Posts filed under 'visual research'

The Physique of the Public

I am really looking forward to this upcoming seminar hosted by CSISP at Goldsmiths. Although the topic in general is relevant to my work I am particularly excited to hear Albena Yaneva speak. Her ethnographic analysis of the role and importance of visual representations and practices in architecture has been very inspiring to me. If you haven’t already read it – Scaling Up and Down: Extraction Trials in Architectural Design, Social Studies of Science, 35/6(December 2005) 867–894


Friday 6 June | Room 137a, Richard Hoggart Building

Speakers:
Jane Bennett | Political Science, Johns Hopkins University
Matthew Fuller | Centre for Cultural Studies, Goldsmiths
Javier Lezaun | James Martin Institute, Oxford University
David Oswell | Sociology, Goldsmiths
Albena Yaneva | Architecture, Manchester University
Claire Waterton | Sociology, Lancaster University
Sarah Whatmore | Geography, Oxford University
Brian Wynne | Sociology, Lancaster University

Discussants:
Andrew Barry | Geography, Oxford University
Gail Davies | Geography, UCL
Kate Nash | Sociology, Goldsmiths

This one-day workshop will bring together social researchers and theorists who bring an interest in publicity and citizenship to the study of material and physical practices.

In fields like science and technology studies, it has long been acknowledged that non-human entities play an important role in the (un)making of social connections. However, everyday dealings with things, technologies, and nature are also increasingly recognized, and explicitly formatted, as occasions for ethical and political involvement. In engaging with these developments, authors in political theory, sociology and geography have begun to explore whether and how everyday practices may be understood as sites for the organisation of publics by socio-material means. This workshop aims to further explore this ‘object’ or material turn in the study of publics and citizenship. It is meant to provide a space for more detailed consideration of the kinds of practices, events and devices that this turn brings into view, from flood management to the art of sowing seeds. Within this context, the workshop will also engage broader conceptual questions about the type of politics, morality or ethics that a socio-material perspective on the public opens up. Thus, it will consider the implications of attempts to bring ‘democracy’ within the realm of embodied experience, including for the types of agency that are enabled and disabled by the repositioning of citizenship, and public involvement, as relations of material and physical entanglement.

Add comment May 25th, 2008

Helsinki Winter 2007_New Media Art

After a summer break, our research project on ‘New Media Artists as Cultural Intermediaries’ continues with a preliminary visit to Helsinki beginning of November and a second one beginning of December. This time, Goetz has already retreated to Berlin concentrating on finishing his PhD and I am left to venture out on my own. Below a few excerpts from field notes during both visits:

01/11/07
Without a moment to really take in the fresh icy air and bare winter trees, I am drawn into a trail of encounters and interesting conversations at medialab (TAIK).

http://studioincite.com/blog/wp-content/medialab.jpg

Chris Hales, usually based in London, is my guide for the day. He is currently replacing Teijo Pellinen’s teaching sessions at medialab, both interactive cinema/TV experimenters. Teijo was part of the US touring F2F exhibition in 2000 with the first ever interactive TV show to be broadcasted on national Finnish TV. He is still based at YLE (Finlands’ national TV) developing new projects.

I finally get introduced to media artist/ curator (ISEA 2004)/ researcher Tapio Mäkelä (key person in shaping new media art policy in Finland) and agree to meet next week at the famous m-bar, which he himself initiated in 1998. I then meet Mikko Lindholm, with pram and kid, who together with Perttu Hämäläinen and Ari Nykanen runs and created animaatiokone and their widely shown interactive embodied gaming experience ‘kick ass kong-fu’ (created with support from Helsinki University of Technology, Graduate School in Computer Science and Engineering and Nokia Foundation – a triangle new media artists often find themselves working within, that Goetz, Nina and I spoke a lot about after our initial research phase in spring). Based within Medialab, Crucible Studio, developing projects around digital narratives, drama and interactive storytelling, also operate within a similar triangle: Universities, private technology/media companies and EU/governmental funding, bringing together engineers, artists and designers. The studio is often mentioned for having produced interactive TV show ‘Accidental Lovers’ in 2003 (presented at several international conferences on technology/media/design).

04/11/07

Tallinn, Estonia: Ville Hyvönen shows us around Kulturfarbik, a derelict building to be turned into a cultural centre.

A little overwhelming, this visit turns out to be a non-stop ‘being in the field’ with hardly any time to reflect at all. The weekend I spend with Pixelache delegation in Tallinn, meeting with Estonian media initiators/ activists/ festival producers. Juha Huuskonen, Ville Hyvönen and Nathalie Aubert from Pixelache don’t cease to surprise me with their many activities and involvement in a number of different media festivals, events and programmes. I look forward to spending a bit more time with them in march for the preparations of Pixelache festival.

05/11/07
A first but long awaited meeting with Heidi Tikka becomes my first insight into the upcoming exhibition at Forumbox Gallery, where Heidi will be showing new work alongside Tuomo Tammenpää and Hanna Haaslahti.

It is a privilege to see the very first stages in the production of her piece. An initial and rather simplified description would be: ‘illogical’ garments (oddly re-seamed leather jackets) with wearable CCTV circuits embedded into them.

We spend the evening talking about her work, past projects and her thoughts about this upcoming exhibition. I decide to come back for the set up and develop a few ideas for some form of ‘audience feedback’. The next day I have another great evening with Tuomo (interactive designer and new media artist), at the Pixelache University event ‘dorkbot’, talking about work and the world. Closer to a critical designer then an ‘exhibiting new media artist’, Tuomo sees his work geared towards the context of everyday life, not the gallery environment. Thoughts on relevance of such work and the failing of technologies within new media art leaves me truly excited about the potential crossovers within new media art/design. For the exhibition at Forumbox he is working on ‘electrical toys gone wrong’ (again it seems, some form of rebellion against a predictable logic…)

07/11/07
Before my flight back to London, a last minute very interesting conversation with Perttu Rastas – a key figure in the collection, distribution (AV-arkki) and curation of early Finnish video and media art, based first as a curator now as head of media archive at Kiasma Art Museum – leaves me in a thoughtful state, with notes in form of big questions, not answers: … will, and if so, how can art institutions such as Kiasma play a role within new media art in the future? how can they be ‘appropriate’ facilitators? hosts? collectors? (what kind of) new media art is in fact ‘collectible’? (Hanna Haaslahti’s interactive installation ‘White Square’ was bought into their archive in 2003, her piece which she will also be showing at Forumbox ‘Time experiment’ has been bought and is on display at Nokia Mobile Zone in Oulu) what and how does the work ‘fit’ into gallery or museum spaces? does it ‘work’? ….


Perttu kindly shows me around the fascinating underground archive, digital lab and small library.

Add comment December 12th, 2007

Helsinki Winter 2007_ second visit

27/11/07
I am back in Helsinki. This visit is mainly dedicated to the following exhibition of Hanna Haaslahti’s, Tuomo Tammenpää’s and Heidi Tikka‘s work, at the FORUMBOX Gallery, opening on the 29th of November and on until the 29th of December.

After a preliminary visit only two weeks ago – which had been packed full with interviews and events – this visit is much more channeled and concentrated. I spend my days within the walls of the gallery, trying to juggle between being a visual researcher: documenting sounds and images; that of the classic ethnographer: noting down observations, asking questions and recording conversations; trying to come up with a concept to creatively find a way of capturing visitors’ feedback, while, above all, wanting to be a helping hand in the setting up of the exhibition.

An intense period filled with physical construction, potential hick ups, delicate situations and some long winding crucial decision-making process stretches over three whole days. I spend the first two days recording, thinking carefully about relevance, discovering interesting moments, capturing dialogue (if not in Finnish..) between the three artists , between both Heidi and Hanna and their technical collaborators, and between the artists and their work that slowly takes shape within the huge space. It feels like a constant ebb and flow. All three have times of thinking, starring, observing, building and tweaking (the most significant of all it seems – working with unstable, complex and unpredictable technologies…)


Heidi – Hanna – Tuomo

29/11/07
The day of the opening I spend setting up a corner by the entrance to the gallery with a few ‘tools’ I brought with me. Despite initial doubt on part of the gallery director Tanja Saarto – saying that visitors (Finns) might be too reserved or shy to engage – the response, to her own surprise, is rather good. Visitors (in total probably about one hundred) are invited to take a disposable camera (to capture their own details of interest) and maps (to be marked with colour coded impressions/experiences, in response to the individual pieces in the gallery) as they explore the space.

A brief conversation with Tanja Saarto gives me the impression that the opening is definitely a success. She is surprised at how many people within the art scene are positively intrigued and complementary towards this fairly new adventure for the gallery into new media art. I myself am so involved in visually capturing the atmosphere of the opening and engaging with visitors gathering around the ‘feedback corner’, that I miss the opportunity to speak to a seemingly important art critic – whom I later briefly see curiously wondering around Tuomo’s piece with a pen and paper.

The opening happens to coincide with the opening of another New Media exhibition at MUU gallery of Andy Best & Merja Puustinen’s work. Both parties strangely end up in the same restaurant a few blocks down for dinner, which I guess is not surprising considering the after all rather small New Media Art scene in Helsinki.


(During dinner, someone pulls out his Nokia phone – a rather old model - to show us the noise level in the restaurant – what a great but strange thing to be able to measure, making sure you don’t spend too much time sound-polluting your ears)

I meet Andy Best the next day at the gallery, adjusting, repairing and ‘tweaking’ his robots. We spend a few hours talking about the theoretical context of their installation and the way both, him and his partner Merja, are managing to juggle between producing new work, teaching and the family. Merja seems to be the one mainly involved in the funding side of things, so I later find out that this exhibition is supported by AVEK (one of the main funding bodies of New Media Art in Finland – whose funds curiously mostly originate from a special tax deriving from blank videos/DVD’s ) and the Finnish Arts Council.

1/12/07
I take part in Tuomo’s workshop organized by Pixelache University at FORUMBOX Gallery. Well prepared and patient, Tuomo shows a group of 6 how to mount and weld a simple ‘electronic music circuit board’ (the gallery attendants probably called them ‘noise tools’). With great enthusiasm I manage to make one myself, only to drop out once it comes to the final tweaking – making sure it actually keeps on working..

As I start taking down my bits in the gallery, looking through some of the ‘experience maps’, I see that a lot of dots marked ‘sad’ have ended up at Tuomo’s installation on the map. Only then do I notice a little sign next to two or three of his toys reading ‘they did not survive’. It reminds me of our initial conversation about whether, or what kind of media art ‘works’ in a gallery space, and what happens if not. Openly declaring a failure with this little sign seems to perfectly communicate the risk and instability involved in using complex technology in this context – but this then being ‘sad’ – not frustrating.

Frustration seems to undermine some of the thoughts Heidi has about her installation when I speak to her briefly that afternoon. The ideal scenario in terms of visitors’ engagement with the two wearable jackets (sewn in CCTV cameras and screens are placed in relation to each other) is for several people to be present at the same time, or of course for her to be there in person. The atmosphere at the opening encouraged a form of interaction with the piece that maybe is impossible to achieve outside some kind of ‘event’ structure? Audience instead of visitor? Does it need a different kind of public scenario? The question of context, audience and interactivity hovers above me as I sadly say goodbye to Helsinki the next day.

Add comment December 11th, 2007

Just out!

Many thanks to Shadey and Seabird for giving me permission to use these pictures of them ‘doing wireless’ on the cover of Mel and Gerard’s new book.

Add comment December 2nd, 2007

Free Symposium on home interaction, participative design + DIY culture.

Not that this blog should just be a noticeboard of things coming up but this looks great.

Free Symposium on home interaction, participative design + DIY culture.

Not In The Manual: Inquiries into open-ended and user-based design interventions in and around the home.
Monday 12th November 2007
Inaugural symposium from the Home Interaction Research Cluster at the University College for the Creative Arts at Farnham
Farnham Maltings, Bridge Square, Farnham, Surrey, GU9 7QR

Symposium Details
The symposium explores just how individuals are participating in the design of their immediate environment and what influence this might have on the shape of design. What can we learn from these ‘amateur’ interventions? How can professional design harness the creative potential of user participation? What services and products may emerge from this DIY ecology? What new methods of interaction are being offered? What is this sense of ‘home’ that is being created?

The symposium is the first event hosted by the Home Interaction Research Cluster at Farnham and includes papers and presentations from academics within the group, as well as contributions from peers in social sciences, design history and computing.

This symposium will be of value to anyone with an interest in DIY cultures, co-creation, user-modification, personal agency and well-being within (and around) the ‘home’ setting, from disciplines such as design history, sociology, product design, interactive design, human-computer interaction.

Papers & presentations include:
– From Blog to Blogue: Personal media and life politics
– Making Space & Telling Stories: Homes Made By Amateurs
– Making Time: Interrogating the experience of the amateur maker
– Single Lives, Personal Spaces: Autoethnography and design for solo living
– Objects for Peaceful Disordering: Indigeneous Designs and Practices of Protest
– Warranty void if removed: modern day tinkering.

Outline Schedule
9:30 Coffee and Registration
10:00 – Keynote: Dr Tim Dant, Reader in Sociology, University of Lancaster
11.00-17.00 – Papers & Panel Discussion
17.30-21.00 – Drinks & Evening Meal

*Please note that the Symposium is free (including refreshments), but you must register in advance*. Places are strictly limited. To register a place or for any enquiries, please email homeinteraction@ucreative.ac.uk with your full name, job title/position, organisation name, contact email address, contact phone number and any professional/personal web address. You will receive a confirmation of your booking soon after.

Add comment October 3rd, 2007

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