Curating Immateriality

The Work of the Curator in the Age of Network Systems
Joasia Krysa, editor
$15.95
ISBN: 1570271739
Format: Paperback
Subject: Arts
Pub Date: 04/01/2006
Publisher: Autonomedia/I-DAT
Shipping Weight: 1lbs
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Curating Immateriality
The Work of the Curator in the Age of Network Systems
Joasia Krysa, editor

This is the third book in the DATA Browser series of critical texts that explore issues at the intersection of culture and technology.

The site of curatorial production has been expanded to include the space of the Internet and the focus of curatorial attention has been extended from the object to processes to dynamic network systems. As a result, curatorial work has become more widely distributed between multiple agents, including technological networks and software. This upgraded 'operating system' of art presents new possibilities of online curating that is collective and distributed — even to the extreme of a self-organising system that curates itself. The curator is part of this entire system but not central to it.

The subtitle of the book makes reference to the essay 'The Work of Culture in the Age of Cybernetic Systems' (1988), in which Bill Nichols considered how cybernetics transformed cultural production. He emphasised the shift from mechanical reproduction (symbolised by the camera) to that of cybernetic systems (symbolised by the computer) in relation to the political economy, and pointed to contradictory tendencies inherent in these systems: 'the negative, currently dominant, tendency toward control, and the positive, more latent potential toward collectivity'. The book continues this general line of inquiry in relation to curating, and extends it by considering how power relations and control are expressed in the context of network systems and immateriality.

In relation to network systems, the emphasis remains on the democratic potential of technological change but also the emergence of what appears as more intensive forms of control. Can the same be said of curating in the context of distributed forms? If so, what does this imply for software curating beyond the rhetoric of free software and open systems?

Contributors:

0100101110101101.ORG & [epidemiC] | Josephine Berry Slater | Geoff Cox | Alexander R. Galloway & Eugene Thacker | Olga Goriunova & Alexei Shulgin | Beryl Graham | Eva Grubinger | Piotr Krajewski | Jacob Lillemose | low-fi | Franziska Nori | Matteo Pasquinelli | Christiane Paul | Trebor Scholz | Grzesiek Sedek | Tiziana Terranova | Marina Vishmidt

Contents:

INTRODUCTION TO 'THE WORK OF THE CURATOR IN THE AGE OF NETWORK SYSTEMS' Joasia Krysa

OF SENSE AND SENSIBILITY: IMMATERIAL LABOUR IN OPEN SYSTEMS Tiziana Terranova

TWILIGHT OF THE WIDGETS Marina Vishmidt

EXTRACT FROM KURATOR SOURCE CODE Grzesiek Sedek

SOFTWARE ACTIONS Geoff Cox

FLEXIBLE CONTEXTS, DEMOCRATIC FILTERING AND COMPUTER-AIDED CURATING Christiane Paul

'C@C': COMPUTER-AIDED CURATING (1993-1995) REVISITED Eva Grubinger

CONCEPTUAL TRANSFORMATIONS OF ART Jacob Lillemose

UNASSIGNABLE LEAKAGE Josephine Berry Slater

BIENNALE.PY 0100101110101101.ORG & [epidemiC]

ON MISANTHROPY Alexander R. Galloway & Eugene Thacker

ANNOTATIONS ON 'I LOVE YOU' BY DIGITALCRAFT.ORG Franziska Nori

NET ART LOCATOR low-fi

THE PARTICIPATORY CHALLENGE Trebor Scholz

EDITS FROM A CRUMB DISCUSSION LIST THEME Beryl Graham

AN INVENTORY OF MEDIA ART FESTIVALS Piotr Krajewski

FROM ART ON NETWORKS TO ART ON PLATFORMS Olga Goriunova & Alexei Shulgin

CULTURAL LABOUR AND IMMATERIAL MACHINES Matteo Pasquinelli

NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

The DATA browser series presents critical texts that explore issues at the intersection of culture and technology. The editorial group are Geoff Cox, Joasia Krysa, Anya Lewin, Malcolm Miles, Mike Punt & Hugo de Rijke. This volume is produced in association with Arts Council England and University of Plymouth.

 
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