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Asides

I was talking to this very nice person at a very fashionable opening in London who said she used to read my blog and really enjoyed the witty commentary on contemporary culture.

This really made my evening. Obviously this is no longer the case, though. So I am making a not-quite-New-Year resolution of sorts to go back to my fascinating days of yore. Stay tuned, but in the meantime please enjoy some of my Greatest Hits:

Lead Into Gold
Face Value
Never, Ever Reach the Moon
Why Have a Blog?
Bring on the laptop concerto
Crumpled up Paper Vs. the Idiolect
So Much to Learn from Old Pizza (Or, Did Andy Like Anchovies?)
Dude, Where’s My Coconut?
Rest In Peace: Alexander Calder (1898-1976), and Piet Mondrian (1872-1944)
Expo, or, the Tale of Two Mayors
Just Add Water
The Real Life of An Artist
Last Speakers

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Art & Culture My Projects Technology

This happened Edinburgh #3

powerof8.org.uk
powerof8.org.uk

On October 12, the third This happened Edinburgh event will take place at the Wee Red Bar. Our exciting line up includes: Peter Pratt, Michael Salmond, Sarah Drummond & Lauren Currie, and Paul Rodgers & Euan Winton, and Anab Jain.

Tickets are available now at this site. Be fast — last time tickets sold out in under an hour! The event is sold out! If you want to follow all the This happened Edinburgh news, become a fan on Facebook, use the #thedi hashtag on twitter, or just keep an eye on the This happened website.

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Art & Culture My Projects

Liminal Screen

381828413_cb4d48fc38

The Banff Centre for the Arts in the beautiful Rocky Mountains of Canada is world-renowned as a place where artists retreat to create and think. For over 70 years this very special place has been catalysing creativity and developing leaders in the arts — a track record few places in the world can lay claim to.

I’ve been invited to be a peer advisor for the upcoming Liminal Screen co-production residency at the Banff Centre, within the Banff New Media Institute. I wanted to post the opportunity here to entice ambitious artists from around the world who are engaged with screen-based practices to apply.

This residency will “…focus its inquiry on the transitions between screen and life, as the screen reinforces its central position as an ubiquitous communications portal, data visualization surface, and frame on an ever more meditated world. Practitioners from all walks of screen-based practice are encouraged to apply to the program. We are particularly interested in practice that extends its investigation of the screen out into other media or networks (biological, philosophical, social, and other systems) and explores the spaces and relationships between screen, mind, and hard reality.”

Scholarships and financial aid are available. Apply via the Banff Centre website, deadline September 25, 2009.

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Art & Culture

Hyperbole, hype, firsts and number ones

number-one

I’m really late to the saying-goodbye-to-Michael-Jackson party. My little wave is barely noticeable in the tidal wave of tributes, for as so often happens, he is more popular in death than in life, his musical legacy blasting out of cars and iPods and clubs with a vengeance. MJ’s untimely departure from this world caused me to dust off this long-percolating draft post about hyperbole and hype, since I can think of no more timely example of the impact that breakthroughs, both real and exaggerated, have on individuals, society, and history. The “King of Pop” broke some real barriers and pioneered forms, which is the kernel of what was important about him, the thing that made him noteworthy. However, his “people”, the media, the adoring fans, and the man himself wrapped this substantial gift in grand statements and gestures aimed at canonising him before his end: from his nickname, to an album entitled “Number Ones” (am I the only one who thinks the Billboard chart is meaningless?), to patents on dance moves, to naming what would have been his last concert tour “This Is It”.

This need for a sense of excitement through claims of novelty ultimately leaves one less than satisfied. As Robert Sharp notes, speaking of a news story on a barely remarkable precedent set by one of Nicolas Sarkozy’s divorces: “These “firsts” and “record breakers” are irritating because they are a distraction. They are a lazy hook for journalists to begin the story, eating up word count that could be used to analyse the event itself. Of course there is no precise precedent for Sarkozy’s domestic re-alignment – But is that fact likely to have an impact on how the French will manage the situation? Indeed, does the event have any political significance at all?”

Falling prey to (or perhaps playing to) the temptation to engage in grandiose and hyperbolic statements, Salon.com posted an article questioning what the best TV show of all time was: The Sopranos or The Wire? As you might suspect, the debate between the two Salon.com critics makes for less exciting reading than the bombastic title implies. It takes a reader’s letter to bring things back to earth: “But I am once again put off by a critical community that has utterly lost hold of its moorings and has drifted into a place where something can’t be praised without being praised to a level of utter absurdity. It’s the era of hyperbole, where things can’t just be good, they have to be the best ever, the most, the funniest, the smartest. There’s not real ability to do the most important job of the critic, which is to draw distinctions and illuminate difference, because when everything is ballyhooed beyond all rationality, theres no meaning to any praise. What possible weight can a critic lauding something have, anymore?”

Indeed. So farewell MJ, our “King of Pop”. As is always the case, in measures of time so slow as to be glacial, maybe we can forget the pomp and circumstance and just enjoy or forget the music on its own merits.