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trying out html

eee  not sure what this will do

 

Twitter as what?

Recent blog post was sent to Twitter. As what though? How do i find these on Twitter?

Previously posted as will789gb on Twitter. #experimentality seems to work ok

Video so far from second workshop

Starting to check the tapes. So far I have looked at the first two and the piano. Includes both on music till the tape runs out.

I think I will put most of this on YouTube eventually, starting with the piano. I can go up to ten minutes at a time. Watching the advice on recording again I am reminded of the dangers in overproduction so will just find places to start and stop. There is an alternative soundtrack somewhere. For voices this would be an advantage but there can be more versions later.

Workshop 2: Charlie Gere, Ruskinian experimentalism, or the historical roots of experimental art

Charlie Gere (Department of Media, Film & Cultural Studies, Lancaster University) opened his presentation by describing how the window next to where he writes faces directly towards Ingleborough, one of the famous ‘three peaks’ of the Yorkshire Dales, along with Pen-y-Ghent and Whernside. Concomitantly, he explained how, John Ruskin gave the name ‘Looking Down from Ingleborough’ to the first issue of Fors Clavigera, the series of letters addressed to ‘the workmen and labourers of Great Britain’, which also was intended to support the work of the Guild of St. George, the utopian society Ruskin, then 50 years old, founded at the same time.  

Workshop 2: Day 1 - Discussion

Discussion following the presentations of the first day of the workshop focused around six main themes: a dialectical tension with structure, non-idiomatic, use of the term experiment, unpredictability, image-breaking and image-making in terms of the end of art, and similarity and difference between genres.

Workshop 2: Karen Juers-Munby, Events between script and freedom: improvising with text in contemporary experimental performance

Karen Juers-Munby (LICA, Lancaster University) in her presentation focused on the eventness of experimental (postdramatic) performances. She argued that the phenomenon of the event often arises precisely through the openly exhibited tension between script and performance.  Juers-Munby explored some contemporary experimental performances that openly exhibit text in performance and in which text or script becomes an acknowledged ‘player’ in improvisation. Using the examples of ‘Forced Entertainment’ and Julia Barclay’s ‘Apocryphal Theatre’ she illuminated the issues of presence and identity in terms of presenting and dis/placing identity. Juers-Munby argued that this new aesthetic forms are not merely formal innovations but can also be seen as political aesthetics.   

Workshop 2: Antti Saario, Free Improvised Music: Recording Perspective

Antti Saario (LICA, Lancaster University) opened his presentation by emphasising the importance of looking at particular challenges set forth by recording free improvised music. He described this in terms of a quest for a more tactile sonic experience: “the turning point from mechanical explosion to electrical implosion” (Marshall McLuhan, 1964). Saario followed by posing critical questions: Why do we want to record this magical event of improvisation? Why do we want a fixed perspective and what would it be?

Exhibition - Dark Places

Commencing next week at the John Hansard Gallery, Southampton.

'Dark Places uncovers sites of secrecy and technology across Britain. Commissioned by The Arts Catalyst and co-curated with the Office of Experiments, SCAN and the John Hansard Gallery, the exhibition presents new artists' works that explore spaces and institutions below the radar of common knowledge.'

http://www.artscatalyst.org/projects/darkplaces/darkplaces.html

Workshop 2: Experiment as Event in the Arts and Sciences – Introductory Session

Bronislaw Szerszynski (Sociology, Lancaster University) began by thanking once again all the people involved in the organization and running of the workshop. He outlined the programme of the event and the accompanying performances. Szerszynski then invited Charlie Gere (Department of Media, Film & Cultural Studies, Lancaster University) to introduce the main themes of the workshop.

Michael Krätke – Welcome to Experiment as Event in the Arts and Sciences Workshop

Michael Krätke (Director, IAS, Lancaster University) in his opening note welcomed everyone to the second workshop of the Experimentality programme - Experiment as Event in the Arts and Sciences – and emphasized the importance of the exploration of its themes in the context of interdisciplinary research.

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