RE: [-empyre-] what work are women doing now?



Hi Kanarinka,

Nice to hear from you.  I've seen ikatun's work before -- maybe
in connection with the Boston CyberArts Festival.

I added a link to ikatun in the bibliography page.
Under Networks and other online collaborations and 
collections.  I think I will separate out this category soon and
make it a separate page)
 
I'm thinking of adding events listings after the rest of the pages
have taken shape.  So please send me email about 
events.

Both Jess Loseby and lia's (does she go just by lia?) work
was of interest.  I added Jess Loseby's Sketchbook and 
re-move to the links to new works. Thanks!!

Although I think that someone could look at the work of men
and women in new media and find some patterns of differences,
I'm personally reluctant to do this as regards the work of 
other women. Some are not comfortable with this.

Woman programmers have told me that they think women 
approach the writing of code differently than men do.  Do you
have any thoughts about this?

Best,
Judy



At 01:59 AM 12/6/03 -0500, you wrote:
>Hi Judy and everyone,
>
>My name is kanarinka (catherine d'ignazio offline). I'm honored to have
>been invited to participate in the discussion about this book (It's en
>route to me right now, but i have not actually seen it yet).
>
>One of my most recent projects that you might be interested in is a
>fluxus/yoko ono-inspired piece called "public alley 818, Boston, MA,
>USA" in which people send me instruction pieces online and I enact them
>in the alley behind my house - http://www.ikatun.com/k/publicalley818.
>
>I'm also the co-founder of the iKatun (www.ikatun.com) collective of
>artists and technologists in Boston, MA.
>
>I am very interested in dialogue regarding women and technology. Being a
>professional programmer, I have tended to work mostly around male
>technologists. I'm particularly interested in how one might go about
>differentiating the work of men and women in technology without falling
>into easy gender-specific dichotomies (as in "men do xyz and women do
>zyx").
>
>Some women you might be interested in checking out for the bibliography:
>
>Jess Loseby - http://www.rssgallery.com/ - Jess and iKatun collaborated
>on a project called the Digital Pocket Gallery
>(http://www.ikatun.com/digitalpocketgallery/). She is very interested in
>what she calls the "cyber-domestic aesthetic". I think that we found
>common ground in our interest in the everyday. 
>
>lia - http://lia.sil.at/lia3/index.htm & www.re-move.org - Her work
>consists of intriguing, abstract interfaces with sound and motion. 
>
>Best wishes to all,
>kanarinka
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: empyre-bounces@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
>[mailto:empyre-bounces@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au] On Behalf Of Judy Malloy
>Sent: Friday, December 05, 2003 11:31 PM
>To: soft_skinned_space
>Subject: Re: [-empyre-] what work are women doing now?
>
>
>
>
>
>>http://www.uol.com.br/bienal/24bienal/nuh/enuhclark01.htm (some images 
>>of Lygia Clark works)
>>
>>http://www.uol.com.br/bienal/24bienal/nuh/inuhclark02a.htm (a text by 
>>Suely
>>Rolnik)
>
>
>Thank you!
>
>I've added this to the bibliography on the website at 
>http://www.judymalloy.net/newmedia/
>(click on bibliography)
>
>The bibliography is in progress and I am particularly looking to add
>entries - women artists in this field whose work is not 
>as widely known as it should be.  
>
>Does anyone on the list have suggestions?
>
>Best,
>Judy
>  
>
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>empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
>http://www.subtle.net/empyre
>
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