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Material from this years and previous years events will be added gradually. Please comment, suggest additional links and events, and participate.

Monday, December 12, 2011

JANUARY 2012 SPEAKERS PROGRAMME EVENTS


18th January, 11a.m. Jane and Louise Wilson. D’Arcy Thompson  Lecture Theatre, Tower Building, Perth Road.



To coincide with their new show at DCA, we are very pleased to have Jane and Louise Wilson speaking about their practice. Louise graduated from DJCAD in 1989, Jane from Newcastle Polytechnic. They then studied together at Goldsmiths. Their joint work investigates institutional spaces, power relations, and tries out strategies to re-invigorate modernist optimism. They are Turner Prize nominees and among the most exciting contemporary artists of now.


FURTHER INFO
recent show- upcoming at DCA



25th January 11am “Paul Virilio and the Aesthetics of Disappearance”
An introduction to this important thinker (also curator and photographer) by John Armitage.


 THIS EVENT WILL TAKE PLACE IN CENTRESPACE, in THE VISUAL RESEARCH CENTRE, lower level DCA. This is to coincide with the screening week of “Atom Town: life after technology.”

This illustrated lecture examines his contribution to the debates over contemporary aesthetics by considering one of his most powerful texts, The Aesthetics of Disappearance (2009a). It explains the importance of the argument of this book to afford an entry point into it for uninitiated English-speaking readers. The lecture then surveys the ramifications of Virilio’s study for theorizing and practicing media in the present period.
The theme of the book is the development and modern-day condition of human perception in the world’s advanced cultures. Virilio’s text is therefore about how diverse ways of perceiving and coping with the realms of photography and technology, science, and cinema are appreciated and incorporated into postmodern culture.
Perhaps the principal claim of the text is its description of the aesthetics of disappearance as an “irresistible project and projection toward a technical beyond” (Virilio 2009a: 103). Before presenting an explanation of what Virilio means when he employs concepts such as “aesthetics” or the “technical beyond,” it is vital to grasp how this assertion stems from The Aesthetics of Disappearance in its entirety. Consequently, the purpose of this lecture is to offer a foundation for an appreciation of what he means by defining the aesthetics of disappearance in this way.
     Professor John Armitage is Associate Dean and Head of the Department of Media at Northumbria University, UK. He specializes in the cultural and media theory of Paul Virilio, the French contemporary philosopher and ‘critic of the art of technology’. Professor Armitage is the founder and co-editor, with Ryan Bishop and Douglas Kellner, of the Duke University Press journal Cultural Politics and the editor and author Paul Virilio: From Modernism to Hypermodernism and Beyond (2000), Virilio Live: Selected Interviews (2001), Virilio Now: Current Perspectives in Virilo Studies (2011), Virilio and the Media (2012), The Virilio Dictionary (2012), and Virilio and Visual Culture (2012).

Virilio books are available in the university library.
Particularly recommended:
War and Cinema
Open Skies
The Information Bomb
Crepuscular Dawn
The Aesthetics of Disappearance.
 
Paul Virilio : Unknown Quantity. Exhibition curated by PV

Atomtown: life after technology WEBSITE

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Torsten Lauschmann: alchemist of the visible 23rd November

Pleasure!! Wonder!! Beauty!! Thrills!!





This is the last Speakers Event this year; wisdom, prudence and your innate desire for visual delight dictate that your presence will be most worthwhile.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Der Lauf der Dinge / The way things go: Wednesday 16th November

Fischli and Weiss play consequences; sculptural, comical, amazing and amusing.


"like a Hitchcock movie acted by objects instead of people"
Also shorts by Pipilotti Rist.


Those wild Swiss!
next week TORSTEN LAUSCHMANN LIVE

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

ELLIE HARRISON 9th Nov

Ellie Harrison’s practice can be seen as emerging from her ongoing attempt to strike-a-balance between the competing roles of ‘artist’, ‘activist’ and ‘administrator’.
Her work takes a variety of forms including performance spectacles, interactive installations, collaborative projects, political campaigns, media interventions, lectures, websites and coach trips.

She uses skills and strategies drawn from each of these perspectives to create playful and engaging work, in-and-out of art world contexts, which aims to expose and challenge the systems which control and rule over our lives, be they political, ethical, social or economic.


  The image is from Fireworks Display 26 June 2010 - 'a one-woman attempt to re-enact a chronology of ‘the history of revolution’ over the course of the last 360 years via the medium of pyrotechnics.'


Ellie Harrison’s practice can be seen at www.ellieharrison.com (which links through to all the other online stuff if you investigate far enough)


+ Vimeo page for video documentation
www.vimeo.com/ellieharrison

+ Facebook page for recent news / pics
www.facebook.com/blatantselfpromotion

This is my MFA thesis, which I might talk about a bit:
www.ellieharrison.com/essays/trajectories/


Ellie Harrison was born in London in 1979. She lives and works in Glasgow. In 2009 she founded the Bring Back British Rail campaign and in 2010 she became the first individual artist to openly publicise an Environmental Policy on her website.

She is the secretary of The Artists’ Bond - established in 2011 as the successor to the Artists’ Lottery Syndicate - and is a full member of the Scottish Artists Union.

www.ellieharrison.comging from her ongoing attempt to strike-a-balance between the competing roles of ‘artist’, ‘activist’ and ‘administrator’.

She uses skills and strategies drawn from each of these perspectives to create playful and engaging work, in-and-out of art world contexts, which aims to expose and challenge the systems which control and rule over our lives, be they political, ethical, social or economic.

Her work takes a variety of forms including performance spectacles, interactive installations, collaborative projects, political campaigns, media interventions, lectures, websites and coach trips.

Ellie Harrison was born in London in 1979. She lives and works in Glasgow. In 2009 she founded the Bring Back British Rail campaign and in 2010 she became the first individual artist to openly publicise an Environmental Policy on her website.

She is the secretary of The Artists’ Bond - established in 2011 as the successor to the Artists’ Lottery Syndicate - and is a full member of the Scottish Artists Union.

www.ellieharrison.com

Thursday, October 27, 2011

MARGARET TAIT Wednesday 2nd November

"AS POET, artist and above all film-maker Margaret Tait realised her vision of the world across many of the artificial boundaries in the arts."   Murray Grigor

A chance to see a delicate and poetic vision which evolves from daily life and a subtle eye.





 Margaret Tait: selected films 1952-1976  in djcad library FILM DVD524
 Margaret Tait Reader', edited by Peter Todd and Benjamin Cook published by LUX
 A portrait of Ga
 online clips and images

Monday, October 24, 2011

Ecstasy and the Volcanic

WERNER HERZOG DOUBLE BILL  Wednesday 26th October



Two extraordinary documentaries which push the genre into meditative reflection on  the human condition.

La Souffriere (1976, 33 minutes)
"What, then, particularly interests Herzog is the notion of people and places pushed to extremes: that it is by this route that we can discover something more essentially truthful about ourselves and the world around us. And it is this fundamental, what he calls “poetic, ecstatic truth” (2), that Herzog has always searched for. The film scholar and critic Mark Cousins has said that, after John Ford, Herzog is the most important landscape director in cinema history (3); whilst Herzog himself is fond of saying that we, as a race, only have embarrassed images of the world (that is, worn out and corrupted by picture postcard clichés), and that we need to find new images with which to define ourselves. If not, he warns, we will perish like the dinosaurs."
From "Images at the end of the world"

The Great Ecstasy of the Woodcarver Steiner (1974, 45 min)
Woodcarver Steiner’s indelible minutes contain a perfect Herzogian subject: the “ski flier” who sails super-human distances — a serene young man who is portrayed to exist on a more transcendent plane. Walter Steiner is a medal-winning, record-breaking Swiss ski-jumper whom Werner’s ultra-slo-mo camera routinely captures soaring impossibly, and with an eerie calm usually reserved for monks or yogis. When rendered in hundreds of frames per second, Steiner’s feats dissolve the notion of the act as mere sport, launching it to the level of unearthly art bathed in death-defying ecstasy — a blissful state that Herzog finds himself in as well whilst doing live color commentary throughout the film. Also featuring an unforgettable, ethereal score by regular collaborator Florian Fricke (aka Popol Vuh), Steiner is easily one of the most visually breathtaking of all Herzog’s films, documentary or otherwise — so relish this opportunity to see it on the big screen!

FURTHER READING 

HERZOG ON HERZOG edited by Paul Cronin 
MAIN LIBRARY 791.430 233 092 H 582

www.sensesofcinema.com
A wonderland of articles, interviews and ideas

I'm ready for my close-up
Podcasts from the wonderful Resonance FM on cult and art film makers.

The Culture Show: Mark Kermode interviews Werner Herzog
During the course of the interview, Herzog is shot by a hidden sniper with an airgun; he continues the interview as if nothing unusual has happened...
 DJCAD library ART VT4676

Monday, October 10, 2011

OVER YOUR CITIES GRASS WILL GROW : Wednesday 12th October


a film by Sophie Fiennes
The film bears witness to German artist Anselm Kiefer's alchemical creative processes and renders in film, as a cinematic journey, the personal universe he has built at his hill-studio estate in the South of France.
film website

review in Guardian
"The artist as creator is respectfully restored to the very centre of the process, and not marginalised by the cross-currents of money, fashion or theory."

Anselm Kiefer gallery page

Anselm Kiefer biographical interview

Sophie Fiennes talks about 'Perverts Guide to the Cinema" her collaboration with Slavoj Zizek

Anselm Kiefer books in DJCAD library are stored at
75(43)-19/20-KIE


an extraordinary work about a unique artist and place. See you there...

Friday, September 30, 2011

5th October: Geoff Lucas on HICA

The Highland Institute for Contemporary Art is in a remote location. It is however resolutely contemporary.
Geoff Lucas, co-founder with Eilidh Crumlish, will describe the process of developing an arts organisation, and the effects of that on his practice as a visual artist.


 image: "preparations"  Jeremy Miller

RECOMMENDED READING

Baljeu, J., Theo van Doesburg, Macmillan, 1974

Bann S. (ed.) The Tradition of Constructvism, Thames and Hudson, London, 1974

Gottelier, L. (ed.) Bart Wells Institute, Dent-De-Leone, 2009

van Doesburg T., Principles of Neo-Plastic Art, Percy Lund, Humphries & Co. Ltd., London 1969

HICA, Exhibitions 2010, Small Potatoes Publishing, Inverness-shire, 2011

HICA, Four Exhbitions: October 2008 – August 2009, Small Potatoes Publishing, Inverness-shire, 2009

Huttinger E., Max Bill, ABC Edition, Zurich 1978

Jaffe H.L.C., De Stijl 1917-1931, Belknap Press, Harvard University, Massachusetts, 1986

Lauter, M., Concrete Art in Europe after 1945, Ostfildern-Ruit: Hatje Cantz, 2002

Ramirez M. C., Helio Oiticica – The Body of Colour, Tate Publishing, London, 2007

Rotzler W., Constructive Concepts, Rizzoli International Publications Inc., 1989

Williams E., An Anthology of Concrete Poetry, Something Else Press, New York, 1967


www.h-i-c-a.org
www.psprojectspace.nl
www.minusspace.com

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Next event: 28th September. Ken Cockburn: the Road North


RECOMMENDED FURTHER READING

The Road North
Ken Cockburn & Alec Finlay
www.theroadnorth.co.uk


Selected Bibliography

Back Roads to Far Towns: Bashô’s Travel Journal
Translated by Cid Corman and Kamaike Susumu, illustrated by Hide Oshiro (1968)

Makoto Ueda: Basho and his interpreters : selected hokku with commentary (1992)

Earl Miner: Naming Properties: Nominal Reference in Travel Writings by Basho and Sora, Johnson and Boswell (1996)


Samuel Johnson: A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland (1775)

James Boswell: The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides (1785)

Dorothy Wordsworth: Recollections of a Tour Made in Scotland A.D. 1803 (1874)

John Henry Dixon: Gairloch in North-West Ross-shire (1886)

Seton Gordon:
Highways & Byways in the Western Highlands (1935, new edition 1995)
Highways & Byways in the Central Highlands (1949, new edition 1995)

Norman Shaw et al: Nemeton (2011)


Thomas Kinsella: The Tain, translated from the Irish epic Tain Bo Cuailnge (1970)


www.themodernantiquarian.com
Offers “news, information, images, folklore & weblinks on the ancient sites across the UK, Ireland and Europe”



KC, 25/9/11
--------------------------------------------------------
and a few more...

the Scottish Poetry Library

Nina Pope and Karen Guthrie: a Hypertext Journal, following Pope & Guthrie's journey to the Western Isles of Scotland, in the footsteps of the writers Boswell & Johnson.

An Itinerary to Natsuo Basho's "Narrow Road to the Deep North

First speakers programme event

I Shot Andy Warhol (1996) Mary Harron
Plus
A short tribute to George Kuchar       

 Further reading and viewing

Andy Warhol   by Arthur C Danto   (2009)  in library      75(73)-19-WAR

All tomorrow’s parties : Billy Name’s photographs of Andy Warhol’s factory  Essay by Dave Hickey, interview by Collier Schorr in library      77(73) NAM

The philosophy of Andy Warhol: from a to b and back again (1977)
In library     75(73)-19-WAR

Andy Warhol interviewed in 1977 in the magazine he founded:

George Kuchar   links to online film

“A wondrous shuddering grothole” the Scala Cinema remembered