Search results for 'public+domain'
Steve Cisler
Bernardo Gutiérrez
Media (in) Darkness
OPEN #21 - (Im)Mobility
Media (in) Darkness
OPEN #11 - Hybrid Space
Theme issue of OPEN, journal for Art and the Public Domain, published by the Foundation for Art and Public Space (SKOR), Amsterdam & NAi Publishers, Rotterdam, Fall 2008.
Bernardo Gutiérrez
Bernardo Gutiérrez (@bernardosampa) is a Spanish-Brazilian journalist and writer who researches networked movements, hacker culture and peer-to-peer politics. He is the founder of the network FuturaMedia.net, lives in Sao Paulo, Brazil, and participates in the Global Revolution Research Network (GRRN).
ReadEric Kluitenberg
Eric Kluitenberg is an independent theorist, writer, and organiser on culture, media and technology. He is the editor-in-chief of the Tactical Media Files, and a Research Fellow at the Institute of Network Cultures (2013). He teaches media theory and history at the Art/Science Interfaculty in The Hague.
ReadDebates & Credits
Sarai - The new media initiative, Delhi
Sarai is a programme of the Centre for the Study of Developing
Societies, (CSDS) one of India?s leading research institutes with a
commitment to critical and dissenting thought and a focus on critically
expanding the horizons of the discourse on development, particularly
with reference to South Asia.
Tactical Television in Italy
Overview and manifesto of urban tv movements in Italy
The League of Noble Peers
The League of Noble Peers is an organization credited with producing the Steal This Film documentary series.
Raqs Media Collective
Bassel Khartibil
Free Bassel Khartibil
Aaron Swartz
Launch: Open 21 (Im)Mobility - Exploring the Boundaries of Hypermobility
Tuesday evening May 24 the theme issue (Im)Mobility of Open, Journal for Art and the Public Domain was presented at the Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam, in combination with a screening of The Forgotten Space, a film by Allan Sekula and Noël Burch, and a Q & A with filmmaker Noël Burch.
Debates & Credits
Media Art in the Public Domain
Debates & Credits was a Russian / Dutch art and media project which has invited four artists and artist collectives from Russia and four from The Netherlands to develop interventionist (media-) art works for the public space.
The project happened in three stages:
Amsterdam, September 11 - 22
Yekaterinburg, September 26 - 29
Moscow, October 7 - 13