[spectre] Spectropolis: Mobile Media, Art, and the City
Andreas Broeckmann
abroeck at transmediale.de
Wed Sep 29 10:57:08 CEST 2004
[is New York finally waking up? -a ;-]
Date: Tue, 28 Sep 2004 19:09:43 -0400
From: "Wayne Ashley" <washley at lmcc.net>
Spectropolis: Mobile Media, Art, and the City
October 1 - 3 from 12 - 4 PM, City Hall Park
Spectropolis is a three-day event (October 1-3, 2004) in Lower
Manhattan that highlights the diverse ways artists, technical
innovators and activists are using communication technologies to
generate urban experiences and public voice. The increasing presence
of mobile communication technologies is transforming the ways we
live, construct and move through our built environment. The
participants of Spectropolis make obvious or play with this shift,
creating new urban perceptions and social interactions with cell
phones, laptops, wireless internet, satellite navigation technology,
PDAs and radio. Don't forget to bring your Wi-Fi enabled laptop,
radio, headphones, or PDA for an added encounter!
Spectropolis Artists: Julian Bleecker, Jonah Brucker-Cohen and
Katherine Moriwaki,The DSP Music Syndicate (Ethan Bordeaux, Ben
Recht, Noah Vawter, and Brian Whitman),Elizabeth Goodman and Eric
Paulos, Carlos J. Gomez de Llarena, Joshua Kinberg, Jeff Knowlton and
Naomi Spellman, Karen Lee, Akitsugu Maebayashi, free103point9
transmission artists (Damian Catera, Matt Mikas, Michelle Nagai, and
Tom Roe), and Trebor Scholz
Spectropolis is curated by Wayne Ashley, LMCC's curator of New Media
and public programs, and artists Yury Gitman and Brooke Singer.
Spectropolis is produced by Dana Spiegel, Director of NYCwireless,
Jordan Silbert, and Jordan Schuster; and co-sponsored by the Downtown
Alliance, NYCwireless, and the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council.
Spectropolis is organized in collaboration with NYCwireless, the
Alliance for Downtown New York, Pace University, and the Vera List
Center for Art and Politics at the New School University.
WWW.SPECTROPOLIS.INFO
Spectropolis Panels:
"Hot Enough? Art, Activism and Wireless Technology During the
Republican National Convention"
Monday, September 27, 7:00 PM. The New School's Lang Center, 55 West
13th Street; Admission: $8.
Webcast and online discussion: www.dialnsa.edu
The Republican National Convention (RNC) in late August gave rise to
a wave of artistic projects employing wireless technology to make
specific political statements. Unexpectedly, the RNC thus provided a
common focus and purpose to diverse and divergent initiatives and, in
hindsight, enables us to assess the efficiency of the new technology.
This panel examines how artists employ wireless technology to reach
unprecedented masses, to recast the concept of "collaboration," to
redefine and politicize the urban environment, and to achieve
unparalleled levels of immediacy.
Organized by the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New
School, on occasion of Spectropolis. Co-sponsored by the Design and
Technology Department, Parsons School of Design, and the Department
of Communication, The New School.
Participants: Yury Gitman (MagicBike); Natalie Jeremijenko (Clear
Skies; Bitradio; Antiterror Line); Joshua Kinberg (Bikes Against
Bush); neuroTransmitter (Re-Inventing Radio); and Tad Hirsch
(Institute for Applied Autonomy).
Moderator: Jonah Peretti, Director of Research and Design, Eyebeam.
"The Victory of the Commons: The Case for a Public Airwaves Movement"
Wednesday, September 29, 7:00 PM. Multipurpose Room at Pace
University, 3 Spruce Street. Admission is $5; free for Pace Students.
To order tickets in advance, call 212-346-1715.
Participants evaluate the case for a widespread social movement
advocating open spectrum policies led by community wireless groups.
Panelists will present the successes and failures of earlier media
and technology movements including media reform, low-power FM, public
access television, and open source software.
Participants: Chris Anderson (Indymedia New York) Dharma Dailey
(Prometheus Radio) Anthony Townsend (NYCwireless) and others,
Moderated by Laura Forlano, Columbia University.
Organized by NYCwireless.
"Downtown Dialogue with Spectropolis Artists"
Monday, October 4, 7:00 PM. The Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts
at Pace University, 3 Spruce Street. Admission is $5; free for Pace
students. To order tickets in advance, call 212-346-1715.
How do new media and information technologies continue to influence
the form, processes, experience and ideas of urban life? Mobile
phones, the internet, Personal Digital Assistants, Geographical
Information Systems, Global Positioning Systems, and Virtual Reality
are only some of the technologies that continue to effect the ways we
navigate through, understand, and act upon the city. In combination
with existing media, these tools are giving rise to new forms of
electronic culture within the urban landscape. In this panel,
Spectropolis artists discuss these trends through a discussion of
their individual projects
Participants: Julian Bleecker, Jonah Brucker-Cohen, Katherine
Moriwaki and Trebor Scholz
Moderator: Anthony Townsend, Interactive Telecommunications Program, NYU
Spectropolis Workshops:
Spectropolis workshops offer hands-on wireless communication play and
participation. The workshops aim to educate a non-technical public
and demystify a range of technologies through engaging presentations.
GPS Drawings with Jeremy Wood
Saturday, October 2 and Sunday October 3; 12 pm and 2 pm
Begin at City Hall Park
Building a Community Hotspot with John Geraci and Dana Spiegel
Saturday, October 2 and Sunday October 3; 2 pm
The Computer Lab-Rm 206 at Pace University, enter at One Pace Plaza
Zapped! with Beatriz da Costa, Jamie Schulte and Brooke Singer
Saturday October 3; 3 pm
The Multipurpose Room at Pace University, enter at One Pace Plaza
The Brooklyn Museum, Pace University and the New School University
are generously hosting Spectropolis events.
Spectropolis thanks these organization for their help: Bway.net,
Wiselephant, Justin T. Molloy and jtmdsgn, B Squared Design,
Starworks, and the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation.
Spectropolis is presented as a program of Downtown Digital Futures, a
multi-year initiative presented by the Lower Manhattan Cultural
Council, and made possible with support from Pace University; the May
and Samuel Rudin Family Foundation; the New York State Council on the
Arts Electronic Media and Film Program, a state agency; the New York
City Department of Cultural Affairs; City Council Speaker Gifford
Miller; the Asian Cultural Council; Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute;
the Experimental Television Center's Media Arts Technical Assistance
Program, and the Cowles Charitable Trust. The Alliance for Downtown
New York is our marketing partner. Special thanks to Hughes Hubbard &
Reed LLP.
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