| artsflow is moving |
[09 Oct 2002|11:20pm] |
This artsflow blog is moving to its rightful home at Enterzone where it is now powered by Movable Type.
We are in the process of figuring out how to import these LJ entries into the new MT engine, but we'll probably leave this archive here unless we decide to dedicate the memewatcher username to some other purpose.
Please adjust your bookmarks etc., RSS feeds, etc.
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| Volunteer Marketing/Publicity Position at Nonprofit Press |
[17 Sep 2002|02:43pm] |
Watchword Press is currently looking for a volunteer to spearhead marketing and publicity efforts for our "nearly" quarterly literary magazine, Watchword.
The ideal candidate would:
--possess some grassroots marketing experience
--have the capacity to meet deadlines
--be a good communicator (with the press and others)
--be someone with enthusiasm, dedication, and creativity
We're looking for someone to work independently, but would would be able to meet with me (the publisher) once a week or on an as needed basis.
Please contact Danielle Jatlow at Watchword Press if you or someone you know might be interested in getting involved with a nonprofit literary publishing house. To find out more about Watchword Press including contact information, please visit http://www.watchwordpress.org.
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| Blogging and Writing September 15 |
[05 Sep 2002|11:37am] |
X-Originating-IP: [64.71.166.114] Delivered-To: xian@pobox.com Date: Wed, 04 Sep 2002 09:47:43 -0600 From: Deena larsen <textra@chisp.net> X-Accept-Language: en To: ht_lit@consecol.org Subject: Blogging and Writing Sept 15 Sender: owner-ht_lit@consecol.org Reply-To: ht_lit@consecol.org X-UnSubscribe-Address: subscribe@consecol.org
Blogging--it's a way of communicating on line, of sharing thoughts and ideas, of creating a "psychic brain dump", of storing quick impressions. What does this form of communication offer electronic arts and literature? Is this a passing fad? An invitation to an unending addiction? Or a literary form?
What are blogs and how can we use them? How can blogs spread the word in electronic literature and art? How do blogs help build the community?
OUR GUESTS: Doug Lawson is the Executive Editor of The Blue Moon Review, which is accepting submissions for literary blogs. Doug founded the Blue Moon Review, and has published since 1994. The Blue Moon Review has been featured internationally as one of the top online literary magazines, nd has been named in Writer's Digests' Top Fiction 50 and top online magazines lists three times running.
Mark Bernstein is founder and Chief Scientist of Eastgate Systems, which has developed Tinderbox, a personal content management assistant . Mark is active in the weblog community, with a lively blog interspersed with travelogues and observations to keep track of hypertext doings and analyze blogging habits.
Adrian Miles lectures in hypertext and cinema at RMIT in Melbourne Australia and is a new media researcher in the InterMedia lab at the University of Bergen, Norway. He is a regular participant in international conferences in the fields of hypertext and new media, and is on the board of several journals and conferences.
WHEN AND WHERE September 15th at 4 pm Eastern, 3 pm Central, 9 pm London, and 6 am Sydney
To join in, go to http://lingua.utdallas.edu:7000. Log in as guest Type @go trAcELO at the bottom of your screen. We will help you from there :)
LINKS
For more information about this and other Electronic Literature chats, please go to http://www.eliterature.org/com/LinguaMOO.shtml
Electronic Literature Organization is at http://www.eliterature.org trAce writers community is at http://trace.ntu.ac.uk/
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| Interactive Introduction to Duchamp |
[16 Aug 2002|04:40pm] |
A succinct, illustrated and animated (Flash) website called Making Sense of Marcel Duchamp has just gone live. If you find the childhood section slow going (I don't), don't miss 1923 (there's a timeline for easy navigation), the year of The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even (commonly known as The Large Glass).
The animations of Duchamp's earlier interactive works are a joy, but the explication of The Large Glass is revelation.
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| Classic Annotators Wanted |
[15 Aug 2002|04:28pm] |
From http://www.awpwriter.org/joblist/aug2002/
Classic Annotators. Give a new twist to classic tales! Your expertise of classic tales is needed to bridge the gap between today's MTV generation of teenagers & some of the greatest literary works of all time. In order to grab & keep the attention of this pop-up video audience, your writing will need to be entertaining & humorous. The classics include: Canterbury Tales, The Great Gatsby, A Raisin in the Sun, & The Scarlet Letter.
Selected candidates will work from home (must own computer). For immediate consideration, please e-mail your c.v. to kquinn@teachers-discovery.com.
x
Shakespeare Annotator. Caesar is not only a salad. Your expert knowledge of Hamlet, Macbeth, Julius Caesar, The Tempest, Othello, Taming of the Shrew, & A Midsummer Night's Dream is needed to introduce Mr. Shakespeare to a new generation. Your teenage audience is "hip," so your annotation will need to combine entertainment & humor with education & facts. Additionally, your knowledge of Elizabethan England & its famous playwright will be called upon to add bits of historical information.
Selected candidate will work from home (must own computer). To audition for this project, please e-mail your c.v. & an annotated version of one scene from your favorite play to kquinn@teachers-discovery.com.
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| Bay Area: Media Alliance, Discounted August Classes |
[03 Aug 2002|06:06pm] |
Beat the Summer heat with MA's cool classes – great instructors, small class size, low prices. And now, get a discount for a second class upon completion of any session this Summer.
Computer classes include these starting next week:
PHOTOSHOP INTENSIVE 8/8 MAC OSX INTRO 8/10 INTRO TO FLASH 8/12
http://www.media-alliance.org/calendarcomputer/august.html
Media Skills classes include these in August:
GRAMMAR INTENSIVE (one day) 8/15 ART of the INTERVIEW w/Andrea Lewis 8/15 NEWSWRITING 8/21 and ADVANCED COPYEDITING 8/24
http://www.media-alliance.org/calendarmedia/august.html
Register online or call (415) 546-6491, M-F from 1-5pm
Thank you and enjoy the Summer! Hope to see you in class and at the Journalism event below..
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Journalists & Unions: Writing the Good Write August 8 at 7pm, FREE! Media Alliance, 814 Mission St. #205, S.F.
In a world dominated by corporate giants, is it possible to create space for discussing political alternatives? How can unions and other professional associations support journalists working for change within the mainstream media?
Join Media Alliance for an evening of discussion about these and other related questions. Panelists include Jeff Fohl, President, Northern California Chapter of the Graphic Artists Guild; Michael Cabenatuan, President of the Northern Ca. Media Workers Guild; Al Weinrub, President of the National Writer's Union, Local 3; and others.
For more information (415) 546-6334 ext. 310. **************************************************************
Become a Member, Take a Class, Make a Donation !!! Celebrate Media Alliance's 25th Anniversary & Help Build Media Democracy in 2002....
http://www.media-alliance.org
Media Alliance is a 25 year young training and resource center for media workers, activists, and community organizations.
Media Alliance 814 Mission St. #205 San Francisco CA 94103 (415) 546-6491
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| Bendofbay Redesign |
[31 Jul 2002|10:03am] |
A.P. Crumlish writes that bendofbay has undergone a redesign: </blockquote>We ditched the frame structure of bendofbay.org, and instead redid the whole thing with shared borders for the banner and navigation bars. Frames after all eliminate a good chunk of the viewable space. Now, as you read, our masthead gets out of your way.</blockquote> (from The Well)
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| Watchword Issue III Celebration in Oakland, 7/31/2 |
[01 Jul 2002|06:14pm] |
Dear friends,
We're pleased to announce that issue Three of Watchword has made it off the presses and into the hands of some lucky people!
The issue contains the work of twelve pioneering writers whose pieces range from the forthright and ironic to the oblique and sinister. Sounds like delicious summer reading to me! The artwork in issue Three displays a bold cover and a striking centerfold by Oakland artist Tony del Rio. To check out a sampling of writing and the cover artwork for the issue, please visit: http://watchwordpress.org.
Also on our website is information about our forthcoming soiree at 4001 Studios in Fruitvale to launch this issue—we hope all you local folks will join us for the party and for readings by contributors Jenny Bitner, Meg Hamill, and Sam Tsitrin. The event will take place on Wednesday, July 31st at 7pm, 4001 San Leandro Street, #29, Oakland...just three blocks from the Fruitvale BART station. More details to come...
The current issue and back issues are available from Watchword Press at www.watchwordpress.org. Watchword issue Three can also be found at the following rad bookstores:
Avenue Books, Berkeley Cody's, Berkeley Diesel, Oakland Pegasus, Berkeley Pendragon, Berkeley
Dinkytown News, Minneapolis, MN Mayday Books, Minneapolis Orr Books, Minneapolis
St. Mark's, New York
City Lights, San Francisco Dog Eared Books, San Francisco Farley's, San Francisco
As always, feel free to contact me with questions or comments. More soon.
Warm regards, Danielle
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| Chapel of the Chimes |
[18 Jun 2002|07:54pm] |
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New York Gong - Bananareggie |
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Hi Beanbender's List,
I'm writing to tell you (if you haven't heard) of the Chapel of the Chimes concert this Friday: a summer solstice celebration Garden of Memory. It's been a very fun event in the past: musicians are scattered all over the Chapel, you wander through... It's a great event to bring kids to - an amazing, labyrinth of a building with all sorts of music that you can listen to for as long (or short!) as you like, and if you come to where my group is playing, there will be improvisations in which kids and adults can join in (or not). We'll supply the toys/instruments. It's all very informal - and mysterious. Following is the real press release. There should be more in tomorrow's East Bay Express. Hope to see you!
Dan Plonsey =============
New Music Bay Area and Chapel of the Chimes present their magical summer solstice celebration Garden of Memory: a Columbarium Walk-Through Event at Chapel of the Chimes, a labyrinthine Julia Morgan-designed columbarium and mausoleum replete with gardens, fountains, and stained-glass skylights at 4499 Piedmont Ave., next to Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland on Friday, June 21 from 5 to 8 pm. The program features simultaneous performances in different parts of the building as composers and musicians present a variety of acoustic and electronic music, installations, and interactive events; the audience is free to move throughout the building during the performances. Admission is by sliding scale, $5 - $20. For information, call New Music Bay Area at (415)563-6355 ex. 3, or write to info@newmusicbayarea.org.
Performers include Ingram Marshall, Kyle Gann, Daniel Lentz with Brad Ellis and William Trimble, Maggi Payne, Laetitia Sonami, Krystina Bobrowski, Dean Santomieri, Matthew Goodheart, Greg Moore, Jason Serinus, Dan Plonsey (with: John Schott, John Shiurba, Matthew Sperry, Tom Yoder, Lynn Wold, Michael Zelner, and Suki), Katrina Wreede, Miguel Frasconi, John Bischoff, Charles Amirkhanian, Henry Kaiser and Danielle de Gruttola, Ya Elah, Elaine Kreston, Brenda Hutchinson, Jerry Kuderna, Philip Gelb with Shoko Hikage and Brett Larner, Randy Porter, Pamela Z, Sarah Cahill, and the Cornelius Cardew Choir.
Garden of Memory offers a unique and personal musical experience to every listener as he or she wanders freely through this multilevel maze of interior gardens, alcoves, pools, and antechambers ingeniously designed by Julia Morgan. Drawing crowds of around eight hundred people each year (including a large number of children), Garden of Memory has become a favorite summer solstice celebration for Bay Area audiences.
New Music Bay Area is a nonprofit organization which provides opportunities and information to composers and performers of new music throughout the Bay Area. New Music Bay Area is supported by grants from the California Arts Council and the generosity of its members and donors. Garden of Memory is supported in part by a Community Partnership Grant from the San Francisco Bay Area Chapter of American Composers Forum.
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| San Francisco Black Film Festival |
[03 Jun 2002|04:26pm] |
San Francisco, California -The fourth annual San Francisco Black Film Festival (SFBFF) will present its largest showing of films to date from June 12-16, 2002. Themed "Sharing Our Experiences on Film" this festival will aim to fulfill the mission of collecting and showcasing a diverse collection of films - from emerging and established filmmakers- that highlight the beauty and complexity of the African and African American experience. Sixty-five films from the United States, Africa, Canada, Israel and Germany will testify to the uniqueness of the African-American experience and its increasing impact on the cinematic arts.
The SFBFF is now a five-day extravaganza featuring exclusive world premiere film screenings, educational seminars, open panel discussions, interactive workshops, youth events, parties and a poetry slam. The film festival's four venues include screenings and programs at the Delancey Street Theater and Town Hall, the African American Art & Culture Complex and celebrity-filled opening night at the historic Herbst Theater on Wednesday, June 12 and he newly christened Lesbian & Gay Community Center.
Opening night guests include Eriq La Salle (ER and Coming To America) and Michael Beach (Third Watch, Waiting To Exhale and Soul Food) Eriq will receive the newly established Pioneer Award for his ground breaking work on the hit series, ER. Tickets are $ 55.00/$ 75.00 and are available by calling 415.392.4400.
Screening tickets are $ 8.00 and can be purchased at www.ticketweb.com For a complete schedule of activities and films go to www.sfbff.org or call 1-877-467-1735
4th Annual San Francisco Black Film Festival Sharing our experiences on film....
June 12-16, 2002 4 venues 5 days 65 films Workshops-Panels-Poetry Slizam-Urban Kidz Film Fest-Parties 877-467-1735 www.sfbff.org
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| ANNOUNCEMENT OF WTO CLOSURE GOES FROM SYDNEY TO CANADA'S PARLIAMENT |
[28 May 2002|04:02pm] |
Latest in series of WTO pesterings by The Yes Men On Tuesday, May 21, a representative of the World Trade Organization announced the dissolution of his organization to a shocked but supportive Sydney audience ( http://theyesmen.org/tro/disband.rtf, http://theyesmen.org/tro/cpa.html ). He stated the WTO would reconstitute as a new organization dedicated to assisting the world's poor instead of the rich (http://gatt.org/trastat_e.html).
The bombshell announcement has had worldwide repercussions, sparking debate on the floor of the Canadian Parliament, where MP John Duncan took the floor to ask "what impact this will have on our appeals on lumber, agriculture and other ongoing trade disputes" (http://www.nationalpost.com/home/story.html?f=/stories/20020525/338502.html).
At that point, WTO headquarters in Geneva denounced the "representative" as an impostor. "While we can appreciate [the 'impostors'] sense of humour, we would not wish for reputable news organizations like yours to be counted among those duped."
"It isn't humor this time," said Andy Bichlbaum, who "represented" the WTO in Sydney. "We really do want to dissolve the WTO and rewrite its charter so that the poor benefit rather than suffer from trade policy." The group he belongs to, The Yes Men, have previously represented the WTO at two international conferences ( http://theyesmen.org/wto/, http://theyesmen.org/finland/ ) and on mainstream TV (http://theyesmen.org/tv.html). Each time, they have been invited by people who mistook a Yes Men parody website (http://gatt.org/) for the official WTO site (http://www.wto.org/). The WTO reacted to previous appearances with outrage and attempts to shut GATT.org down.
After overcoming their initial shock, the audience of Australian accountants expressed enthusiasm for the change, and offered many thoughtful suggestions for how world trade could benefit the poor--moving the headquarters from Switzerland to a Third World country, for example.
"I'm as right-wing as the next fellow," said one of the accountants, "but it's time we gave something back to the countries we've been doing so well from."
In past appearances, the Yes Men hoped to horrify audiences by taking free-trade ideas to their logical conclusions. They argued for selling votes to the highest corporate bidder (http://theyesmen.org/wto/ppt/), making the poor "recycle" hamburgers to cure endemic hunger (http://theyesmen.org/hamburger/), allowing countries to commit human rights abuses with a system of "justice vouchers" modelled after pollution vouchers, and even enabling managers to administer electric shocks to sweatshop workers from afar by using a futuristic telepresence technology embedded in a three-foot-long golden phallus (http://theyesmen.org/finland/photos.html).
The joke was on the Yes Men, however, when these proposals failed to shock audiences, who repeatedly found it credible that such ideas would come from the WTO.
Finally, the Yes Men decided to say "no."
"We've already demonstrated that audiences of experts will accept anything whatsoever so long as it comes from the mouth of the WTO," said Mike Bonanno, a Yes Man who helped to prepare the lecture in Sydney. "This time, we decided to use the WTO's authority to lead people on a useful exercise that could actually produce something positive."
"It really is possible to dissolve and remake the WTO," said Bichlbaum. "The WTO, after all, was put together from a bunch of wishful thinking and previous agreements one day in 1994. It can just as quickly and easily be replaced by something much better, based on other agreements--the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, for example."
After the events in Sydney, the Yes Men are even more optimistic. "The accountants offered us all kinds of useful suggestions on how to make sure the new version of the WTO benefits the poor," said Bonanno. "We feel kind of bad for misleading them, but they came up with much better plans for the future than we could. We hope they'll accept our apologies and keep working with us."
CONTACTS: The Yes Men: mailto:representatives@theyesmen.orgCPA Australia: mailto:barbara.magee@cpaaustralia.com.au, mailto:rhonda.traversi@cpaaustralia.com.au http://www.cpaonline.com.au/WTO Public Relations (current): mailto:enquiries@wto.orgWTO Public Relations (previous): mailto:jean-guy.carrier@wto.org
The WTO representative's speech in Sydney: http://theyesmen.org/tro/disband.rtfCPA Australia: http://cpaonline.com.au/The CPA's press release: http://theyesmen.org/tro/cpa.htmlWTO dissolution announcement: http://gatt.org/irelease.htmlStatistics about trade liberalization's effects on the poor: http://www.gatt.org/trastat_e/World Development Movement: http://www.wdm.org.uk/United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights: http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html
The primary goal of RTMark (http://rtmark.com/) is to publicizecorporate subversion of the democratic process. It has helped tosponsor three of the Yes Men's appearances. # 30 #
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| Blue Moon Review call for submissions |
[25 Apr 2002|09:57am] |
A new site design brings us new literary needs.
The following submission categories are currently open at The Blue Moon Review: Fiction Hypermedia Audio Blogs See our guidelines page for details and specific email addresses.
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| National Poetry Month - Writer's Monthly |
[22 Apr 2002|08:35pm] |
| |  | | |  WritersMonthly.com continues to grow one good friend at at time! New This Month: Visit our new department Reviews! and read Jessica Clark's take on Arrangements, one of the six new plays featured UCSD's New Plays Festival Featured Short Story: Knife by David Boyne I understand how knives can fascinate people, the way some people are fascinated by snakes. But I'm not fascinated by knives or snakes...  Land On Bended Knee A chapter from the new novel by Siddharth Katragadda This country does not have balls, he would go on like a stuck record. It is like its women, beautiful but pinned down, downtrodden... The Horsefly Watcher Our featured personal assay, by Emmitt Furner, II I spend the better part of my day thinking of my father and wishing I could have, would have, done more to help him through the tough times... April is National Poetry Month! Read Paradise, a new poem from Jewell Forga Get a free add in our May issue! Check out the listings on our Events page Visit our like wow totally free Library Get Published! Read the publisher's take on the real meaning of life... WritersMonthly.com will never sell or share your e-mail address. If you do not want to receive our e-updates, please reply with "unsubscribe" in the subject. Thank you for your support! WritersMonthly.com P.O.Box 4913 San Diego, CA 92164 Email: mail@writersmonthly.com | | | | | |
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| START HERE: Chicago/ELO |
[19 Apr 2002|02:22pm] |
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Locomotive (Monk) |
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(bet the line breaks are busted)
Thursday April 18, 2002 * 2:30 PM * MCA ChicagoSTART HERE> Chicago Writers Share Their Favorite Works of E-Lit The Electronic Literature Organization will conclude its Interactions series with some culminating events this coming weekend April 18-20th at the Version>02 Festival Digital Culture Festival at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. On Thursday, April 18th at 2:30 PM in the Version>02 Festival LAB, the ELO presents "Start Here: Chicago Writers Share Their Favorite Electronic Literature" a panel discussion of a gallery of electronic literature curated by Chicago electronic writers and digital artists Michelle Citron, Kurt Heintz, Niki Nolin, Scott Rettberg, Andrew Stern, Joe Tabbi, and Rob Wittig. The START HERE> Gallery will go live on the web the morning of Thursday April 18th at<http://www.eliterature.org/interactions/starthere>and will be available as a salon installation on several computers during the duration of the festival. It will also appear on the Version>02 site <http://www.versionfest.org> following the festival.FeaturingMichelle Citron presenting* Queer Feast: Cocktails & Appetizers; As American As Apple Pie by Michelle Citron <http://www.rtvf.northwestern.edu/faculty/citron/apple_movie.html>* Home by Annette Barbier and Drew Browning <http://www.unreal-estates.com>* Modern Mother by Arlene Stamp <http://www.vanitygallery.com/stamp>* Mysteries and Desire: Searching the Worlds of John Rechy by Marsha Kinder <http://www.annenberg.edu/labyrinth/electronic.html>Kurt Heintz presenting* The e-poets network <http://www.e-poets.net>* The Electronic Poetry Center (EPC) <http://wings.buffalo.edu/epc/>* The Book of Voices <http://voices.e-poets.net>* Slamming the Sonnet by Jayne Fenton Keane <http://www.poetinresidence.com/slamming>Niki Nolin presenting* CHAOSity by Niki Nolin, Karen Osborne, Wade Roberts and Maureen Seaton <http://acweb.colum.edu/projects/chaosity/>* Literal Drift by Niki Nolin and Maureen Seaton <http://206.69.161.29/literaldrift/introall.swf>* Fearless Little Love Poems by Vicki Wong<http://www.beetleblue.com/fear.html>* Iloveyou 2000 by Louise McKissick <http://flow-digital.com/iloveyou.shtml>Scott Rettberg presenting* The Unknown, a hypertext novel by William Gillespie, Frank Marquardt, Scott Rettberg, and Dirk Stratton <http://www.unknownhypertext.com>* Alternumerics by Paul Chan <http://www.nationalphilistine.com>* Exhale by Orit Kruglanski and Raquel Paricio <http://www.soymenos.com/respira/exhale/>* E-Mail Lit by Alan Sondheim <http://www.google.com/search?q=alan+sondheim>Andrew Stern presenting* Façade (work-in-progress) by Michael Mateas and Andrew Stern<http://www.interactivestory.net>* PARRY by Kenneth Colby* The Playground by Scott Reilly, Joseph Bates, Bryan Loyall, and Peter Weyrauch <http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/project/oz/web/oz.html>* Dogz, Catz and Babyz by Adam Frank, Rob Fulop, Ben Resner, Andrew Stern, et al (PF.Magic)<http://www.petz.com>Joseph Tabbi presenting* Litmixer: The Literary Remediator by Trace Reddell <http://www.altx.com/ebr/ebr12/litmix/index.htm>* Hot Threads from the Electronic Book Review<http://www.altx.com/ebr>Rob Wittig presenting* Blue Company by Rob Wittig<http://www.tank20.com/bluecompany>* The Doll Games by Shelley and Pamela Jackson<http://www.ineradicablestain.com/dollgames/>* -][selec][text: co][deP][1][oetry] _ by Mez<http://netwurkerz.de/mez/selectext/index.htm>* Selected works by Barry Smylie<http://www.barrysmylie.com>******LIVE READING * Friday, April 19th * 11PM * MCA Chicago The ELO presents a reading from Newspoetry, the Unknown, and a live crosscontinental videophone poetry reading from the e-poets network. Newspoetry <http://www.newspoetry.com> is an alternative online news source and writing community, presenting a new poem every day about the news. The Unknown <http://www.unknownhypertext.com> is a hypertext novel for the Millennium by William Gillespie, Frank Marquardt, Scott Rettberg and Dirk Stratton. This comic, interlinked, multilayered, encyclopedic novel of a book tour gone terribly wrong was judged by novelist Robert Coover to be "genuinely multisequential and massively rich in story material" when he selected it as the cowinner of the 1999 trace/AltX hypertext competition. Gillespie, Rettberg and Stratton will perform an interactive live reading from the novel. e-poets <http://www.e-poets.net> is a network of performance poets who use the Internet and other technologies to share their work with each other and a global audience. Using a videophone, Kurt Heintz will connect us cross-continent for a poetry reading from Martha Cinader <http://cinashere.com> in Vallejo, California.****All events in the Version Lab * (Kanter Educational Center - next to lower level lobby) * The Museum of Contemporary Art * 220 East Chicago Avenue * Chicago, IL 60611 * Phone: 312.280.2660A Three-day pass to panels, film festival, Version Lab performances and workshops is $10.****Version>02 is a tour through "the digital commons" and offers an opportunity to meet those who tend to the gardens, fences, and pathways, and to investigate the threats and opportunities that the digital commons face. The MCA Theater offers three days of musical performances, films, and a series of panel discussions. The Version Lab, adjacent to the theater, provides performance space for multimedia artists, video makers, and musicians, and The Lobby is transformed into an informational space for web installations and demonstrations by some of the best in the emergent media arts cultures.******************************************************************** The Electronic Literature Organization http://www.eliterature.org Scott Rettberg, Board of Directors rettberg@eliterature.org fone: 773.561.6175 TO PROMOTE AND FACILITATE THE WRITING, PUBLISHING AND READING OF LITERATURE DESIGNED FOR THE ELECTRONIC MEDIA ++READ THE WEB++********************************************************************
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| Independent Feature Project - Market Call for Entries |
[11 Apr 2002|09:30am] |
Independent Feature Project (IFP) MARKET CALL FOR ENTRIES 24th ANNUAL IFP MARKET (September 27-October 4).
IFP/New York is accepting submissions for three selective sections: Emerging Narrative, Spotlight on Documentaries, and No Borders International Co-Production Market.
Eligible projects: Doc. Features, Doc./Narr. Works-In-Progress, Doc./Narr. Shorts, and feature-length Scripts.
More than $50,000 in cash and prizes awarded to emerging artists.
Formats: 35mm, 16mm, Beta & DigiBeta; preview on VHS. Application fees: $40 (early); $50 (late).
Registration fees, paid on acceptance only, range from $200 - $450.
Contact: IFP Market, attn: Julie Fiedler, Coordinator of Information Services, IFP/New York, 104 West 29 St., 12 fl., New York, NY 10001; (212) 465-8200 x217; Marketinfo@ifp.org.
Deadlines (early/late): Emerging Narrative & Spotlight on Documentaries: May 10 early / June 7 late; No Borders: May 17. Apply on-line
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| SIGNAL FLOW at Mills College |
[03 Apr 2002|11:15am] |
The Mills College Music Department and the Center for Contemporary Music present: SIGNAL FLOW: A Festival of New Music/Intermedia at Mills College April 4, 5, 6, 7 (All events are FREE.)
Mills College is pleased to announce Signal Flow, A Festival of New Music and Intermedia, taking place from April 4-7 at the Mills College Music Building. This is the first of what will be an annual event celebrating the diverse skills and talents of Mills Graduate students in both acoustic and electronic music, and also including installations, videos, and multi-media performances.
The concerts in this year's festival cover a multitude of genres and forms of expression, ranging from solo recitals and chamber pieces to ambitious works featuring twenty or more players, some featuring the Mills College Contemporary Performance Ensemble, and others augmented by some of the Bay Area's finest new music performers, including Tom Bickley, Fred Frith, Phil Gelb, Val Hall, John Shiurba, and Matthew Sperry. Expect arcane home-made instruments, cutting-edge electronics, ensemble precision, individual virtuosity, musical wit, mediations, meditations and much more. All concerts are free, and there will be light refreshments available before, between, and after shows. Beautiful, historic Mills College is located at 5000 MacArthur Blvd. in Oakland, at the junction of Highway 580 and the Warren (13) Freeway. Visitor parking on campus is free.
Thursday, April 4th 8pm Concert Hallworks by Ezekiel Talbot, Shelley Burgon, Andy Nathan
Friday, April 5th 8pm Concert Hallworks by Chris Willits, Ruben Zahra, Bill Wolter
Saturday, April 6th 5pm Ensemble Room videos by Lesley Braithwaite, Linda Davis, Julian Gobert, Ellen Lake, Heike Liss, Michael Trigilio
8 pm Concert HallSudhu Tewari with Contact Mic Arts Union, works by Mark Bartscher, Jarred McAdamsConcert Hallperformance by Beau Casey
Sunday April 7th 3 pm Concert Hallworks by Cenk Ergun, Jonathan Segel
5:30 pm Ensemble Roomvideos by Lesley Braithwaite, Linda Davis, Julian Gobert, Ellen Lake, Heike Liss, Michael Trigilio
8 pm Chapelworks by Tako Oda, Anne Hege, Brett Larner
Throughout the festival: "logic is has cow is stuck on you" Tadashi Usami, Roddy Schrock and Rasmus Jørgensen.
installations: Music Building/West Corridor: Sudhu Tewari In front of the Music Building: Julia Christensen
Mills College Music Building 5000 MacArthur Blvd., Oakland Information: (510) 430-2296 All events are FREE. http://www.mills.edu/signalflow/
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| Get Your War On |
[02 Apr 2002|01:22pm] |
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There is something so needed about Get Your Voltron On, just the latest in a savagely mercilessly scathing, painfully funny take on America after 911.
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