Location: Vienna, Kunsthalle Wien Karlsplatz, MAK, Rhiz
The New Access to Culture is a workshop and public debate on Austrian cultural institutions and their digital future. (June 12 MAK Wien) More →
Shared Digital Futures is a conference that explores the impact of digital network technologies for cultural production. (June 14/15 Kunsthalle Wien, Rhiz)
Overview:
Over the last decade digitization has reached deep into our societies, invaded the archives, transformed production and distribution. The established divisions of labor are called into question, and deep challenges emerge to the theory and practices of many cultural domains. A diverse group of people – artists, researchers, critics, entrepreneurs and an engaged audience – will exchange experiences, debate ideas and reflect on essential challenges:
- How can expanded access to digital networks benefit diverse cultural landscapes?
- What opportunities are offered by the blurring of boundaries between artists and audiences?
- What does it mean when cultural works are both finished works and material for new works?
The popular resistance against ACTA (Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement) in early 2012 showed that current attempts to support established business models in culture have reached an impasse. Simply expanding copyright legislation and enforcement is not only not working, but also politically no longer viable. This has led to a number of outcries by authors and publishers who see the basis of Western culture threatened, but relatively little in terms of new ideas and approaches how to adapt to the changing times. Is there simply a change from old monopolies, based on copyright, financing and distribution, to new monopolies, based on access, intelligent filtering and interactivity?
But then the future is unwritten and there is an urgent need to examine these issues. “Shared Digital Futures” contributes to this debate from the point-of-view of a new solidarity between artists and audiences, of innovative cultural producers and engaged publics. A view where increased access is matched with increased opportunities.
Shared Digital Futures – Program
Wednesday 12. June 2013
Location: Museum for Applied Arts
THE NEW ACCESS TO CULTURE
Austrian Cultural Institutions and their Digital Future
Panel Discussion with:
Marc Sands (Tate Gallery/UK) and
Laurence Rassel (Tapies Foundation/ ES)
Christoph Thun-Hohenstein (MAK)
Moderated by Corinna Milborn (Puls TV)
19:30 – 21:00 h
Friday 14. June 2013
Location: Kunsthalle Wien Karlsplatz
THE ART WORK IS NEVER FINISHED
13:00 – 15:00 h
In the Western tradition we are used to think of art works, once they have been made public, as finished and thus stable. Ideally from then on, they are preserved for eternity in specialized institutions like museums. With the growing importance of digital cultures and the increasing influence of non-western cultural traditions, these assumptions are called into question. Increasingly, the art work is regarded as unfinished and considered only temporarily fixed, changing in versions, adaptable to contexts and usages. It is, at the same time, a finished product and raw material. This poses serious challenges to the theory and practice of cultural production. Does the concept of the art work need an update?
Copying as a Means for Creativity? ‘Chinese Creativities’ and Plagiarism on the Chinese Bestseller Market
Lena Henningsen, writer and journalist and working as an editor for Süddeutsche Zeitung in Munich, Germany. http://www.sinologie.uni-freiburg.de/index.php/mitarbeiter/profs/henningsen
There is a new version available – how digitalization changes our idea of culture
Dirk von Gehlen, writer and journalist and working as an editor for Süddeutsche Zeitung in Munich, Germany. http://digitale-notizen.de
Remix Culture and Its Discontents – On the Freedom of Art in the Age of ‘Intellectual Property’
Inke Arns, independent curator, writer and theorist, currently artistic director of Hartware MedienKunstVerein in Dortmund, Germany. http://www.hmkv.de
Hosted by:
Christian Höller, Springerin Wien
POLITICS OF SHARING
16:00 – 18:00 h
The rise of sharing as a new paradigm is embedded in large-scale social and political transformations. Some speak of the 3rd industrial revolution; others envision a world beyond capitalism. While the crisis of the traditional paradigms, particularly in the cultural industry is a matter of daily experience, is necessary to understand more about the larger dynamics driving this. How to understand these transformations? How to develop models that do not simply support new business cycles but rather increase transparency and participatory aspects? How can such a new model relate to state and markets?
How to render the p2p/sharing economy more autonomous
Michel Bauwens, founder of the Foundation for Peer-to-Peer Alternatives works with a global group of researchers in the exploration of peer production and governance. http://p2pfoundation.net
Digital Labor: New Opportunities, Old Inequalities
R. Trebor Scholz, associate professor for Culture and Media at The New School in NYC. http://newschool.academia.edu/TreborScholz
Sharing Beyond the Digital Sphere
Brigitte Kratzwald, social scientist and commons activist http://www.commons.at
Hosted by:
Felix Stalder, World-Information Institute
FUNDING THE COMMONS
18:00 – 20:00 h
From Free Software to Wikipedia, from Alpine meadows to new urban gardens, the commons are increasingly identified as an alternative mode of production; a model which rather provides use-value to communities than exchange-value to markets. However, immediately the question of how to finance these commons is raised. If this is to be sustainable beyond certain niches, there is a need to raise money outside the commodities exchange market. State support plays a role, but cannot provide the main funding. A new regulatory framework needs to find a balance of interests to maintain and expand the commons. Different models of how to address this question will be investigated with a focus on the field of art and culture. How to realize the benefits of a commons and what are pitfalls to be avoided?
Learn by funding – Making social entrepreneurship more open and open entrepreneurship more social
Olivier Schulbaum, Co-Initiator of Bank of Common Knowledge, Burnstation, open crowd-funding platform http://goteo.org.
The challenges of sustaining a cultural society with multiple contributors
Philippe Aigraine, computer scientist and analyst of political, economic and cultural stakes of information technology and knowledge governance. https://www.laquadrature.net/en/elements-for-the-reform-of-copyright-and-related-cultural-policies
Art continues to evolve. Will we do the same?
ZOE.LEELA, musician, C3S advocate, creative commonist. http://www.zoeleela.com/
Hosted by:
Emilie Kleinszig, World-Information Institute
Saturday 15. June 2013
NEW COLLECTIVE AUTHORSHIP
13:00 – 15:30 h
Digital media allows for new forms of collaboration and networked modes of cooperation locally and globally; not only in distributed production chains or the field of software development but also in the arts and culture. Collective action that intervenes in processes and flows of signs and sounds becomes more relevant than past models of isolated genius. Practices that draw on technical intelligence and diverse skills are necessarily based on cooperation. What are critical cultural practices in a fluid field of Network society beyond the obsolete 19th century model of the individual author and the aura of the fetish object? What means authorship in the regime of the creative imperative after “the death of the author”?
Tools for a Read-Write World
Femke Snelting, artist and designer, developing projects at the intersection of design, feminism and free software. http://www.constantvzw.org
From visiting to living, into the Archive
Daniel García Andújar, visual media artist, activist and art theorist from Spain. Lives and works in Barcelona. https://danielandujar.org
Prismatic Captures of Referential Landscapes
Jonathan Uliel Saldanha, founding member of the art and music platform SOOPA. Works as a cultural producer in Porto, Portugal. http://www.jonathanulielsaldanha.com
Collective identities are necessary, progress implies them
Ewen Chardronnet, author, artist, film maker and curator based in Brittany, France. http://www.ewenchardronnet.com
Hosted by:
Konrad Becker, World-Information Institute
NEW INTERMEDIARIES
16:00 – 18:00 h
In digital environments the transaction costs for publishing, distribution, logistics and administration has fallen dramatically. It is not so much about big trucks distributing tons of material to thousands of outlets than about paperless trails and automatized logistics. Many forms of cultural production have been democratized with widely accessible tools and independent producers can benefit from digital scaling effects. Social networks and recommendation systems unseat the dominant powers of industry marketing campaigns and mass media. While traditional roles of cultural gatekeepers have become outdated, there is a need for new intermediaries that do not function as privatizers of social surplus, but as partners of independent cultural producers.
Can there be a Commons without a Community? Shifting emphasis from the free and open to the commons and the collaborative economy.
Eric Kluitenberg, theorist, writer, educator, and advisor working at the intersection of culture, media, and technology. http://www.ecommons.eu
Public library*
Marcell Mars, founder of the Multimedia Institute – mi2 and net.culture club mama in Zagreb. http://2012.haip.cc/en/festival/
Dealers in Free
Jamie King, producer/director of the “Steal this Film” series and founder of the VODO project in London http://vodo.net
SDF Sounds
Location: Rhiz
21:00 – 22:00 Film screening:
Tunnel Vision (59′)
Director: Raz Mesinai Music: Jonathan Uliel Saldanha
Produced and edited: Mesinai/ Saldanha Tzadik DVD Edition, Cat. # 3013
SDF Live acts and DJs
The orchestration of efforts and the organization in collectives and ensembles comes naturally to musicians. Collective practices and the free exchange of ideas and skills is a central element of musical practice over the centuries. It draws on a commons of tunes, rhythms and collective moods. Digital music culture is mixing and meshing on the shoulders of a giant heritage. Sound system culture collectively organizes around a shared technology and social space. However, social synchronization through shared ritual practices needs to be balanced by independent structures and new forms of association in autonomous networks. While largely invisible in mainstream culture, marginalized networks often spawned the most interesting cultural innovations.
HHY & the Macumbas LIVE (PT) Sangue Electrico Club Combo
The rhythm voodoo: hypnotizing dubgrooves live on stage! For this special Vienna set, HHY & The Macumbas will present a special sonic apparatus. Operating the intervals between percussion and its echo, sub bass and its resonance, the flesh and skin of the percussion with the electric blood of the mixer.
DJ Chus Martinez y su Conjunto (FR)
Is it a phantom? Multiple identities? It is the famous European collective DJ!
c0ntainer LIVE (AT)
»c0ntainer is a web, laying out its tiers of social sounds on earlier techno concepts«
Speakers Corner Soundsystem DJs (AT)
Sound system culture: and the beat goes on!
Saturday 15. June 2013
Workshops: 10:30- 12:30 h
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