Archive for June, 2008

01SJ Adobe Global Youth Voices

01SJ Adobe Global Youth Voices exhibited as part of the 01SJ Global Festival of Art on the Edge from June 4-8, 2008 at The Tech Museum of Innovation. Director Liz Slagus writes:

“Congratulations to all the groups involved in the 01SJ Adobe Global Youth Voices program!!! 01SJ AGYV culminated in an exhibition at The Tech’s New Venture Hall June 4-8, 2008.

There was an abundance of incredibly positive feedback and praise for the projects on display in the exhibition. Everyone who came through the exhibition was impressed by the level of work generated by the 11-21 year olds involved in the program.

On a day-to-day basis, the exhibition drew approximately 150-200 visitors. So, the work of your youth was seen by many! To facilitate the visits to the exhibition, Grant Wilson, an amazing local artist (and just plain wonderful human being!) was on-hand to describe, and in some cases demonstrate the projects to those with questions. The reception on Saturday, June 7th at 6pm was a huge success with a few hundred people from the town of San Jose and the 01SJ festival in attendance. It was a lively and fun event and celebration of the efforts of the youth involved in 01SJ AGYV. The Saturday workshops and demonstrations by the groups in attendance were also incredibly well-attended and a nice opportunity for the youth and/or artists involved with the projects to speak directly to the public about the work.”

via 01SJ Adobe Global Youth Voices

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Tantalum Memorial by Harwood, Wright and Yokokoji

Artists Harwood, Wright and Yokokoji present Tantalum Memorial — Reconstruction as part of the 01SJ Biennial Exhibition Superlight, at the San Jose Museum of Art. The exhibition runs from May 10 to August 31, 2008.

Tantalum Memorial – Reconstruction is the first in a series of telephony-based memorials by the artists group Harwood, Wright, Yokokoji, to the people who have died as a result of the coltan wars in the Congo. The installation is constructed out of electromagnetic Strowger switches, the basis of the first automatic telephone exchange invented in 1888. The movements and sounds of the switches are triggered by the phone calls of London’s Congolese community as they participate in Telephone Trottoire, a concurrent project also built by the artists in collaboration with the Congolese radio program Nostalgie Ya Mboka.

Since August 1998 there have been 3.9 million deaths in the coltan wars and there are currently over 35,000 Congolese refugees in the UK alone. Coltan is mined for the metal tantalum, an essential component of mobile phones and other communication devices that is now more valuable than gold and coveted by dozens of international mining companies and warring local militias. This work weaves together the ambiguities and consequences of globalization, transnational migration and refugees and the impact of our addiction to constant communication.

Telephone Trottoire is a social telephony network that calls Congolese listeners, plays them a phone message and invites them to record a comment and pass it on to a friend by entering their telephone number. This builds on the traditional Congolese practice of radio trottoire or pavement radio, the passing around of news and gossip on street corners in order to avoid state censorship.

Tantalum Memorial Residue (courtesy Manifesta7) will be the second in the series, this time utilizing a 1938 telephone exchange rescued from the old Alumix factory in Bolzano, Italy. This is also the site of Manifesta 7 – the European Biennial of Contemporary Art, 19thJuly to 2nd November, 2008.

Tantalum Memorial Reconstruction will next be shown at The Science Museum in London UK in October 2008. This version will be triggered by the phone calls of a new telephony project created during workshops that will bring together young people from a Greenwich school with Congolese asylum seekers. The installation will then travel to Chalkwell Hall in Southend-on-Sea, Essex where it will launch the new centre for international arts organization Metal.

Tantalum Memorial Reconstruction May 10 – August 31, 2008 is A FUSE Commissioned Residency for the 2nd Biennial 01SJ Global Festival of Art on the Edge, ZERO1, CADRE Laboratory and the Lucas Artists Program, Montalvo Arts Center.

The artists Harwood, Richard Wright and Matsuko Yokokoji have worked together since 2004, firstly as Mongrel – an internationally recognized artists collective. Previous projects include the first online commission from the Tate Gallery, London, a BAFTA award nomination and work in the permanent collections of the Pompidou Centre Paris and the Centre for Media Arts in Karlsruhe (ZKM).

For more information contact: Harwood,Wright, Yokokoji at:
richard@mediashed.orgor
harwood@mediashed.org
matsuko@mediashed.org

http://www.mongrel.org.uk

http://www.mediashed.org

Telephone Trottoire: http://www.telephonetrottoire.net

ZERO1 Biennial: http://01sj.org

Manifesta7:http://www.manifesta7.it

via Networked Performance

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2008 Picture Gallery Up

We’ve added a 2008 photo gallery to our site, so visit it often to see lovely 2008 01SJ Festival moments captured by photographer Everett Taasevigen.

Visit the 2008 photo gallery.

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Minneapolis Art On Wheels!

Ali Momeni and his crew of Mobile Broadcast Units have arrived from Minneapolis to make “Art fr the People/ Art on Wheels!” The units are projectors mounted on bicycles, to allow for spontaneous projections on buildings and trees, wherever the party is!

They’ve been blogging about their trip here:

http://minneapolisartonwheels.org/

check out their press release:

http://minneapolisartonwheels.org/?p=20

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NTDTV covers 01SJ!

New Tang Dynasty Television (NTDTV) has been covering events of 01SJ Festival for several weeks now. Here is the link to review some of the news coverage we’ve been getting, and a great example of the Festival’s global scope:

http://cntv.us/zh/view/5893
http://cntv.us/zh/view/5892

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