NetworkedArt: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

Aus hyperdramatik
Zur Navigation springen Zur Suche springen
(Die Seite wurde neu angelegt: „<h1>Networked Theater, Performance, Art, Culture...</h1> =ARTICLES= ==The Network, The Internet and the Arts== Very nice chapter in the [https://processing…“)
 
Keine Bearbeitungszusammenfassung
Zeile 39: Zeile 39:
=(Media) Art=
=(Media) Art=


==The Robot in the Garden==
===The Robot in the Garden===
Marina Grzinic, “Exposure Time, the Aura, and Telerobotics,” in The Robot in the Garden: Telerobotics and Telepistemology in the Age of the Internet, edited by Ken Goldberg (MIT Press, 2000), p. 215.
Marina Grzinic, “Exposure Time, the Aura, and Telerobotics,” in The Robot in the Garden: Telerobotics and Telepistemology in the Age of the Internet, edited by Ken Goldberg (MIT Press, 2000), p. 215.
http://atc.berkeley.edu/201/readings/Robot_In_The_Garden_Intro.pdf
http://atc.berkeley.edu/201/readings/Robot_In_The_Garden_Intro.pdf


==The Stellvertreter shoes==
===The Stellvertreter shoes===
convey the feeling to be close to a person who is somewhere else by transferring the activities of the distant person’s shoes into the shoes of others.
convey the feeling to be close to a person who is somewhere else by transferring the activities of the distant person’s shoes into the shoes of others.
>> https://blog.shiftr.io/showcase-1-2a4ef797cefc
>> https://blog.shiftr.io/showcase-1-2a4ef797cefc


==Dialog==
===Dialog===
The project “dia.log” explores the term by setting a dialog between the user and the thing; by understanding various contexts through their sitting behaviors. These objects are given the potential to be smart, but also have a chance to fail.
The project “dia.log” explores the term by setting a dialog between the user and the thing; by understanding various contexts through their sitting behaviors. These objects are given the potential to be smart, but also have a chance to fail.
>> https://blog.shiftr.io/showcase-2-5bba0cccbddd
>> https://blog.shiftr.io/showcase-2-5bba0cccbddd


==Rambler Shoes==
===Rambler Shoes===
* https://www.onascimento.com/new-page-4
* https://www.onascimento.com/new-page-4
* https://twitter.com/ramblershoes?lang=en
* https://twitter.com/ramblershoes?lang=en


==Tangible Media Group==
===Tangible Media Group===
https://tangible.media.mit.edu/projects/
https://tangible.media.mit.edu/projects/


Zeile 67: Zeile 67:




==Niklas's Roy==
===Niklas's Roy===
ARS/Africa connected project<br>
ARS/Africa connected project<br>
>> https://www.niklasroy.com/#menuTop
>> https://www.niklasroy.com/#menuTop
Zeile 85: Zeile 85:




==(Media) PHILOSOPHERS==
==(Media) Philosophers==
===Geert Lovink===
what else—the possibilities of networking, generative code, and open software projects


===Deleuze and Guattari===
===Deleuze and Guattari===
emblematic literary concept of the “rhizome”
emblematic literary concept of the “rhizome”
===McLuhan===
===slavoy zizek?===
===Geert Lovink===
what else—the possibilities of networking, generative code, and open software projects




Zeile 101: Zeile 106:
=Net Art=
=Net Art=


==Net Art Artists==
===Cosic===
Cosic
===Shulgin===
Shulgin
===Olia Lialina===
Olia Lialina
===Heath Bunting===
Heath Bunting


Lisa Jevbratt’s work 1:1
===Lisa Jevbratt’s work 1:1===
every IP address might be represented by a single pixel. Her work scans the IP address namespace, number by number, pinging each address to determine whether a machine is online at that location. The results are visualized as pixels in a gigantic bitmap that, quite literally, represents the entire Internet (or at least all those machines with fixed IP addresses).  
every IP address might be represented by a single pixel. Her work scans the IP address namespace, number by number, pinging each address to determine whether a machine is online at that location. The results are visualized as pixels in a gigantic bitmap that, quite literally, represents the entire Internet (or at least all those machines with fixed IP addresses).  


Mark Napier’s two works Shredder and Digital Landfill  
===Mark Napier’s two works Shredder and Digital Landfill ===
rely on a seemingly endless influx of online data, rearranging and overlaying source material in ways unintended by the original creators.  
rely on a seemingly endless influx of online data, rearranging and overlaying source material in ways unintended by the original creators.  


===Carnivore and Minitasking===
Works like Carnivore and Minitasking approach the network itself as a data source, the former tapping into real-time web traffic, and the latter tapping into real–time traffic on the Gnutella peer–to–peer network.  
Works like Carnivore and Minitasking approach the network itself as a data source, the former tapping into real-time web traffic, and the latter tapping into real–time traffic on the Gnutella peer–to–peer network.  


>I/O/D 4 (known as “The Webstalker”)
===>I/O/D 4 (known as “The Webstalker”)===
Jodi’s Wrongbrowser series of alternative web browsers  
Jodi’s Wrongbrowser series of alternative web browsers  
also illustrate this approach, that the network itself is the art.  
also illustrate this approach, that the network itself is the art.  

Version vom 6. Mai 2020, 11:11 Uhr

Networked Theater, Performance, Art, Culture...


ARTICLES

The Network, The Internet and the Arts

Very nice chapter in the "Processing Book" that introduces historically, there have been two basic strands of networked art:

  • art of the Internet: art where the network is used as the actual medium of art–making.
  • art for the Internet: art where the network is used as the transportation medium for dissemination of the work.

"artists and designers began making online work that not only was “in and of” the Internet, but leveraged the net as a tool for quick and easy dissemination of executable code, both browser-based and otherwise."

"As Marina Grzinic writes, the “delays in transmission–time, busy signals from service providers, [and] crashing web browsers” contributed greatly to the way artists envisioned the aesthetic potential of the web,..."


Theater

interrobang

sophiensäle

no 99 in tallinn/ rise and fall of estonai 2011

Mediengruppe Bitnik mit der Oper (über Telefon)

Performance Art

(Media) Art

The Robot in the Garden

Marina Grzinic, “Exposure Time, the Aura, and Telerobotics,” in The Robot in the Garden: Telerobotics and Telepistemology in the Age of the Internet, edited by Ken Goldberg (MIT Press, 2000), p. 215. http://atc.berkeley.edu/201/readings/Robot_In_The_Garden_Intro.pdf

The Stellvertreter shoes

convey the feeling to be close to a person who is somewhere else by transferring the activities of the distant person’s shoes into the shoes of others. >> https://blog.shiftr.io/showcase-1-2a4ef797cefc

Dialog

The project “dia.log” explores the term by setting a dialog between the user and the thing; by understanding various contexts through their sitting behaviors. These objects are given the potential to be smart, but also have a chance to fail. >> https://blog.shiftr.io/showcase-2-5bba0cccbddd

Rambler Shoes

Tangible Media Group

https://tangible.media.mit.edu/projects/

inTouch

https://tangible.media.mit.edu/project/intouch/



(Media) ARTISTS

Niklas's Roy

ARS/Africa connected project
>> https://www.niklasroy.com/#menuTop

John Maeda

created a number of sketches and games dating from the mid–1990s, including a series of interactive calendars using visual motifs borrowed from both nature and mathematics.

Joshua Davis

emerged as an important figure through his online works Praystation and Once–Upon–A–Forest.


Bertolt Brecht

on the early revolutionary potential of radio networks

Hans Magnus Enzensberger

1974 essay on new media, “Constituents for a Theory of the Media”


(Media) Philosophers

Deleuze and Guattari

emblematic literary concept of the “rhizome”

McLuhan

slavoy zizek?

Geert Lovink

what else—the possibilities of networking, generative code, and open software projects





Net Art

Cosic

Shulgin

Olia Lialina

Heath Bunting

Lisa Jevbratt’s work 1:1

every IP address might be represented by a single pixel. Her work scans the IP address namespace, number by number, pinging each address to determine whether a machine is online at that location. The results are visualized as pixels in a gigantic bitmap that, quite literally, represents the entire Internet (or at least all those machines with fixed IP addresses).

Mark Napier’s two works Shredder and Digital Landfill

rely on a seemingly endless influx of online data, rearranging and overlaying source material in ways unintended by the original creators.

Carnivore and Minitasking

Works like Carnivore and Minitasking approach the network itself as a data source, the former tapping into real-time web traffic, and the latter tapping into real–time traffic on the Gnutella peer–to–peer network.

>I/O/D 4 (known as “The Webstalker”)

Jodi’s Wrongbrowser series of alternative web browsers also illustrate this approach, that the network itself is the art. All of these works automate the process of grabbing data from the Internet and manipulating it in some way.

Jodi

http://wwwwwwwww.jodi.org