Recreate the physical, fine art gallery experience by developing a web based multimedia management system that exploits the natural relationships between interconnected, digital media forms.
‘Can Art History Go On Without a Body?’ – Charlie Gere is Lecturer in Digital Art History in the School of History of Art, Film and Visual Media at Birkbeck College, University of London, England. He is the author of Digital Culture (London: Reaktion Books, 2002). His research on art history and digital culture has appeared in numerous collections, including Computing and Visual Culture, ed. T. Szraijber (London: CHArt, 1999), Intelligence: New British Art 2000, (London: Tate Gallery, 2000), Nothing, eds G. Gussin and E. Carpenter (London: August Books, 2001) and Multi-London, ed. J. Kerr (London, Reaktion Books, 2002).
http://www.fact.co.uk/
Welcome to FACT, the UK’s leading organisation for the development, support and exhibition of film, video and new and emerging media.
Art-Place-Technology will look at historical and current projects by some of the world’s leading curators of new media art, and discuss how curating new media art creates interfaces with the art world, museum culture, media, publishing and academia. The symposium proceedings will be published in 2007. To book your place and register go to www.art-place-technology.org For further information please contact Lynn Halliday on (0151) 231 5155 or apt@ljmu.ac.uk
New media art is a global phenomenon: a rapidly changing and dynamic field of creative practice which crosses conventional categories and disciplinary boundaries challenging our assumptions about art.
How do curators engage with new media art?
What makes a good curator of new media art?
What can we learn from the pioneers of this field?
What does the future hold for curating new media art?
What common ground exists with other disciplines?
These and other issues will be explored at Art – Place – Technology.
30 March – 1 April 2006 time TBC http://www.a-r-c.org.uk/liverpool/ocs/downloads.php
http://www.fluxiom.com/
Asset Management Uber-Program. RoR developed, zero flash. Developed by wollzelle, one of, if not the web consulting groups in the world. Headed by Thomas Fuchs, who effectively wrote Rails, Script.aculo.us and a lot of other AJAX/Ruby jazz.