[-empyre-] Beryl Graham: "Resolutions for Digital Futures"

Cathy Davidson Cathy.Davidson at Duke.edu
Mon Jan 5 04:29:11 EST 2009


I agree.  I alternate my hours on the internet with walks with my friend 
Priscilla, in the forest, ritual walks where we talk ideas, emotions, art. 
  And then I usually blog about it:  http://www.hastac.org/node/1848 
("Making Like Kant")
Cathy N. Davidson (on leave)
Ruth F. DeVarney Professor of English and 
 John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute Professor of Interdisciplinary 
Studies
129 Franklin Center, Duke University
Durham, NC  27708-0403
Co-Founder, HASTAC (www.hastac.org)
Co-Director, HASTAC/MacArthur Foundation Digital Media
     and Learning Competition (www.dmlcompetition.net)




eliza fernbach <hecticred at yahoo.com> 
Sent by: empyre-bounces at gamera.cofa.unsw.edu.au
01/04/09 02:37 AM
Please respond to
hecticred at yahoo.com; Please respond to
soft_skinned_space <empyre at gamera.cofa.unsw.edu.au>


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Re: [-empyre-] Beryl Graham: "Resolutions for Digital  Futures"






I'm with you Beryl! I have spent the past couple of months alternating 
studio work with active museum/gallery/studio visits...
Looking always helps me to see better as themes emerge from the streams of 
representation I encounter.
-eliza fernbach

Tell me what you forget, I will tell you who you are.
                    - Marc Augé


--- On Sat, 1/3/09, Timothy Murray <tcm1 at cornell.edu> wrote:

> From: Timothy Murray <tcm1 at cornell.edu>
> Subject: Re: [-empyre-] Beryl Graham: "Resolutions for Digital  Futures"
> To: "soft_skinned_space" <empyre at gamera.cofa.unsw.edu.au>
> Date: Saturday, January 3, 2009, 3:40 PM
> Hans Ulrich Obrist has pointed out that the turnover speed
> for 
> exhibitions has increased, meaning that there is less time
> for 
> curatorial research. I think that research is particularly
> important 
> for new media art, so my resolution is to spend less time
> on 
> University bureaucracy, and more time looking at new media
> art, and 
> reflecting on ways that media new media offers for
> rethinking 
> curating. Being towards the end of a major book project for
> MIT 
> Press, I also have resolution to get out more!
> 
> Bio: Beryl Graham (UK) is Professor of New Media Art at the
> School of 
> Art, Design and Media, University of Sunderland, and
> co-editor of 
> CRUMB <www.crumbweb.org>.  She curated the
> international exhibition 
> Serious Games for the Laing and Barbican art galleries, and
> has also 
> worked with The Exploratorium, San Francisco, and San
> Francisco 
> Camerawork. Her book Digital Media Art was published by
> Heinemann in 
> 2003, and she has chapters in many books. Dr. Graham has
> presented 
> papers at conferences including Navigating Intelligence
> (Banff), 
> Museums and the Web (Seattle), and Caught in the Act (Tate 
> Liverpool). Her Ph.D. concerned audience relationships with
> 
> interactive art in gallery settings, and she has written
> widely on 
> the subject for books and periodicals including Leonardo, 
> Convergence, and Switch.
> 
> -- 
> Renate Ferro and Tim Murray
> Co-Moderators, -empyre- a soft-skinned-space
> Department of Art and Rose Goldsen Archive of New Media Art
> Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
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