Research Catalog

No internet, no art : a Lunch bytes anthology

Title
No internet, no art : a Lunch bytes anthology / edited by Melanie Bühler.
Publication
  • Eindhoven : Onomatopee, [2015]
  • ©2015

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library NX180.I57 N65 2015Off-site

Details

Additional Authors
Bühler, Melanie
Description
351 pages, 63 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color); 24 cm.
Summary
Today it has become increasingly difficult to find a person or an object without some kind of connection to the internet. 'No internet, no art' is dedicated to exploring what this situation entails with respect to one cultural field in particular: art. This anthology forms both the culmination and a continuation of a series of public events titled 'Lunch bytes: Thinking about art and digital culture', held in Washington, D.C., which invited artists and experts from different fields to discuss their work in relation to this overarching theme. By opening up the often narrowly-defined discursive field of 'post-internet,' artistic practices are examined thematically within the larger context of digital culture. As such, this anthology offers valuable new contributions to the fields of art history, media studies, philosophy, curatorial studies, and design.
Series Statement
Onomatopee ; 102
Uniform Title
Onomatopee (Series) ; no. 102.
Subject
  • Art and the Internet
  • Art et Internet
  • Digitalisierung
  • Kunst
  • Design
  • Internet
  • Philosophie
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (pages 329-334) and index.
Contents
Introduction / Melanie Bühler -- Arrangement 2 / Adam Cruces, Pierre Lumineau -- from Uncreative writing / Kenneth Goldsmith -- Harry Burke on Uncreative writing, poetry and language -- Nothing new needs to be created: Kenneth Goldsmith's claim to uncreativity / Cornelia Sollfrank -- Domenico Quaranta on authorship, appropriation, surfing clubs and post-Internet art -- Readymade affect : interview / Michael Bell-Smith -- Constant fluidity : interview / Joel Holmberg -- Ben Vickers on "new media art," the digital as a category and the role of the curator today -- Curation, context, archive: presenting and preserving new media art / Christiane Paul -- Annet Dekker on archiving, preservation and collecting -- The archive and the principle of Noah's Ark / Peter Weibel -- Jaakko Pallasvuo on oversharing, social media and being visible as an artist -- In the name of love: arguments for a slow Internet / Claire L. Evans -- Athletic aesthetics / Brad Troemel -- Paul Kneale on surveillance, language and cryptogifs -- Surveillance in the age of "trusted computing" / Douglas Thomas -- Nine eyes / Jon Rafman -- Geert Lovink on the "social" in social media and the political economy of the Internet -- Out in public / Natalie Bookchin -- Who's asking: reciprocal querying in the age of big data / Monica Lam, Greg Niemeyer -- Raffael Dörig on the history of activism, art and the Internet -- Hacking as a way to deal with the world : interview / UBERMORGEN -- Performance, mediation, and the public sphere / Mark Tribe -- Niels van Doorn on the political economy of labor, the artist as creative entrepreneur and online participation as future investment -- The digitization of work: three trends / Philipp Albers -- Internet + money + art + work + labor / Rafaël Rozendaal in conversation with himself -- The self as artwork in the age of digital capital / Bernadette Wegenstein -- Jenna Sutela on extending technologies and the blurring boundaries on the self -- Where did the future go? / Nicolas Nova -- m-a-u-s-e-r on surface lust and the architectural rendering -- Soft brand abstracts: closer than ever before / Kari Altmann -- Michel van Dartel on the new aesthetic and the post-digital -- Those new aestheticians and their amazing mental machines / Daniel Pinkas -- ...More than meets the eye. New/media aesthetic(s) / Katja Kwastek -- The post-digital: the new aesthetic and infrastructural aesthetics / David M. Berry -- Elvia Wilk on the relationship between physical and digital -- Physical data : interview / Aram Bartholl -- Karen Archey on digital art, medium specificity and post-Internet -- Art beyond the digital age / Andreas Broeckmann.
ISBN
  • 9789491677359
  • 9491677357
OCLC
  • ocn927446215
  • 927446215
  • SCSB-1834341
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library