos entender que actualmente nos encontramos en la infancia          de estos quehaceres artísticos. Historiadores, críticos          y teóricos empiezan a fomentar lo que sería la historia          del net.art, pero resulta extremadamente complicado intentar hacer una          historiografía sin poseer la distancia temporal necesaria.</p>
<p>Ya que resulta imposible ir perfilando las posibilidades sin limite de          estas nuevas tendencias artísticas y por lo tanto las infinidad          de teorizaciones sobre el tema, no nos queda otra alternativa que seguir          debatiendo. Y esperar a ver lo que nos deparan las próximas versiones          de encuentros sobre el tema como; Ars Electrónica (AT), Artfutura(ES),          Ciberart (ES), WRO01 (PL), Futuresonic (UK). Plataformas en que se ponen          en común las últimas posiciones respecto a estos temas que          han ido surgiendo en entornos de planteamiento y promoción de estas          artes como aleph en España y Mikro en Alemania.<br />
Transmediale: www.transmediale.de<br />
Phoney: www.irational.org/tttp<br />
Prof. Dr. Dieter Otten: www.internetwahlen.de<br />
Auto-Illus trator: www.signwave.co.uk<br />
Carles Tomàs: www.iua.upf.es<br />
Ars Electronica: www.aec.at<br />
Artfutura: www.artfutura.org<br />
Ciberart: www.ciberart.ua.es<br />
Wro01: www.wro.getin.pl<br />
Futuresonic. www.futuresonic.com<br />
Aleph: aleph-arts.org<br />
Mikro: www.mikro.org</p>
<p><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=El%20cielo%20-cargado%20de%20nuevas%20tecnolog%C3%ADas-%20sobre%20Berl%C3%ADn" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=El%20cielo%20-cargado%20de%20nuevas%20tecnolog%C3%ADas-%20sobre%20Berl%C3%ADn" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><a class="a2a_button_tuenti" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tuenti?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;linkname=El%20cielo%20-cargado%20de%20nuevas%20tecnolog%C3%ADas-%20sobre%20Berl%C3%ADn" title="Tuenti" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tuenti.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tuenti"/></a><a class="a2a_button_tumblr" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tumblr?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;linkname=El%20cielo%20-cargado%20de%20nuevas%20tecnolog%C3%ADas-%20sobre%20Berl%C3%ADn" title="Tumblr" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tumblr.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tumblr"/></a><a class="a2a_button_linkedin" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/linkedin?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;linkname=El%20cielo%20-cargado%20de%20nuevas%20tecnolog%C3%ADas-%20sobre%20Berl%C3%ADn" title="LinkedIn" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/linkedin.png" width="16" height="16" alt="LinkedIn"/></a><a class="a2a_button_meneame" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/meneame?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;linkname=El%20cielo%20-cargado%20de%20nuevas%20tecnolog%C3%ADas-%20sobre%20Berl%C3%ADn" title="Meneame" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/meneame.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Meneame"/></a><a class="a2a_button_email" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;linkname=El%20cielo%20-cargado%20de%20nuevas%20tecnolog%C3%ADas-%20sobre%20Berl%C3%ADn" title="Email" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/email.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Email"/></a><a href="javascript:print()" title="Print" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/print.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Print"/></a><a href="javascript:if(document.all){window.external.AddFavorite('http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/02/04/el-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin/','El%20cielo%20-cargado%20de%20nuevas%20tecnologías-%20sobre%20Berlín')}else{var%20b=a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions%20||%20'Press%20Ctrl+D%20to%20bookmark%20this%20page';alert(a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions)}" title="Bookmark/Favorites" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/bookmark.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Bookmark/Favorites"/></a><a class="a2a_dd a2a_target addtoany_share_save" href="http://www.addtoany.com/share_save#url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F02%2F04%2Fel-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin%2F&amp;title=El%20cielo%20-cargado%20de%20nuevas%20tecnolog%C3%ADas-%20sobre%20Berl%C3%ADn" id="wpa2a_12">Share</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/02/04/el-cielo-cargado-de-nuevas-tecnologias-sobre-berlin/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>propuestas artísticas para una renovación de las prácticas sociales</title>
		<link>http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/01/23/propuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales/</link>
		<comments>http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/01/23/propuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Jan 2001 16:07:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Español]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2001]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Activism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Control]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Global]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Karin Ohlenschläger]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[net.art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Phoney]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Transmediale]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/01/23/propuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Arte y Activismo en la Red: propuestas artísticas para una renovación de las prácticas sociales El mundo de la Informática y de las Telecomunicaciones mueve la Bolsa, la economía y las finanzas, pero también el Arte y la Cultura. Para algunos artistas la Red representa un nuevo espacio de libertad de expresión ycomunicación horizontal y <a href='http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/01/23/propuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Arte y Activismo en la Red:<br />
propuestas artísticas para una renovación de las prácticas sociales</p>
<p><em>El mundo de la Informática y de las Telecomunicaciones mueve la Bolsa, la economía y las finanzas, pero también el Arte y la Cultura. Para algunos artistas la Red representa un nuevo espacio de libertad de expresión ycomunicación horizontal y participativa. Para otros, es el brazo ejecutivo del nuevo poder totalitario de las economías emergentes. </em><br />
<a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/karin-ohlenschlager/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Karin Ohlenschläger">Karin Ohlenschläger</a><br />
Cinevideo20<span id="more-19"></span></p>
<p>Para algunos, Internet es un tablón de anuncios de obras, exposiciones y subastas de pin-tura, escultura o fotografía. Para otros, la Red representa un nuevo espacio público de creación y experimentación virtual que tiene muy poco que ver con las artes plásticas tradicionales. De hecho, las nuevas propuestas de estos últimos abarcan desde singulares animaciones o diseños de salvapantallas, hasta la construcción de complejas arquitecturas interactivas de navegación y comunicación on-line. Un singular ejemplo de estas nuevas arquitecturas relacionales nos lo ofrece el proyecto Alzado Vectorial, galardonado con el pri-mer premio en la categoría de arte interactivo, en la pasada edición del Prix Ars Electrónica. Se trata de un ambicioso montaje realizado por el artista mexicano/canadiense Rafael Lozano Hemmer, en la Plaza del Zócalo de Méjico D.F., con motivo de la celebración del fin de año 1999/2000. La obra consistía en la instalación de dieciocho cañones de luz robotizados alrededor de la histórica plaza, mientras la Red albergaba un modelo virtual del mismo lugar. Sobre este modelo, los usuarios de Internet podían diseñar su propio domo geodésico, predeterminando la posición de los haces de luz. Un ordenador central recogía estos datos y los transmitía a los cañones luminosos que se movían al son de las instrucciones y ejecutaban sucesivamente cada una de las propuestas. Todo ello generaba una peculiar coreo-grafía luminosa, visible en un radio de 20 kilómetros a la redonda. Un numeroso equipo de técnicos y programadores orquestaron esta singular sinfonía lumínica y polifónica, que conectaba la plaza con la red y el público local con el público <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/global/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Global">global</a>. A lo largo de los diez días que duraba el evento, cerca de 700.000 internautas visitaron y participaron de un modo u otro en la propuesta de Alzado Vectorial. Sus intervenciones y experiencias han sido recopiladas enun gran banco de datos, todavía accesible en la Red (<a href="http://www.alzadovectorial.com" target="_blank">www.alzadovectorial.com</a>).</p>
<p>Escala global Uno de los aspectos que distingue a losactuales artistas de la Red de sus antecesoresactivistas del arte es el hecho de concebir lasacciones a escala global para incidir en ámbi-tos locales. Las estrategias de resistencia civilen defensa del movimiento zapatista on-line de Ricardo Domínguez; las cartografías vir-¡tuales de los flujos urbanos de Knowbotic Research (www.io.khm.de); las instalacionestelerobóticas de Ken Goldberg (www.ieor.ber-keley.edu/goldberg./art/), las esculturas vivas de material transgénico de Eduardo Kacconforman otros tantos ejemplos y experien-cias de cómo convertir la Red en un espacioabierto, dinámico, operativo y evolutivo.Otros proyectos artísticos específicamenteconcebidos para la Red cuestionan y evidencian la fragilidad del sistema, sus paradojas eincongruencias. Sus obras se basan en lastácticas empresariales del márketing y el merchandising para alertar, subvertir y, en algunos casos concretos, incluso sabotearobjetivos comerciales, políticos e institucio-nales. En una irónica y sagaz declaración deprincipios, ®TMark afirma que “así como lascorporaciones son entera y únicamentemáquinas de incrementar la opulencia de susaccionistas (a menudo, en detrimento de lacultura y de la vida), ®TMark es una máquinapara mejorar la cultura y la vida de sus accionistas (normalmente, en detrimento de las opulencias)”. Por su parte, el grupo artístico Etoy(www.etoy.org), internacionalmente conocido por la victoria jurídica contra su homóni-mo – una conocida marca de juguetes norte-americanos en la Red -, invita a participar ensus acciones a través de una singular fórmu-la de accionariado, sustituyendo el antiguomodelo de coleccionismo de arte, por el de laparticipación activa en emociones y valorescontraculturales en los proyectos artísticos on-line.</p>
<p>Asimismo, el artista valenciano Daniel Andújar (<a href="http://www.irational.org/tttp" target="_blank">www.irational.org/tttp</a>) está destacando en el ámbito internacional con su participación en numerosas exposiciones de <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/netart/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with net.art">net.art</a> en Alemania, Holanda y Estados Unidos. Su proyecto <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/phoney/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Phoney">Phoney</a> acaba de obtener el primer premio en la convocatoria internacional de la <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/transmediale/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Transmediale">Transmediale</a> de <a href="http://www.danielandujar.org/tag/berlin/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag" title="Posts tagged with Berlin">Berlin</a>(<a href="http://www.transmediale.de" target="_blank">www.transmediale.de</a>), entre más de 270 propuestas. Experimento colectivo Todo ello pone de manifiesto que el net art es parte de un gran experimento colectivo cuyocampo de acción y reflexión abarca desde losmicromundos nanométricos de la bioingenie-ría genética (ver Génesis de Eduardo Kac en www.ekac.org/transgenic), hasta las macro-estructuras de las nuevas dinámicas globa-les, tal y como sugieren las obras de Rafael Lozano Hemmer, Daniel Andújar o AntoniMuntadas, entre otros. Este último es uno delos artistas pioneros e innovadores en elámbito del arte electrónico nacional e inter-nacional. Su primer proyecto Fileroom(www.fileroom.org), de 1994, se concebíacomo un gran banco de datos que invitaba arecoger y exponer todo tipo de relatos y tes-timonios vinculados a la censura política,social o cultural. El segundo proyecto, titula-¡do On-translation (www.on-translation.org) consistía en la traducción de unas simplesfrases realizadas por profesionales de diver-sas partes del mundo. En su conjunto, las nuevas corrientes artís-ticas siguen encarnando la defensa de estasubjetividad de la diferencia, de lo atípico, dela utopía, ya que, según Félix Guattari, “ la subjetividad desaparece en los valores vacíosdel beneficio y del poder (1)</p>
<p>Para la refundación de las prácticas sociales,Felix Guattari, originalmente publicado en LeMonde Diplomatique, Oct.1992, y traducido en http://aleph-arts.org/epm/practicas.html</p>
<p><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service facebook_like" src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;layout=button_count&amp;show_faces=false&amp;width=75&amp;action=recommend&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;height=20&amp;ref=addtoany" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:21px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=propuestas%20art%C3%ADsticas%20para%20una%20renovaci%C3%B3n%20de%20las%20pr%C3%A1cticas%20sociales" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service twitter_tweet" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.html?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;counturl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;count=horizontal&amp;text=propuestas%20art%C3%ADsticas%20para%20una%20renovaci%C3%B3n%20de%20las%20pr%C3%A1cticas%20sociales" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:130px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><!--[if IE]><iframe frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><![endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!--><iframe class="addtoany_special_service google_plusone" src="https://plusone.google.com/u/0/_/%2B1/fastbutton?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;size=medium&amp;count=true" scrolling="no" style="border:none;overflow:hidden;width:90px;height:20px"></iframe><!--<![endif]--><a class="a2a_button_tuenti" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tuenti?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;linkname=propuestas%20art%C3%ADsticas%20para%20una%20renovaci%C3%B3n%20de%20las%20pr%C3%A1cticas%20sociales" title="Tuenti" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tuenti.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tuenti"/></a><a class="a2a_button_tumblr" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/tumblr?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;linkname=propuestas%20art%C3%ADsticas%20para%20una%20renovaci%C3%B3n%20de%20las%20pr%C3%A1cticas%20sociales" title="Tumblr" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/tumblr.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Tumblr"/></a><a class="a2a_button_linkedin" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/linkedin?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;linkname=propuestas%20art%C3%ADsticas%20para%20una%20renovaci%C3%B3n%20de%20las%20pr%C3%A1cticas%20sociales" title="LinkedIn" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/linkedin.png" width="16" height="16" alt="LinkedIn"/></a><a class="a2a_button_meneame" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/meneame?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;linkname=propuestas%20art%C3%ADsticas%20para%20una%20renovaci%C3%B3n%20de%20las%20pr%C3%A1cticas%20sociales" title="Meneame" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/meneame.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Meneame"/></a><a class="a2a_button_email" href="http://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;linkname=propuestas%20art%C3%ADsticas%20para%20una%20renovaci%C3%B3n%20de%20las%20pr%C3%A1cticas%20sociales" title="Email" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/email.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Email"/></a><a href="javascript:print()" title="Print" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/print.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Print"/></a><a href="javascript:if(document.all){window.external.AddFavorite('http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/01/23/propuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales/','propuestas%20artísticas%20para%20una%20renovación%20de%20las%20prácticas%20sociales')}else{var%20b=a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions%20||%20'Press%20Ctrl+D%20to%20bookmark%20this%20page';alert(a2a_config.localize.BookmarkInstructions)}" title="Bookmark/Favorites" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.danielandujar.org/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/icons/bookmark.png" width="16" height="16" alt="Bookmark/Favorites"/></a><a class="a2a_dd a2a_target addtoany_share_save" href="http://www.addtoany.com/share_save#url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.danielandujar.org%2F2001%2F01%2F23%2Fpropuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales%2F&amp;title=propuestas%20art%C3%ADsticas%20para%20una%20renovaci%C3%B3n%20de%20las%20pr%C3%A1cticas%20sociales" id="wpa2a_14">Share</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.danielandujar.org/2001/01/23/propuestas-artisticas-para-una-renovacion-de-las-practicas-sociales/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>

