DocAgora, hotdocs, toronto, 27th april 2007

The research “the author vs. the collective” was presented at HotDocs documentary film festival in Toronto, Canada. See slides (as .pdf).

“The Documentary Auteur is a dead duck in the digital water.”

quoted from http://www.nfb.ca/filmmakerinresidence/blog/?cat=2&paged=2

That’s what 6 people debated, 3 for and 3 against, on stage at Hot Docs, during the third real-life instalment of DocAgora. A clap-athon from the audience was to determine the winner.

FIR friends Peter and Amit, co-founders of DocAgora, clearly set up this false dichotomy to get people thinking deeper about the shifting roles of authorship and the digital collective. But at times the discussion was painful, until finally, Adnan Hadzi on the “pro-side” finally wisely reframed the argument: its not authorship that’s dead, but its copyright and ownership that’s dead.

But it was too late in the game, and the documentary world’s Simon Cowell, Nick Fraser of the BBC, wrapped-it up for the “con” side by trashing the whole debate, trashing the notion of Auteur: “Could we please use a proper Anglo-Saxon word for it,” then evoking the spirit of Torontonian Marshal McLuhan and (after trashing him) proclaiming the authorial duck alive and well by saying: “Quite simply, works made collectively are boring”.

The clap-athon swung in favour for the con-side. Only then did the really interesting aruguments for the collective emerge. Montrealer Sylvia Van Brabant stood up from the audience and pointed out: “What about the Native storytelling traditions… who are the authors in that!?” Sanjay, another documentarian, criticized the “hyper-individualism of the west and its notions of authorship.” And later in tha hallway, Marc Glassman, complained to me he hadn’t gotten a chance to speak because he’s bald and wears glasses. He wanted to desperately say “What about Jazz, guys?”

Luckily, no real ducks were hurt in the making of DocAgora, as Peter is also one of the co-founders of the Greencode, a movement to green the doc industry.

Btw, FIR is an alumni of DocAgora, as Gerry and I both presented at the inaugural DocAgora in Amsterdam.

Meanwhile, FIR had two presentations at Hot Docs, including one for Doc U, to university students all intent on becoming filmmakers. They later told their mentor, Sarah Zammit, who told me, “I want to do what FIR does!” and some even said, “I want to be her!” Scary.

quoted from documentary.org

Author? Autheur? by Marc Glassman

DocAgora, a nonprofit organization created to make the digital world comprehensible and useful to the documentary community, is the virtual brainchild of Peter Wintonick, co-director of the definitive profile of Noam Chomsky, Manufacturing Consent; Israeli-Canadian producer Amit Breuer (Checkpoint, Sentenced to Marriage); and American “webjockey” and director Cameron Hickey (Garlic and Watermelons). In ancient Greece, the agora was the crossroads where a marketplace was established and public debates would occur. Using classic forms of communication—debates, panel discussions and lectures—DocAgora is bringing a new marketplace of ideas to documentary festivals around the world. A self-styled “gypsy caravan” of practical philosophers, DocAgora has been plying its trade for a year now, in festivals ranging from IDFA to Silverdocs to Hot Docs.

Joining Breuer and Wintonick as core members of DocAgora is a trio of distinguished individuals. Fleur Knopperts brings marketing and financing expertise to the group. The former director of IDFA’s FORUM, where scores of documentaries have found broadcasting and financial partners, Knopperts has recently become the industry and marketing director at the Sheffield Documentary Festival in England. Replacing Knopperts as the IDFA rep is industry veteran Adriek van Nieuwenhuijzen, who has a wealth of knowledge on documentary filmmaking. Neil Sieling, American University New Media Fellow at the Center for Social Media, is recognized internationally as a consultant, TV producer (Alive from Off Center) and curator, who helped to launch a multitude of projects, including Link TV.

This sextet of visionary media activists scored its initial North American success with an afternoon of spirited, well-structured debates at the 2007 Hot Docs festival in Toronto, Canada. Seats were hard to come by as filmmakers, broadcasters, academics, producers and students jostled for space at University of Toronto’s Innis Town Hall. The highlight was an Oxford Union-style debate organized around the proposition that “The authored documentary is a dead duck in the digital water.”

Arguing in favor of the proposition were activist director Daniel Cross (The Street, S.P.I.T. and creator of the website homeless.org); producer and cross-media creator Femke Wolting of the Dutch-based company Submarine (My Second Life); and the British-based communications academic Adnan Hadzi (Liquid Culture, Deptford TV). Arguing in favor of the auteur were director Jennifer Fox (Flying: Confessions of a Free Woman), new technologies student Brad Dworkin (Ryerson University in Toronto) and broadcaster/producer/writer Nick Fraser (BBC’s Storyville).

Operating as the moderator, Sieling pointed out that DocAgora questions the new digital age in “a Socratic manner without being pretentious.” He set up the ground rules, keeping the speakers to a slightly loose five-minute time limit, announcing a “clap-o-meter” for an informal audience vote and explaining that Canadian veteran commissioning editor Rudy Buttignol would be the adjudicator for the debate.

Cross brought the proceedings to life right away by announcing, “The water is poisoned, the ducks are dead and the auteurs ain’t got no money––so we’re going to win this debate.” He then challenged the audience, asking all the auteurs to stand up and be counted. No one stood up, hardly surprising in a room full of reticent Canadians and international doc-makers.

Cross’ argument centered on the collaborative nature of documentary filmmaking, particularly in cinema vérité. Since the main camera operator, sound recordist and editor have so much to do with the making of that type of doc, Cross suggested that the director is simply part of the process, not an auteur. To him, the best documentaries have layers of authorship, not just a single vision. He concluded by pointing out that the website he has founded, www.homelessnation.org, welcomes that layering through blogs by street people, who are given cameras and encouraged to contribute pieces on issues ranging from police brutality to squatting

Counter-punching for the auteur side, the distinguished documentary director Fox passionately argued, “I live for authorship.” To her, scientific and medical discoveries are authored. Even An American Love Story has become as much her story as the subjects’ because she gave shape and structure to the documentary. Fox expressed her belief in “a singular vision” of filmmaking, replying to Cross’ layers of authorship by suggesting that creative collaborators only work well when there’s a link: the auteur.

Next up, presumably for the collective, non-auteur side, was Wolting. The Dutch new media pioneer used to be a programmer at the Rotterdam International Film Festival and, while there, grew weary of the old-style auteurs, who seemed to always get funding and have their films included in prestigious festivals worldwide. While arguing against that style of auteurism, which smacks of elitism, Wolting did make a case for young “authors” being able to make their films with new digital tools. With YouTube, it is possible to distribute short films for free and bypass festivals altogether. A believer in the punk ethic DIY (do it yourself), Wolting ended up endorsing a “new age of auteurs,” who are not members of a privileged class but simply the ones with the best ideas and methods of execution.

Toronto new media artist Brad Dworkin followed Wolting to the podium, arguing on the auteur side. Dworkin pointed out that even Andrew Sarris, the critic who popularized the auteur theory in the US back in the 1960s, now admits that the old definition doesn’t work anymore. Calling auteurism a “pattern theory in flux,” Dworkin asked, “In a digital world, can we say the author is dead? I don’t think so; it’s in a new form: the website itself.”

Dworkin suggested that we look at an entire website as one work: the layout, the text, even the color. “The new auteurs,” he went on, “are the creators of the search engines because they develop the programming, aesthetics and set the parameters, like a director of a documentary.” Citing an experiment he conducted in collective authorship, where 20 feeds of Toronto were shot simultaneously, Dworkin noted that by setting the time, format and place, he was, in fact, the auteur. Even in digital work, he concluded, “the context of the exhibition and distribution” are handled by one person, who is effectively, its author or creator.

Hadzi came to the debate highly prepared, as his PhD project is on “the author versus the collective.” Taking the high road, he argued that “the author is in flux. The copyright is the dead duck in the digital water.” Playing to the crowd as a tongue-in-cheek academic radical, Hadzi offered an astonishing amount of facts and speculation around new media technology. For instance, did you know that by 2015, your home computer will be able to store all the music created in the world? Or that by 2020, all the content ever created could potentially be stored in that same computer?

Hadzi is a believer in “copyleft,” a practice where directors and other artists voluntarily remove some usage restrictions from their own work. His ideas complement the “free use” access to archival materials, which the Center for Social Media advocates. For Hadzi, open licensing and common source technology will open up production and distribution for documentary filmmakers. And the auteur? Artists with singular visions will provide knowledge and wisdom to the collective voices that will spring out of the new panacea in the upcoming digital age.

Leaving the visionary thoughts of Hadzi, Dworkin and Wolting far behind, the avuncular Fraser arose to deliver the final speech of the debate. The well educated and fearsomely amusing Brit suffers fools badly. He denounced famed French cultural theorists Deleuze and Baudrillard, who were obvious inspirations for Hadzi and Dworkin in particular. Fraser pointed out that “everyone in the debate basically agrees with one another,” making it impossible to do what a true Oxford debater would do in conclusion: “Trash the enemies and praise our side.” Apart from a nice but gratuitous aside praising Canadian media philosopher Marshall McLuhan (“Artists are the canaries in the coal mine.”), Fraser’s conclusion was contentious but engaging: “The documentary shall survive made by individuals and collectives.”

As the adjudicator, it was upto Buttignol to deliver the final word. The clap-o-meter had already registered a resounding victory for the auteur side. An advocate of auteurism, Buttignol turned into a contrarian, admitting that he felt suspicious that the audience agreed with him. His conclusion was Jesuitical: “The argument is dead.” Evoking yet another Canadian philosopher and scientist, Hubert Reeves, Buttignol left the audience with this thought: “Chaos and order co-exist.” In other words, auteurs and collectives will always be among us.

Doc Agora will certainly be with us for quite a while. The group plans to be a presence at this fall’s Sheffield and Amsterdam documentary festivals. The future looms before them. Whether it’s bright or not may well be the subject of another debate.

Check out www.docagora.org for details.

Marc Glassman is the editor of POV, Canada’s leading documentary magazine, and of Montage, the publication of the Directors Guild of Canada.

CUCR & Deptford.TV, workshops / roundtable: research architecture

During April/May 2007 CUCR students joined the Deptford.TV workshops. Have a look at the 2007 channel in the http://www.Deptford.TV Broadcast Machine.

As a result the text “strategies of sharing” got published in the CUCR magazine street signs (.pdf file).

roundtable

 

Can spatial practice become a form of research? How may architecture engage with questions of culture, politics, and conflict? This new and innovative research centre brings together architects, urbanists, filmmakers, curators and other cultural practitioners from around the world to work collaboratively around questions of this kind. In keeping with Goldsmiths’ commitment to multidisciplinary research and learning, the centre also offers an alternative to traditional postgraduate architectural education by inaugurating a unique, robust studio-based combination of critical architectural research and practice at MA and MPhil/PhD levels. The MA programme is for suitably qualified graduates from a range of disciplines wishing to pursue studio-based spatial research in the context of theoretical work. The MPhil/PhD programme is aimed at practitioners of architecture and other related spatial practices who would like to develop long-span practice-based research projects. The encompassing aim of research at both levels is to explore new possibilities generated by the extended field of architecture. http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/architecture

rethinking television histories, kings college, london, 19th-21st april 2007

the presentation & programme as (pdf) file

showing old television to students is a culture shock for them because there is  a difference in production, surface & deep attitude – nostalgia? memory?

archive footage offers a unique access to the complexities of history
see BIRTH television archive

video active has a catalogue application, metadata & transcoding, thesarus module, multilinguality, launch in nov 2007 videoactive.eu

Video Active’s content selection strategy will be informed by the input of a wide range of television history scholars. For this purpose a conference will be held on 19-21 April 2007 at the Strand campus of King’s College, Universty of London.The conference is being organised by the Department of Media Arts at Royal Holloway, University of London, in co-operation with the Department of Media and Representation at Utrecht University as part of the Video Active project. The conference will play a crucial role in informing and influencing the development of the project’s content selection and editorial strategies.
Rethinking Television Histories: Digitising Europe’s Televisual Heritage

see also:

the harlem digital archive
archival.tv

common work, glasgow, 19th-20th april 2007

elvira one of deptford.tv’s contributor presented the project from a collaborators POV, see programme & sessions as .pdf files.

Common Work / Glasgow

Common Work is a unique conference-event which aims to discuss and challenge some of the issues and tensions surrounding socially engaged arts practice

What is socially engaged arts practice – whose definition counts?

Who benefits?

What difference does it make?

Using Tramway’s world renowned visual art and performance spaces, Common Work will connect a range of people – artists, educators, academics – who share a belief in the power of art to explore issues of social relevance.

Common Work – a collaboration between the Participation Inclusion and Equity Research Network (PIER) and Tramway – promises to inform, challenge, entertain and enlighten

For more information please go to: www.ioe.stir.ac.uk/commonwork/abstract.html

Venue: Tramway, 25 Albert Drive, Glasgow, G41 2PE, Scotland

open knowledge conference, limehouse, london, 17th march 2007

                    Open Knowledge 1.0
            Saturday 17th March 2007, 1100-1830
                    Limehouse Town Hall
                http://www.okfn.org/okcon/
          Organized by the Open Knowledge Foundation

  * Programme: http://www.okfn.org/okcon/programme/
  * Registration: http://www.okfn.org/okcon/register/
  * Wiki: http://okfn.org/wiki/okcon/
  * http://www.okfn.org/okcon/after/

On the 17th March 2007 the first all-day Open Knowledge event is taking
place in London. This event will bring together individuals and groups
from across the open knowledge spectrum and includes panels on open
media, open geodata and open scientific and civic information.

The event is open to all but we encourage you to register because space
is limited. A small entrance fee of £10 is planned to help pay for costs
but concessions are available.

## Speakers

### Open Scientific and Civic Data

  * Tim Hubbard, leader of the Human Genome Analysis Group at the Sanger
    Institute
  * Peter Murray-Rust, Professor in the Unilever Centre for Molecular
    Science Informatics at Cambridge University
  * John Sheridan, Head of e-Services at the Office of Public Sector
    Information

### Geodata and Civic Information

  * Ed Parsons, until recently CTO of the Ordnance Survey
  * Steve Coast, founder of Open Street Map
  * Charles Arthur, freeourdata.org.uk and Technology Editor of the
    Guardian

### Open Media

  * Paula Ledieu, formerly Director of the BBC's Creative Archive
    project and now Managing Director and Director of Open Media for
    Magic Lantern Productions
  * Fleur Knopperts of DocAgora
  * Zoe Young of http://www.transmission.cc/

## Theme: Atomisation and Commercial Opportunity

Discussions of 'Open Knowledge' often end with licensing wars: legal
arguments, technicalities, and ethics. While those debates rage on, Open
Knowledge 1.0 will concentrate on two pragmatic and often-overlooked
aspects of Open Knowledge: atomisation and commercial possibility.

Atomisation on a large scale (such as in the Debian 'apt' packaging
system) has allowed large software projects to employ an amazing degree
of decentralised, collaborative and incremental development. But what
other kinds of knowledge can be atomised? What are the opportunities and
problems of this approach for forms of knowledge other than Software?

Atomisation also holds a key to commercial opportunity: unrestricted
access to an ever-changing, atomised landscape of knowledge creates
commercial opportunities that are not available with proprietary
approaches. What examples are there of commercial systems that function
with Open Knowledge, and how can those systems be shared?

Bringing together open threads from Science, Geodata, Civic Information
and Media, Open Knowledge 1.0 is an opportunity for people and projects
to meet, talk and plan things.


Open Knowledge 1

Source: http://www.epsiplus.net/epsiplus/news/open_knowledge_1

21/03/2007

The Open Knowledge 1 conference demonstrates the value to be gained from opening up data and information.

London: Saturday, 17th March 2007

The old Lime House Town Hall in east London built in a by gone age (1879) hosts an Information Age event organised by the Open Knowledge Foundation. The Open Knowledge Foundation is a not for profit organisation that is incorporated in the United Kingdom as a company limited by guarantee.

The Open Knowledge Foundation exists to promote the openness of knowledge in all its forms, in the belief that freer access to information will have far-reaching social and commercial benefits.

The event titled Open Knowledge 1 focussed on two pragmatic aspects of Open Knowledge: atomisation and commercial possibility. This theme was developed throughout the day via an interesting programme that brought together the Science, Geodata, Civic Information and Media communities. The event concluded with a series of short sharp workshops that covered a broad range of topics.

The programme opened with an introduction from Rufus Pollock of the Open Knowledge Foundation. Rufus explained the objectives of the Open Knowledge Foundation and then the audience of 80+ people considered and took part in active debate following a series of presentations grouped under the headings:

Session 1: Open Geodata

An audio recording of this session has been published.

A range of topics then arose in the discussion that followed as a result of questions raised by the audience. The topics discussed included amongst others:

  • UK Ordnance Survey of Great Britain – behaviour of a monopoly, pricing, licencing, data quality, NIMSA, internal culture, led and dominated by the legal people employed.
  • Role of legal advisors – they are involved in all parts of the business process but the Business Managers should be taking the decisions and guiding the organisation not the legal advisors.
  • The role of the UK HM Treasury – lack of policy, Corporation Tax, not recognising the Information Society changes and that their policy needs to change
  • The Role of politicians – they need to be challenged
  • Whether Civic campaigns brought about change or rather direct action to over come the immediate issue lead to change in culture and policy. For example – providing maps for all by capturing topographic data and making that available.

Session 2: Open Media

A range of topics then arose in the discussion that followed as a result of questions raised by the audience. The topics discussed included amongst others:

  • Metadata – metadata interoperability, why not WWW Consortium
  • BBC Creative Archive – what can be done to ensure the BBC opens up the archives that they hold on behalf of society? BBC Charter, BBC Trust.
  • Understanding the collaboration process
  • Business models
  • Middle Class approach – most people have to focus on earning a living there is limited time available for voluntary activities such as some presented.
  • Educational aspects: How to create a community. How to respond to a community.
  • Human nature and the herd instinct.
  • Life cycles: how long are people interested in particular information and initiatives.

Session 3: Open Scientific and Civic Information

A range of topics then arose in the discussion that followed as a result of questions raised by the audience. The topics discussed included amongst others:

  • Transformation government policy: too many web sites
  • Allowing society to contribute by opening up the data: public sector spends too much time thinking about a solution before delivering it, allow innovation to operate, need to enable parallel paths and peer pressure competition to operate, allow the community to assist rather than be held at arms length.
  • Skills – the society is skill rich and has a role to play.
  • Use of click-Use-Licences
  • EU initiatives and frameworks.

The day clearly demonstrated that:

  • The information society was very broad as it touched on most human interest areas and as such no one part of society has the complete knowledge and skills to develop the knowledge economy.
  • Opening up public sector data as well as that of large private sector publishing organisation’s would enable society to develop the information society in parallel with the Government initiatives.
  • Knowledge and skills existed throughout society and that this would continue to grow as a result of the changing demography within Europe (The aging society and shrinking workforce). Opening data would enable this latent force of knowledge and skills to contribute to, participate in and benefit from the Information Society.
  • The information age was clearly challenging the old models and methods developed and adopted by large organisation’s whether they be in the public sector or private sector and that they were slow to adapt.
  • Civil society through direct action provided the catalyst for change.
  • Infrastructure initiatives needed to ensure all parts of society were involved not just one part.
  • The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) Charles Booth Online Archive (Charles Booth and the survey into life and labour in London (1886 – 1903)) map of Lime House Town Hall summarises the issue neatly as the Charles Booth map is available and the comparison with the map of today from a private sector is also available!

ePSIplus analyst Chris Corbin whom filed this report attended the Open Foundation 1 meeting.

Freeing the Data in London

email discuss Posted by Jessica Clark on Mar 20, 2007 at 7:46 AM

quoted from http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/blogs/future_of_public_media/freeing_the_data_in_london/

How much access should members of the public have to the data and media projects that their tax dollars fund? How about corporations looking to make a buck from government-financed data? Does information really “want to be free,” as Stewart Brand famously pronounced more than two decades ago, and if so, who’s going to pay for its production?

These and other questions were on the table at the Open Knowledge 1.0 gathering this past weekend. Radical geographers, documentary filmmakers, DNA researchers and UK bureaucrats were among the panelists and audience members at London’s grubby but vibrant Limehouse Town Hall. What motivated this disparate bunch to devote their sunny Saturday to data? A passionate belief that information becomes more valuable when everyone is free to repurpose it.

Rufus Pollock, executive director of the Open Knowledge Foundation, kicked off the event by exploring the day’s themes of “atomization and commercial possibility.” From “genes to geodata, statistics to sonnets,” he suggested, data differs, but commonalities are greater. He noted that software developers have a rich history of open source practices for developing collaborative and iterative projects like the Linux-based operating system Debian; the idea now is to migrate those habits and legal structures to other disciplines.

According to Pollock, software development has learned to effectively atomize information processing, parsing out packets of coding to discrete individuals and stringing them back together into a working whole. Versioning systems, tagging, and numbered releases are all examples of practices that can be applied to other modes of knowledge.

Such a divide-and-conquer approach “allows us to deal with complexity,” he said. “Without it we’d be hopeless” His remarks reflect a similar realization in the creative arts—that the future is in aggregation and recombination, that reuse is the new creativity.

Mapping for the people

Becky Hogge, executive director of the Open Rights Group, moderated the day’s first panel on open geodata—a topic that has become particularly hot with the rising popularity of Google’s map-based mashups. Panelists included Charles Arthur, the technology editor of The Guardian and a principal organizer of the Free Our Data campaign; Ed Parsons, the former CTO of Britain’s national mapping agency, the Ordnance Survey; and Steve Coast, the founder of Open Street Map, a project that allows ordinary people to create collaborative digital maps by participating in “mapping parties” in which they attach GPS devices to their cars, bikes or persons and wander an agreed-upon region. Volunteers then translate these “traces” into lines, which are merged with existing public domain maps to provide up-to-date renderings.

Parsons kicked off the session by agreeing that government-funded geographical information should be more openly available, but noting that it is both expensive to produce and not particularly politically compelling. “Geodata doesn’t get votes,” he said. He suggested that the answer lies in more innovative, less bureaucratic licensing of the data for different uses.

In contrast to the United States, which places federally funded information in the public domain, Britain keeps much of its government-funded data under wraps, charging taxpayers, corporations and other government agencies to use it. Parsons had headed up an effort to provide more geodata for noncommercial use via an Ordnance Survey project dubbed OpenSpace, the hope of which was to “fill in the white space that is the gaps between the roads.” But the project has been scuttled for now, and he wasn’t able to provide details about what had happened to it.

Coast explained how his OpenStreetMap project is leading the charge against government ownership of geodata by harnessing the energy of volunteers to generate up-to-the minute maps, a “grassroots remapping.” The work of OpenStreetMap has revealed some of the tricks of commercial map-makers, who place small “easter eggs,” or false cul-de-sacs, in their maps to detect and prevent copyright infringement. OpenStreetMappers around the world can contribute to the “Free Wiki World Map” on the group’s site, and the process is “atomized,” because different volunteers perform different steps along the way. While the project is in is infancy, Coast suggested, it will gather momentum as data is added, putting pressure on private and government map-makers to lower the price of their information.

Arthur picked up the call for more public geodata with an explanation of his Free Our Data campaign, the goal of which is to make “impersonal data collected by the UK government organizations available for the cost of reproduction—which for digital is zero.” He explained that there’s some funny math happening within the government’s accounting: taxpayers dollars are used to produce one agency’s information, and that agency turns around and sells it to another agency for a profit, creating a false market value. “There’s a lot of data in there,” he said, “the trouble is that we can’t get it out.” He characterized data as the “mitochondria in the cell of government,” and suggested that by putting it in the public domain the government would both rid itself of administrative costs and significantly benefit the UK economy. He offered South Africa as an example—in 2000 the government made its maps available for free, and use of the data has grown by 500 percent.

“I don’t think this is a conspiracy, it’s a cock-up,” commented Parsons. “Government really doesn’t understand the value of the data that it’s sitting on.”

Content, copyright and community-building

The next panel examined some of the technological and legal underpinnings that are determining the use and distribution of digital media. Paula Ledieu, the director of Open Media at Magic Lantern Productions, and the former project director for the BBC’s Creative Archive project, spoke about the potential of open content and the challenges of licensing media in the digital age. She lauded the current explosion of user-generated archives like Flickr, “an extraordinary body of still images as a repository for us…a few years ago this would have sounded like a utopian la-la land.” However, content producers are still having a hard time finding visual, film and audio that is in the public domain. And, she warned, license experiments like Creative Commons risk creating “content ghettos.” She also noted that open culture experiments like the BBC’s Creative Archive are at risk; the project is currently closed down as the BBC puts it through a “public value test.” Measurements for assessing the value of such resources are scarce and poorly understood; Ledieu encouraged audience members to explore this area further, and in a later presentation, to respond to a whitepaper published by Ofcom (the UK’s version of the FCC) about the role and structure of public media in the digital era.

Other panelists offered examples for how content producers can engage with open information practices. A duo of presenters from Platoniq, a Barcelona-based collective, described a series of projects designed to combine open media distribution with public spaces, such as Burn Station. Their Bank of Common Knowledge project adapts the techniques of peer-to-peer media sharing to peer-to-peer education, allowing discrete chunks of information to be broken down and passed on via a network of volunteers. Presenters from the Transmission project described an international effort to develop open metadata standards for digital documentary film; the effort would make it easier for viewers to find the films online. They urged audience members to “join them in the fight for the freedom of the feeds.”

The science of openness

The final panel of the day tackled the question of how scientists might more easily gain access to data and research, often restricted by proprietary corporate ownership or the copyright protections of scientific journal publishers. Tim Hubbard, the leader of the Human Genome Analysis Group at the Sanger Institute, described how the process of opening up information about the human genome during a multi-organization collaborative research effort both made the research more effective and ensured that the data would remain in the public domain. The result was a shift in both scientific and corporate understanding of why it makes sense to “free the data.” Even companies are now agreeing, he said, that there’s “pre-competitive” information which it benefits everyone to have access to. He noted some current experiments in liberating pharmaceutical data from corporate control for pressing public health issues like malaria. “Biology is too complex for any organization to have a monopoly on data or ideas,” he said.

And yet, the scientific process of publishing research in peer-reviewed journals does often create a monopoly on news about new discoveries, held by influential publications like Nature. Peter Murray-Rust, a chemist based at Cambridge, described the efforts of the American Chemical Society to crack down on an open database of chemical structures, and praised the efforts of the Wellcome Trust to support open access scholarly publishing. He pointed audience members to the World Wide Molecular Matrix, an open respository of chemical information and molecules.

John Sheridan, the head of e-services for the UK government’s Office of Public Sector Information rounded out the day by trying to defend the official stance on public sector information, and to explain that they’re dancing as fast as they can. The audience was not impressed.

Formal panels were followed by informal presentations of a few interesting projects, including a proposed multimedia archive of the works of filmmaker Sally Potter, a database of public domain works, and a forthcoming project to make obscure but crucial U.N. documents more accessible to members of the public.

Proprietary system designers, grabby governments, and privatizing corporations beware! This was only version 1.0 of this intriguing event.


					

independent media conference, newcastle, 10th march 2007

“With Not For” – Independent Media Conference

Saturday March 10, 12:00 AM

poster (designed by sophia kosmaoglou) resentation together with exploding cinema:

A half-day event built around the cultural urgency of independent and dissident film.

Opportunity to bring together a number of organisations and individuals who work independently to screen films: The Star And Shadow Cinema (Newcastle), Cube (Bristol), Cinilingus (Belfast), Camcorder Guerillas & Document Human Rights Film Festival (Glasgow), Exploding Cinema (London), Undercurrents (Swansea) and more, to discuss issues that affect the, provide a platform to celebrate each others’ activities, witness some much needed collaborative models, and aid in connecting groups together that might not otherwise meet to share experiences and exchange thoughts.

download the poster here.

knowledge transfer, university of salford, manchester, 29th november 2006

the following presentation was given at the knowledgre transfer conference at the university of salford in manchester on the 29th of november 2006. you can download the programme  and the slideshow as .pdf files.

Deptford.TVstrategies of sharing

Can the utopia of liberated media practices, expressed as a recurring pattern in times of new technological  inventions throughout the 20th century, become viable as an approach within a 21st century context, through  the use of FLOSS systems and open content licensing schemes?”

1. Show 1st Slide Map of Deptford.TV  What is Deptford.TV?

Deptford.TV is a research project on collective film-making focusing on post-production and distribution with social software interfaces over which the collaborators can share their ideas, over a combination of WIKI and the EDL  Edit Decision List, protocol used as standard by many editing software programmes. It is a collaboration between facilitators of infrastructure such as Dekspace and the Boundless.coop, software programmers, the Bitnik media collective, open source and free software advocates  Liquidculture and film-makers

Adnan Hadzi’s contribution to this collaboration is the original method to design the Deptford.TV database documenting the regeneration process of Deptford, in South East London. Deptford.TV functions as an open, collaborative platform that allows artists, film-makers and people living and working around Deptford to store, share, re-edit and redistribute the documentation of the regeneration process. The open and collaborative aspect of the project is of particular importance as it manifests a form of liberated media practice. In the case of Deptford.TV this aspect is manifested in two ways

A) audiences can become producers by submitting their own footage

B) the interface that is being used enables the contributors to discuss and interact with each other through the database. Deptford.TV is a form of television, since audiences are able to choose edited timelines they would like to watch, at the same time they have the option to comment on or change the actual content. Deptford.TV makes use of licenses such as the creative commons and gnu, general public license to allow and enhance this politics of sharing…

This politics of sharing started with Linux. Linux (also known as GNU/Linux) is a computer operating system. It is one of the most prominent examples of open source development and free software; unlike proprietary operating systems such as Windows or Mac OS, all of its underlying source code is available to the public for anyone to freely use, modify, and redistribute.

Free software is a matter of the usersfreedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software. More precisely, it refers to four kinds of freedom, for the users of the software:

   * The freedom to run the program, for any purpose (freedom 0).

   * The freedom to study how the program works, and adapt it to your needs (freedom 1).  Access to the source code is a precondition for this.

   * The freedom to redistribute copies so you can help your neighbor (freedom 2).

   * The freedom to improve the program, and release your improvements to the public, so  that the whole community benefits (freedom 3).  Access to the source code is a  precondition for this.

The Linux distribution chosen for the Deptford.TV project is called DYNEBOLIC.

It is one of the easiest installable systems, you just copy the folder from CD to the computer hard disk.


2. 2nd slideyou are personally invited…

Deptford.TV contributes for FeedBack

In the spring of 2006 Deptford.TV received a Call for participation in FeedBack 04.

The Feedback Project is a curatorial initiative which invites participants to think critically about what messages and meanings exhibitions offer and aims at encouraging audiences to have opinions about the way that museums and galleries curate and organise exhibitions.

Under FeedBack Project, two main activities take place: FeedBack Publication and the Open Forum.

FeedBack Publication invites contributions from people who have an interest in the Arts to submit their experiences, opinions and comments through texts, images or projects which will be published. The project is concerned with contemporary curating and the equation artist-curator-audience. The forthcoming issue of FeedBack Publication is focused on participatory art events and their significance in current art practice. This will be the second FeedBack publication. 

FeedBack Project’s Open Forum took place three times during exhibitions at the Whitechapel Gallery. Audiences were invited to discuss views on the curatorial aspect of the exhibitions via email, flyers and the Whitechapel’s website. It also took place in Athens during Visions, an international arts event. FeedBack Project is currently in discussion with Space Studios in East London in order to hold a number of Open Forum sessions during 2007-2007.

The initiators of FeedBack are Goldsmithsown Nayia Yiakoumaki, and Elpida Karaba. 

They where looking to collectideas related to creating discursive spheres between audience, curators and artists. FeedBack 04 was aiming to concentrateon the idea of participatory projects and particularly on the experiences of those participating in the making and realisation of these projectsin order to create an archive ofdocuments, statements, interviews, arguments and conflicts. 

The most obvious way to participate in FeedBack was for each one of us to submit a text on his/her own research, which would employ Deptford.TV as a case-study. We thus interviewed 12 of the participants of Detpford.TV, aiming to produce a written essay, as well as a video essay. Both essays are uploaded on the Deptford.TV website http://www.deptford.tv. Faithful to the Deptford.TV’s frame of mind, the rough material those essays are based on is accessible for the audiences to look at or read, and remix, re-edit or rewrite. We consider these essays to reflect our own viewpoints and agendas, thusincarnatingthe realisation of just one way of reading and writing about the materials we collected. As Deptford.TV is not affiliated with any one institution, we are not under pressure to producepolitically correctoutcomes. Instead, we try to accommodate some raw,un-beautifiedresponses, that are sometimes silenced within formal frameworksjust like the Deptford.TV database hosts rough, primary materials that audiences do not normally get to see. We hope that some of the people we interviewed, as well as people interested in the broader field of collaborative practices and remix culture, will take the time toslightly or radicallyadapt, reinvent or rewrite these essays to better reflect their own, diverse, viewpoints. 

In fact, You are personally invited to rewrite this essay.


3. show 3rd slidePresence / Absence

Collaboration

Deptford.TV focuses on the shift from the individual genius of the artist to the collective nature of the cultural production.  

Quoting from Katherine Hayles. We live in the information era, and Hayles argues that information, unlike materiality, is pattern rather than presence. She further argues that the presence-absence dialectic has been pushed into the background by a new dialectic based on pattern and randomness. Whereas presence-absence is an oppositional dialectic (that is, absence is the opposite of presence), pattern and randomness are not oppositional but complementary. In that sense, randomness is not seen as the absence of pattern, but as the ground for pattern to emerge. Hayles goes on to look at how pattern and randomness apply in our everyday lives, and looks at virtual reality environments where this dialectic leads to the paradox of presence-absence. 

According to Hayles, patternrandomness also implies a shift of emphasis from ownership to access: ownership requires a presence (something tangible one would wish to own) whereas access implies pattern recognition. Networked practices operate more often as open systems that invite users/audiences to participate, providing access to their internal dramaturgies and structuresor rough materialwhen it comes to database filmmaking. The degree of involvement participants are granted really depends on the specific project, and it can be anything from formal interaction (audiences have a number of choices but remain very much placed within the constraints of a predefined and closed system) to co-authorship, where participants are invited to create the piece together with its initiator(s), or the audiences themselves initiate the collective production of a piece. Once participants start claiming authorship for a piece, this really marks a major shift in power, responsibility, as well as conceptual, aesthetic and technical control over the outcomes, which challenges deeply the traditional roles of creators /producers vs. consumers of content, and calls for us to rethink these distinctions. 


show 4th slide:Commons based Peer Production

Open projects demonstrate the emergence of a new paradigm calledcommons-based peer production, a term coined by Professor Yochai Benkler to describe a new model of economic production in which the creative energy of large numbers of people is coordinated (usually with the aid of the internet) into large projects, mostly without traditional hierarchical organization or financial compensation. The free and open source software movement along with collaborative projects such as wikis, are the best known examples of this practice. In the cultural sphere, more and more projects invite the audiencesinvolvement and participation, and/or use open source software providing their users with access to content and know-how, as well as the possibility of developing or recycling the project for the production of their own work. The Internet, being a decentralized peer-to-peer environment, provides the best possible infrastructure for projects that favor open access and collaborative creativity over ownership and authorship. 

Examples of such works:

Show 5th Slide Half-Life Game

Counter Strike: First Person Shooter game, its first version was created entirely by its players, using the level-builders in the Half Life game engine. According to Celia Pearce, the Open Source movement is particularly strong in the First Person Shooter game genre, with games that tend to contain marginal narrative content, but are often at the forefront of engaging player creativity. In March 2001 Counter-Strike was awarded the best Studio award at the Computer Game Developers Conference, although its creators were not professional game designers, but Open-Sourcers who wanted to develop their own game environment. Counter Strike was made available as freeware on the web and quickly became the most popular Online First Person Shooter Game.


Show 6th Slide KR

When it comes to digital /media arts, they often involve appropriation, collaboration, and the free sharing of tools and ideas. So it is not surprising that a growing number of artists use open source technologies, and produce works that, among other things, recycle, duplicate or hack existing artworks or systems. 

Some of these artists are: 

  •  Austrian-Swiss collective Knowbotic Research who experiment with formations of information, interface and networked agency, in an attempt to find viable forms of intervention in the public domain, 

Show 7th slide radioqualia

  •  New Zealanders, London-based duo radioqualia who develop their own tools and use various streaming media softwares to experiment with the concept of artistic broadcasting, using the internet and traditional media forms, such as radio and television, as primary tools.http://www.radioqualia.net/

Show 8th slide Critical Art Ensemble

  •  American interdisciplinary collective Critical Art Ensemble, dedicated to exploring the intersections between art, technologies, critical theory and radical politics. 

Show 9th Slide YesMen

  •  The YesMen. What some would call identity theft, and which they callidentity correction, by impersonating representatives of the most powerful multinational companies that have committed crimes for which they have never been charged. The Yes Men undertake to impersonate them in public, in conferences, on TV or on the web, in order tocorrect their


4. show 10th slideWe asked about…Strategies of Sharing

But let me go back to the Strategies of Sharing and the Deptford.TV project, and talk about our interviews and interviewees. The main aim of these interviews was to gain an insight into the complexities of producing  collaborative work within a creative context. We wanted to find out which are the processes and methodologies employed in such practices. Most importantly, we wanted to illuminate, through our discussions with these participants, their own, personal strategies and tactics. We usedheavyterms, that is, terms that are loaded with multiple, often contradictory meanings, to challenge the participants, inviting them to offer their own definitions and approaches. The questions we asked followed three main threads: collaboration, authorship, and community. The issue of diversity came up during the interviews as a fourth thread, as participants either insisted on its importance or were immediately put off by the term. 

Show 11th slidewhat does collaboration mean…

We asked the contributors what collaboration means to them. Is it enjoyable as a process? Is it productive? Does it enhance creativity? Can it suppress individual creativity? Can it work outside hierarchical systemsor not?

Show 12th slideWhat does authorship…

We further asked how they perceive the notion of authorship and to what extent this is important to them as contributors of either content or context. Do they consider personal attribution to be important within a collaborative project? How do they feel when their work is reused, remixed or re-editedand thus re-authored? And how do they feel about the fact that their work can be reused for commercial purposes, or for ideological purposes they do not necessarily endorse? To us, collaboration invokes the notion of a community that emerges from the very practices of sharingwe are talking about the sharing of time, space (physical or virtual), views, resources, content, skills, knowledge, information, and/or support networks. 

Show 13th slideWhat does community…

We asked the Deptford.TV participants what does the term community signify to them, hoping to get responses that are both personal and grounded in experience -rather than theoretical andpolitically correctanswers. Furthermore, we asked whether the Deptford.TV project initiates, shapes, or awakens a community? And whether it includes, or possibly excludes, existing communities or individuals?

Show 14th slideInterviewees 

We interviewed 12 participants in 10 interview sessions. These were:

  •  Janine Lãi, is a local resident, film-make. Janine has experienced a regeneration process in her own area, and hopes that her personal experience can feed into the context of the Deptford regeneration. She contributed film shot specifically for Deptford.TV
  •  Gordon Cooper, is a local resident since 1978 and a film-maker. Gordon has an interest both in the Deptford area, and in generating open-access and shared resources through the use of alternative litigation such as the Creative Commons. Gordon contributed archive film material. 
  •  Elvira, is a local resident, student and film-maker. She contributed film shot for D.TV
  •  Bitnik are a media collective based in Zurich. Switzerland. Bitnik produce artistic, social and collaborative work. They are concerned with open media practices and the production of tools that can facilitate such practices. They produce their own software systems which they are interested to make applicable in different contexts. Their goal is to merge platform and content, and involve the audiences as producers. Bitnik contributed software. 
  •  Stephen Oldfield, is a local resident since twenty years, and a sound artist. Stephen contributed a live sound performance and its recordings. 
  •  Camden McDonald, is a local resident, a performer, and one of the initiators of the Mindsweeper project: a floating venue on a boat that hosts screenings and other small-scale events. Camden contributed the physical space of the Mindsweeper. 
  •  Nik Hilton, is a local resident, and an architect. Nik is interested in the intersection between film and architecture. He got involved with Deptford.TV due to his interest in collaborative work, and the difficulty of applying this to his professional life as an architect. Nik is also interested in the local area and the Deptford communities. He contributed film shot for D.TV
  •  James Stevens, is one of the initiators of the project Boundless (Deptford), and the initiator of Deckspace media lab (Greenwich). James has a long history as the initiator of projects concerned with open spaces and public access media. His main aim is to facilitate people’s access to technologies. James contributed the infrastructure for D.TV through these two projects, as well as the physical space for the D.TV workshops. 
  •  Raw Nerve are a design collective based in Deptford. Raw Nerve work on a number of community-focused projects, and they aim to build up the connectivity between different creative people in the area. Raw Nerve contributed film archive material. 
  •  Amanda Egbe, is a film-maker and a Goldsmiths MA student. Amanda is interested in the political and technical issues raised by practices of collaborative film-making, as well as the social issues raised by processes of regeneration. Amanda contributed film shot for D.TV. 

And now the MovieDeptford.TV essay: strategies of sharing, 5 min. (excerpt of 28 min).

Show first 5 to 10 minutes of the film 

INTIMACY: Open Call for Papers, Posters & Performances

NTIMACY
Across Visceral and Digital Performance

OPEN CALL FOR PAPERS, POSTERS & PERFORMANCES
INTIMACY Across Visceral and Digital Performance is supported by the AHRC ICT Methods Network, Goldsmiths Graduate School, Goldsmiths Digital Studios, Goldsmiths Drama Department, Goldsmiths Department of Visual Cultures and LABAN.

ABOUT
INTIMACY is a three-day interdisciplinary programme of events made to elicit connectivity, induce interaction and provoke debate between makers, participants and witnesses of works that explicitly address proximity and hybridity in performance. It will feature workshops, seminars, performances, posters, and a 1-day symposium. INTIMACY will employ digital and live art practices as agents, aiming to further practical exploration of and vibrant discourse into notions of intimacy in contemporary performance. It is framed as a forum for artists, scholars, community workers, performers, cultural practitioners, researchers and creative thinkers.

INTIMACY will provide a platform for the discussion of live art/performance practices concerned with displaying intuitive, intimate and visceral relationships between artist and other. It will explore performance practices that engage in intimate encounters, raising issues around bodies of data and flesh; presence as aura and representation; desire as embodied condition and disembodied fantasy; the human and posthuman self. Confirmed contributors include: Johannes Birringer, Kira O’Reilly, Tracey Warr, Janis Jefferies, Amelia Jones, Kelli Dipple, Dominic Johnson, Paul Sermon.

SPACETIME
INTIMACY will take place on the 7th, 8th and 9th December in and around Goldsmiths University of London, LABAN and The Albany (South London).

CO-DIRECTORS
Rachel Zerihan and Maria Chatzichristodoulou [aka maria x]

BOARD
Prof. Johannes Birringer, Chair in Drama and Performance Technologies, School of Arts, Brunel University of West London; Artistic Director of AlienNation Co.
Hazel Gardiner, Senior Projects Officer, AHRC ICT Methods Network; Researcher.
Prof. Adrian Heathfield, School of Arts, Roehampton University; Writer; Curator.
Prof. Janis Jefferies, Artistic Director, Goldsmiths Digital Studios; Director Constance Howard Resource and Research Centre in Textiles; Artist; Writer; Curator.
Gerald Lidstone, Head of Drama Department, Goldsmiths University of London.

PROPOSALS
All participants will be selected on an open submissions basis. Proposals will be peer reviewed by the INTIMACY Board and Advisory Panel. Proposals must not exceed the word limit specified. You may provide additional info such as links to digital material including online video, photos and websites. Further supporting documentation such as hard copies and discs are welcome; if you want these returned please enclose a SAE. We are accepting proposals for:

Paper presentations or Performance Lectures
Poster presentations
Live performances -physical and/or digital

Proposals should be concerned with the relationship between visceral and digital environments/methodologies being explored in contemporary performance practice. Specifically, topics of interest include but are not limited to:
The politics of intimacy in contemporary performance
Risk in relation to intimacy in contemporary performance
Pornography/erotics and performed intimacy
(Dis)embodiment, (tele)presence and intimate performance encounters
Technologies as affective instigators of intimacy
Intimate aesthetics in contemporary performance
Interfaces of performed desire

Accepted proposals will be published on our website. Further publishing possibilities are being explored.

HOW TO SUBMIT
Submit by email to Maria X at <drp01mc@gold.ac.uk> and Rachel Zerihan <intimacyrachelz@yahoo.co.uk> writing INTIMACY SUBMISSION in the subject line.
Send hard copies to INTIMACY c/o 22 Dutton Street, London, SE10 8TB.

Performances: Submit 1) 500-word statement detailing your project; 2) 200-word CV; 3) Tech Drive; 4) Any other supporting material as described above. Please note that only limited technical support can be provided.

Papers/ Performance Lectures: Submit 1) 500-word abstract. This contribution would form a 15 minute paper to be presented at the Symposium on Sunday 9th December; 2) 200-word CV; 3) Any other supporting material as described above.

Posters: Submit 1) 300-word abstract /summary; 2) 200-word CV; 3) Any other supporting material as described above.

DEADLINE
Deadline for submissions: 19 August 2007.
Notification of acceptance: early October 2007

ADVISORY PANEL

Daisy Abbot, AHDS Performing Arts Glasgow
Sylvette Babin, Artist, Editor, Canada
Gavin Barlow, The Albany
Alice Bayliss, School of Performance and Cultural Industries, University of Leeds
Lauren Berlant, Department of English, University of Chicago, USA
Ghislaine Boddington, Performer, Body>Data>Space
Susan Broadhurst, School of Arts, Brunel University of West London
Brian Brady, LABAN
Teresa Dillon, Polar Produce
Simon Donger, Central School of Speech and Drama
Anna Furse, Drama Department, Goldsmiths University of London
Marc Garrett, Artist, Furtherfield
Gabriella Giannachi, Centre for Intermedia, University of Exeter
Joe Kelleher, School of Arts, Roehampton University
Roberta Mock, Faculty of Arts, University of Plymouth
Morrigan Mullen, Re-Write
Chris Salter, Artist, Hexagram; Department of Design and Computational Arts, Concordia University, Canada
Jennifer Sheridan, BigDog Interactive
Igor Stromajer, Artist, Slovenia
Bojana Kunst, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Tony Thatcher, Choreographer, LABAN
Helen Varley Jamieson, Performer, New Zealand

For more information on INTIMACY also check http://www.intimateperformance.org or contact intimacyrachelz@yahoo.co.uk or drp01mc@gold.ac.uk for full details of the call

INTIMACY Across Digital and Visceral Performance

INTIMACY is a culturally urgent series of events designed to address an aesthetically and formally diverse set of responses to the notion of ‘being intimate’.

Intimacy has been constructed as a three-day interdisciplinary programme of events made to illicit connectivity, induce interaction and provoke debate between makers of and witnesses to works that explicitly address proximity and hybridity in performance. Digital and live art performance practices will be used as agents to further practical exploration of and vibrant discourse into intimate inter-actions. Resisting rigid forms of communication such as paper-giving and conference proceedings, collaborative techniques have instead been adopted to platform interactive strategies including workshops, seminars, roundtable discussions and performances. Intimacy is framed as a forum for artists, scholars, community workers, performers, cultural practitioners, researchers and creative thinkers.

Performance and live artists appear to be making work which addresses the disparity and isolation that breeds throughout communities facing direct and indirect conflict. Responding to the cultural climate of acute (in)security, current live art practice is explicitly addressing our relationship to one another in environments of extreme closeness and heightened connectivity. The current explosion in One to One performances (a performer, literally performing to an audience of one), for example, is an encounter that’s becoming increasingly rife in new performance festival showcases. Intimacy will provide a platform for the discussion of sub-cultural practices concerned with displaying intuitive, intimate and visceral relationships between artist and other. As such, it affords contemporary practitioners, theorists and students the opportunity of practical and critical engagement with co-ordinates that currently define these practices.

“How are bodies represented through technology? How is desire constructed through representation? What is the relationship of the body to self-awareness?” [Stone, Allucquère Rosanne The War of Desire and Technology at the Close of the Mechanical Age Cambridge, Mass. & London: MIT Press, 1995, p. 17]

Intimacy will employ these questions as a starting point to explore performance practices that engage in intimate encounters, raising issues around bodies of data and flesh; presence as aura and representation; desire as embodied condition and disembodied fantasy; the human and posthuman self. At the same time, it will explore technologies that can enhance ‘closeness’: networking technologies such as the Internet, wireless networks, telecommunications and Web.02; sensor technologies; virtual reality and other digital multi-user environments. These technologies of inter-subjectivity generate heterotopias that can function as the settings for beautiful and threatening encounters. Intimacy will allow for a hands-on exploration of such technologies as a means for intimate inter-actions in digital and hybrid performance practices.

The final outcome will be an online publication in the form of a media wiki which will host papers, reports, and AV documentation of the diverse events. Parts of the publication, such as the reports and documentation, will be made accessible to everyone to rewrite, re-edit and reuse. Intimacy’s open, collaborative and process-driven publication, rather than offering a fixed outcome edited by a sole author, will aim to ensure a multiplicity of voices and initiate an ongoing discussion and exchange among members of the communities.

Featuring performances, workshops, seminars and a symposium, Intimacy invites established scholars, current researchers, leading and emergent artists and eager audiences to enable the interrogation and creative exploration of formal, aesthetic and affective modes of performing intimacy now.

Intimacy is co-organised by Maria Chatzichristodoulou [aka maria x] , PhD Candidate at the Goldsmiths Digital Studios and Drama Department, University of London & Sessional Lecturer at Birkbeck College FCE; and Rachel Zerihan, PhD Candidate at the Performance and Live Art Research Unit, Nottingham Trent University.

Intimacy Committee: