1,721 days, 2,667 entries ... Newsticker, link list, time machine: HOLO.mg/stream logs emerging trajectories in art, science, technology, and culture––every day
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Beyond Scrolls & Screens is a new experiment by Christine Surgue and Google Arts. Using object recognition, it allows users to explore and jump back and forth between reoccuring visual elements in high-resolution scans of screens and scrolls from the Tokyo National Museum, Tokyo Fuji Art Museum, and Tachibana Museum collections.
“We need to be very thoughtful about which parts of Korg’s tradition that we want to incorporate and take on.”
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Tatsuya Takahashi , on how to set up an R&D lab for an iconic Japanese synth manufacturer in Berlin—the global capital of electronic music experimentation
OUT NOW :
Joanne McNeil
Lurking: How a Person Became a User
Erudite citizen of the internet
Joanne McNeil tracks the slow erosion of online community, from the early days of the internet to our current era of platform capitalism.
“Uncanny Valley: Being Human in the Age of AI” opens at San Francisco’s de Young Museum, proposing “new ways of thinking about intelligence, nature, and artifice.” In showing works by Zach Blas , Ian Cheng , Simon Denny , Stephanie Dinkins , Trevor Paglen (image), Hito Steyerl , Martine Syms , and others, curator Claudia Schmuckli brings together essential artistic positions that parse the strange and unsettling intricacies of human-machine relations.
“What makes her book such a fun read is that it’s not exactly the comprehensive survey its title implies. Instead, it’s as much memoir as exegesis, an idiosyncratic front-line report from a deeply informed, intrepid, and passionate pioneer who is still in the trenches.”
Eyal Weizman, the founder of the activist research studio Forensic Architecture , has been barred entry into the United States. Informed by email that his right to travel to the U.S. had been revoked, he learned in a subsequent embassy visit that an algorithm had identified a security threat that “could be related to something he was involved in, people he had been in contact with, places he had visited, hotels at which he had stayed, or a pattern of relations among those.” These unsubstantiated claims have left him unable to attend his retrospective exhibition at Dade College’s Museum of Art and Design in Miami, that opens next week.
Celebrating the 30th anniversary of one of Humanity’s most iconic (and existentially wrought) images, NASA releases a new version of the ‘Pale Blue Dot’ photo of Earth.
“Just last week I reduced global emissions by an estimated 59.000 kg CO2 per month by removing a 20 kB JavaScript dependency in Mailchimp for WordPress. There’s no way I can have that kind of effect in other areas of my life.”
– Dutch web developer Danny van Kooten, reporting in detail on his efforts to reduce his carbon footprint on the web
Thanks to a grant from the American Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR), the Asheville Art Museum will digitize more than 1,600 materials from its Black Mountain College Collection , giving the public access to previously unseen archival documents, literature, and works of art. Active from 1933 to 1957, the legendary experimental art school in North Carolina attracted and inspired artists like Anni Albers, Ruth Asawa, John Cage, and Willem de Kooning.
“The Dead Web—The End” opens at the Ludwig Múzeum in Budapest, bleakly imagining the digital detritus after the internet’s collapse. Curators Nathalie Bachand and Béla Tamás Kónya expand on previous iterations of the show with early web-based artworks from the C3 Foundation archive, and new Hungarian contributions from an open call. Brigitta Zics’ Semiosphere (2020, image), for example, teleports vistors into a “busy waiting room” filled with post-collapse chatter.
OUT NOW :
Barbara London
Video/Art: The First Fifty Years
Founding curator of MoMA’s video-media exhibition and collection programs
Barbara London tells video art’s origin story, and traces its growth into installation and interactive art.
“Artists are busy! They are working multiple jobs, side hustles, coordinating festivals, labs, writing research papers, applying for residencies, driving Uber. Meaning they have less time to work on solving these problems than being oppressed by them. They need our help!”
A dozen artists, designers, and cultural producers including Suzanne Kite , Tim Maughan , and Kofi Oduro converge in Ottawa to kick off Artengine ‘s Digital Economies Lab (DEL). At the weekend workshop, hosted by Jeremy Bailey , invited participants begin their “year-long exploration of the wonders and anguish of making art and culture in the twenty-first century.” The goal: prototyping more sustainable, resilient, and equitable financial futures for creatives.
Raphaël Bastide ’s URL installation otherti.me (2019) shows at the transmediale Vorspiel opening at Acud Macht Neu, Berlin at the invitation of panke.gallery. The work, presented as a URL mural, invites viewers to explore a corpus of 30 online works Bastide made over 30 consecutive days, starting on November 16, 2019. Drawing inspiration from daily life, the French artist’s online experiments include emoji clocks, Wikipedia modifications, animated GIFs, and HTML hacks.
Using the world’s fourth most powerful supercomputer, Tianhe II (image), a team of China-based researchers mined a database of 11,000 marine fossil species in search of undetected extinct species. In their paper, they show how machine learning helped analyze the large marine Paleozoic dataset, creating a record with time intervals of only ∼26,000 years—a fine-scale resolution of the fossil record that is typically marred by large temporal jumps, millions of years wide.
“It’s the kind of education I would love to have had—a gentle and metaphorical approach to dealing with ourselves by putting the focus on something much easier to deal with— technology.”
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School of Machines, Making and Make-Believe founder Rachel Uwa, on her pedagogical philosophy. “Humans and society guide the themes of the school more than anything,” Uwa tells art blogger Régine Debatty. “Each year I look around at the current state of things and ask, where are we humans at on the whole? Where are we missing the mark and what feels important for us to know now?”
“The operating system of Code Societies is to code the society that you want to live in … and so we keep an empty seat—a space someone can inhabit—a chair for those that are doing the work now.”
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Simone Browne , in a public discussion elaborating on the Surveillance Studies School for Poetic Computation course she co-instructed with American Artist
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