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  • Things I've been doing when I've not been writing this blog

    • 20 May 2010
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    • Art Music PhD Travels technology
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    No excuses, I've just not done this for ages. I've been enjoying tweeting much more. Probably since I now own an iPhone, where it seems somehow easier to be more immediate. I've still to work out a way to transfer some of the enthusiasm I feel for that to this place. Other than that - a quick round up and reminder (mainly to self) of what's been going on. Lately, Future Everything. Not the conference this year, but gigs and art and eating and drinking with friends from across the UK. Definite highlight was Konono No.1. I've wanted to see them for a long time, and it was a surprisingly small and un-packed gig. The exhibition Serendipity City included some great work: to name a few - Eyewriter, No. 207 by Rana Begum, Jon Rafman's Google Street Views, and of course the Open Sailing project, which if I've not mentioned before, then I should have done. Also, another exhibition, Cu took me to the unlikely venue of The Palace Hotel's basement bar. The hypnotic Death Calls the Tune by Lab Binaer was a definite highlight for me - a record player armed with a UV LED and glowpainted surface, which was activated by an RSS feed of headlines. There was a film screening too - and a reminder of how amazing John Smith's Blight is, with a soundtrack by Jocelyn Pook. I was annoyed to miss the discussion at Castlefield about art and media, but it will apparently be online soon, so at least I can marry up the twitter comments with what happened in retrospect. More blogging on Future Everything here. The reason I didn't see everything I wanted to in Manchester was because I was also in London for meetings, but also to see No Soul For Sale at Tate Modern.
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    It was a celebratory event (Tate Modern has been open for 10 years), which has been met with some criticism. Not sure I would agree with this, but then I was in the position of being able to chat to lots of people who I knew, and who were given a square of Tate Modern's Turbine Hall floorspace to display their wares. Black Dogs' pub was brilliant to hear about.
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    Their idea arose out of considering their environment for the few days in residence in the Turbine Hall, and to display the pieces that they'd been working on for the event. They weren't allowed to serve beer, but I admired their desire to create a cosy relaxed corner nonetheless. Oh and before all this, I was at the second National Photography Symposium. I had a great time. I was working, but also felt like I was not. It was brilliant to meet and remeet people who I communicate with all the time (by email and twitter mainly), and rarely get to hang out with. Being in Derby and at Quad was a treat, as was learning and working with all sorts of people who know an extreme amount of stuff about photography and all of the issues that surround it. Rut Blees Luxemburg gave the closing keynote, using 35mm slides, in an auditorium that had to be completely dark. Hence the dark photo, but you kind of get the idea. Her works glowed appropriately.
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    (If I haven't mentioned this before, I work for Redeye when I'm not doing research. They are a photography network, based in Manchester.) In other conference news, I also bit the bullet, cheated the ash plume, and went to Brussels by air.
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    (This is Dover harbour, I think. And a bit of plane.) Brussels sems to be a tiny city bursting with a great sense of identity; I liked being there very much. The conference, Institutional Attitudes was surprising and sometimes baffling, but gave me food for thought for my own research, which was as good a result as I could have expected. And then there was the small matter of an election, and today, news of new cultural policies on the horizon  ... no wonder I haven't been sitting down to write... Now, I've not done any of these complex events justice, or even written about them in a chronological order, but at least I've gathered all these links in one place. Anyway, I'm so late doing this, everyone else has written tons about them all already.
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  • Currently Reading

    • 28 Aug 2009
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    • PhD Reading
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    I wanted to include a feed from my Google Books page here, but it didn't quite work out as I had wanted it to. I'm using Google Books as a way to keep track of some of the texts that I have read, am reading or aspire to read. I have found that it is a reasonably good place from which to scan contents pages, especially if it is a book that I need to order or buy. I've also been tagging things that I've lodged there, just because I can. Google Books isn't the main keeper of my bibliographic info, however. For that, I use Zotero (v 1.0.10). I have found it to be the best way to keep a bibliography. It allows you to tag, make groups from your library, and most usefully of all, keeps screen-shots and files linked in with each reference. There is also a plug-in to Word, so that it automatically inserts references in the style you need, and creates a bibliography for you. I think it is a really powerful tool, and a very reassuring PhD ally. I don't yet use the online version 2.0 (beta), but I will once its stability can be assured. Also, I think someone has made a WordPress widget for it...so my bibliography might one day appear here. (Thanks to Pete for mentioning delicious too (comment in post below) - I have tried it and really like it, but end up going back to Zotero, just cos I wanted everything in one place and am too lazy to keep both of them simultaneously neat.) PS. I am currently reading George Yudice's  The Expediency of Culture and Paul Morand's Venices. Guess which one is on my bedside table?
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  • Pointless Babble

    • 21 Aug 2009
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    • PhD technology
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    I've investigated quite a few new applications to help me use my computer more efficiently, and also to learn more about social networking. I'm interested to see how digital tools can be used to make work both independently and collaboratively. I'm also interested to see if digital tools can be fun as well as useful - the recent debate about twitter indicates this (see Pear Analytics' study of 'pointless babble' and replies like Stephen Fry's) - and if this has an impact on the work that is my PhD. Certainly I have immediately seen the appeal of FreeMind in helping me to both plan ahead and made notes on reading. I'd also like to try concept mapping tools that are also available (maybe CMap tools, which can be collaboratively made). I thank Howard Rheingold's twitter feed for pointing me to these - I doubt I would have begun using FreeMind so quickly unless I'd heard someone else describing their engagement with it.
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    A bit of one of my FreeMind maps. So yes, I am enjoying using twitter (as @alexhodby)- I have found some great links through it, and it is also a great way to quickly find a consensus of opinion on using digital tools in particular. It helped me to learn about the merits of various url trimmers (current favourite is http://tr.im/), not least because of its statistical analysis of who clicks your trimmed urls, which are strangely compulsive to see. I started this blog, (thanks to the marvel of WordPress) and began looking at a lot more too - some are in my links list on the right, others deserve a separate post. I realise that the main reason for writing my blog is as a note to self, but also I've told other people it's here, as a convenient archive of my links. It also helps me to keep track of exhibitions and events that I've been to - much easier to access than looking through files of leaflets and handouts. Maybe I'm pointlessly babbling to myself. Most recently, and to help me to keep track of all the above, I've started using NetVibes as my home page. It gathers twitter, news, blogs, search engine and email in one place, and seems (so far) to be very useful. Next task is to investigate wiki working (something like this) - it seems far less daunting and a lot more useful now that I've started to investigate the possibilities for myself.
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  • 'The Art of With' at Cornerhouse

    • 8 Jul 2009
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    • Art PhD
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    In amongst travels at the end of June, I was in Manchester long enough to attend The Art of With seminar at Cornerhouse on 24 June. Billed as including a wide variety of speakers, (originally including Nicholas Bourriaud), it seemed a very relevant topic to my research, as it set out to investigate the idea of the 'open' in an arts context. Charles Leadbeater talked about the 'do' and 'talk' experiences of art emerging, rather than simply ones that we 'enjoy'. He also raised the idea that we shouldn't differentiate digital media as something different - it's all just 'stuff' with which we engage with the world. Simon Yuill was more media specific - speaking about the commodification of art, and how a shift to the private sphere has marginalised the participatory - he talked about ideas of copyright, open source, and how these ideas are being explored with digital media and online. He also spoke critically about how web 2.0 platforms are used tokenistically, as a form of apparent 'openness', but without any real infrastructural change. I want to explore some of his ideas about gallery as 'hacklab'. Laurie Peake described her work at the Liverpool Biennial, and how the projects there have engaged (openly?) in, for and with Liverpool communities. She asked: in the future, will we need purpose-built venues for art? I wondered if we didn't, who would host this sort of seminar? Questions particularly tackled ideas about ownership and copyright (I think especially from the artists in the audience). One suggested that we drop the term 'participatory' - which led on quite nicely to Tom Fleming's desire line metaphor, as he explored new ways to talk about culture and the arts. Again he talked about infrastructural change. As did John Ippolito, as he described his work in and around networks. He set up the enabling potential of the network against the instructive environment of the museum. He called for desire lines between 'silos' of knowledge, which would allow for a sharing of ideas between different archival repositories - explored further with the project ThoughtMesh. I missed a curatorial voice in these panels - a person who has straddled those territories which, in this seminar at least, were characterised as insitutional (and therefore closed), and the 'open' domain of creativity, debate and practice. Nevertheless, it provided me with a lot of food for thought for my research.
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  • Short Trip to London

    • 8 Jul 2009
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    Catching up on things I have been doing for the past few weeks... On 20 June, I made a flying visit to London, to see the Goldsmiths Fine Art Degree show, where my friend Nina Wakeford was showing her work (and received a First). With a group of students, she had designed, built and curated a space for their work. It looked like a stupendous amount of endeavour had taken place in a stupidly short space of time, but it was well worth their efforts, as the pieces held surprises and supported one another in the space. It made a refreshing change from the more usual carefully corralled student displays, which often seem unnecessarily precious. In the afternoon, I went on to the first session of the Shortness conference at Tate Modern. It was a joy to hear Tom Shakespeare speak, as well as Sadie Plant, Paul D Millar, Lia (and Dan) Perjovschi - and Steven Connor's chairing of the surprisingly lengthy (for a short conference) Q&A session. One of my most memorable soundbites was Tom's remark that Sei Shonagon was the first twitterer... and the discussion about whether it is possible to make ideas short (to abbreviate, to condense) without first exploring them 'longhand'. I wasn't able to stay on for the dinner, chaired by Nicholas Parsons. I could only follow the twittered remarks afterwards.
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  • Denmark and Newcastle

    • 15 Jun 2009
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    • Friends PhD Travel
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    Last Wednesday (10 June) I flew out to Denmark to attend a European Doctoral Seminar in Culture, Criticism and Creativity to present a paper about my research. I had a quick walk around Copenhagen, and looked into very enticing shops, and of course, some kind of fishy local food. As there was a huge medical conference happening in Copenhagen, our seminar was shifted out to the countryside. I took a train and a bus out there to a conference centre near to Kulhuse. As I was arrived day before everyone else, it meant that I had a free evening to look at the fjord, and a free morning to walk around the tree-lined lanes to holiday homes, thatched houses, ancient burial sites and seaside huts.
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    Back to the work, and there were several great papers and lots of great conversation. I presented on ‘new institutional’ practices, and talked about how I am negotiating the practicalities of my research. I used some examples from recent artistic and curatorial work that have really interested me, including WHW’s curatorial approach for this year’s Istanbul Biennial (and especially their press conference as performance), and the  New Museum's Night School (Anton Vidokle’s artist project as temporary school). Looking forward to keeping in touch with contacts made there. Then, it was great to return to the North East for a day of fun, to celebrate with Beth, and to see so many great friends. Byker Wall (many thanks to Jude), Turkish baths, The Cumberland Arms, and Café Royal (with fellow luncher Ele) – my favourite bits of Newcastle.
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  • June Plans

    • 1 Jun 2009
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    • Art Music PhD Travels
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    It's going to be a busy month: tomorrow, I am in London, giving some curatorial advice for The Space Between. Then I'm in Copenhagen for a research seminar. A Venice biennale trip has been postponed, as a Glastonbury appearance for The 1,2,3,4s is now on the cards... Plus teaching myself more about this blogging lark, and getting some writing done.
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