projekt-heterologia


NEXXG::NU-SUBSTANCE 2007 – electronic music & media arts gathering, Bandung – Indonesia
February 19, 2007, 9:52 pm
Filed under: EVENTS, News

nu_substance2007

23 – 25 Februari 2007
Venue: Common Room & CCF Bandung

The first regular program that is dedicated to encourage
the development of electronic music and media arts practice in Bandung
Indonesia. Initiated by Bandung Center for New Media Arts/Common Room Networks Foundation in collaboration with NexxG, this program is also being supported by CCF Bandung. For the first series of NU-SUBSTANCE 2007, this particular program presents experimental instrument exhibition, workshop (electronic music, video jockey & open source music/sound recording); as well as electronic music concert that will be participated by media artist, musician, scientist and open for public participation.

Program Schedule

Friday, 23th February 2007
Experimental Instrument Exhibition

Venue: Common Room, Jl. Kyai Gede Utama No. 8
Exhibition: 23 Februari – 9 Maret 2007
Opening: 23 Februari 2007, on 15.00 PM
Presenting: Hendy Hertiasa aka Party Maker Inc., NRZ,
Elang EBY. and Evan (Storn)
Special Appearance : ADEMUS

Saturday, 24 February 2007
Workshop Program (electronic music, video jockey & open source music/sound recording)
Venue:
Common Room, Jl. Kyai Gede Utama No. 8
Time: 14.00 PM. – 20.30 PM
Presenting: Deena (Homogenic), Niang aka chainsmokingbastard (Biosampler/UVG) and Andi Sugandi ( Bandung Linux Club)
Participation Fee: Rp. 50.000,-/person
Special Appearance: XONAD (Cerahati)


Sunday, 25 February 2007
Electronic Music Concert
Venue
: Auditorium CCF, Jl. Purnawarman No. 32
Time: 19.00 s/d 22.30 PM
Presenting: Souldelay, Ape on the Roof, Biosampler and Homogenic

Artist Profile

ademus

ADEMUS (b. 1974)
Ade
Muslim’s long standing DJ Ademus, active for over ten years and known to cultivate a healthy obsession with electronic music. Architect and director of the famous essential clothing brand “EAT”. The man behind 347/EAT, Ripple magazine, Spills records, Ex:stence the independent system and movement in Bandung since 1996. Imposes his octopus-like musical tastes on the turntables, making him one of the most eclectic dj’s in Bandung. Next to electronics like minimal, electro, house, techno, braindance, industrial, rock, (free)jazz, postrock, ambient, ragga, dub, reggae, psychedelica, noise, drones, psychfolk, postpunk, free rock grime and many other (mutant) genres.

xonad

Xonad (b. 1974)
Known as the bad boys in the local DnB scene in Bandung, Xonad started his career in local music scene with POC
, were he played punk with Anggareza and Koseng in 1994. Later on, he formed an experimental band called Adalah Mati in 1997 and continuing his passion in music with Bahamas in year 2003. He also often involves in some multimedia performance project together with Biosampler and also known as the member of Cerahati, local production house that are known for its cutting edge music videos. Up until now Xonad is work as video artist and a DJ who plays heavy DnB music with extreme speed, raw distortion and experimental noise.

URL
http://www.myspace.com/xonad
http://xonad.multiply.com/music

souldelay

Souldelay
This band was formed in year 2005 as a result from an on going experimentation made by its personnel. After several research and experimentation, they decided to plays in trio format involving Indra (beat keeper, sound designer), Gigi (glitch, vocal) and Bueno (analog bass). Their music heavily resemblance some influence from Tahiti 80, Telefon tel aviv, Apparat, N.E.R.D, In flames, Manitoba, LO-FI FnK, M83, B. Fleischmann, Milosh, Helios, Boards of Canada, Alva Noto and many more.

URL
http://myspace.com/souldelayer

apeontheroof

Ape on the Roof
Ape on the Roof was started as collaborative project from Utari Syaukat and Aghi Naratama when they studied at Seattle. Their music explores acoustic and electronic sound, accompanied by Tari’s voice who often wrote lyrics that plays with imaginary symbol and irony; besides her personal criticism on daily Jakarta’s urban surroundings. Their first self-titled album (Ape on the Roof, 2003), gain some positive response from music fans in Seattle. After they reside in Jakarta, they continue the collaborative project. This time they involve more talents from Jakarta’s music scene, started from DJ OREO a.k.a AGE (The Jonis), Iman (LAIN, ZEKE & THE POPO), Bemby Gusti (LAIN, SORE), Lens (THE MISKINS), Fe (ex JINGGA), Batman (Goodnite Electric), Agrikulture (DJ ANTON, DJ HOGI), and Junko (HERDY, DJ WINKY).

biosampler

Biosampler
The year 2000 was the early stage of collaborative meeting from a group of people with similar concern and interests. An intense gathering in a house that located in a dense suburban area in Bandung has emerging into a so-called ‘collective attitude’, which is regarded as an act of self-indulgement through a creative process. Each member of this collective often use computer technology, creating piles of works in some digitalized format of sounds, music, images, animations, films, etc. From personal activities, it then has expanded into a collective act to form artistic composition through the creating sensation of sounds, light, and space; which is done spontaneously and sometimes with diverse goal and objective. Some surprising results often happen from their freedom to act and create, as well as dialogues and intervention. What they did has been growing from a daily attitude into an art performance. For NU SUBSTANCE 2007 they play in trio, involving chainsmokingbastard, Party Maker Inc. and Dante von Kelly.

URL
https://projektheterologia.wordpress.com/2007/02/12/biosampler/

homogenic

Homogenic
Homogenic is a three-piece electronic band from Bandung – Indonesia. They have released two full albums. The first one is called Epic Symphony, released back in 2004. The second one is called Echoes of the Universe, released back in 2006. Their music is influenced by the magic of electronic music such as MUM, Bjork (this is where they got their name), and Portishead. The most interesting thing from Homogenic’s music is the perfect match between the angelic sounds comes from their vocalist and light-electronic elements from their programmers. Homogenic is songwriter, keyboardist, and programmer Dina Dellyana, singer Risa Saraswati, and programmer Grahadea Kusuf.

URL
www.homogenicworld.com
www.myspace.com/homogenic

niang

Niang aka chainsmokingbastard (b. 1975)
Niang is known as multimedia experimentalist that initiated Biosampler together with Sulasmoro, Xonad, Pumpung/Punjung, David Stress, Domekide, Gustaff H. Iskandar, ROIM, Iweng, Hendy Hertiasa and other friends. One of his personal project is Jaeger Boy Transistor, an electronic rock music experimentation that also involving Gustaff H. Iskandar (media artist & researcher), Egga (graphic designer, media artist & DJ), Dandy aka Achong (graphic designer and vocalist of Teenage Death Star) and Hendra (electronic music producer and former initiator of Rock ‘n’ Roll Mafia). Besides working on some of his own project, Niang also work as a VJ and part of United Visual Guerilla (UVG) and often plays in Bandung, Jakarta and Singapore.

URL
http://discomfort.multiply.com/

dante

Gustaff H. Iskandar aka Dante von Kelly (b. 1974)
Gustaff
H. Iskandar was graduated in 1999 from Fine Arts Department, Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB). Starting from 1999, Gustaff entered art management scene, wrote, participated in some visual art exhibitions and organized publishing of Trolley Magazine for some years. By the end of 2001, along with R.E. Hartanto and T. Ismail Reza , he founded Bandung Center for New Media Arts, an organization that
are focusing on the development of media arts & multidisciplinary artistic practice in Indonesia. Having partnership with his wife Reina Wulansari and other colleagues, Gustaff is working on his art, working for the organization, curates exhibition, write and speak on discussions and symposiums. In year 2003 he developed Common Room Networks Foundation (http://www.commonroom.info), an artist initiative space that is co-organized together by Bandung Center for New Media Arts & Tobucil. Gustaff currently lives and works in Bandung – Indonesia. Selected projects and exhibition consist: International Symposium for Electronic Arts/ ISEA2004 (Helsinki – FI, 2004); Place, Ground & Practice (Auckland – NZ, 2005), Hetero Utopia: Mapping the Urban Terrain (Bandung -ID, 2006) and Futuresonic Festival 2006 (Manchester – UK, 2006).

URL
http://www.projektheterologia.wordpress.com
http://www.heterologia.multiply.com

elang

Elang EBY. (b. 1981) and Evan (STORN)
After discontinuing his study at Law Faculty Unisba, Elang decided to follow his path in the music field. For quite sometime, Elang has been interested to explore sound by using analog and digital equipment. To fulfill his passion, he formed Tragicomedy (1999-2001), Polyester Embassy (2002 – now) and Alphawaves (2006 – now). He also often works together with Evan (Storn), instrument designer and hardware builder for analog and digital instrument. One of his works is the modified theremin, which is basically being developed after the original theremin that was made in year 1919 by Léon Theremin (1896-1993). If the original theremin uses radio signal as its proximity sensor, the new version were equipped with modern chip so it can reach higher frequency. This modified theremin allows us to explore shine wave, which are similar to violin sound. Not only that, it can also produce pulse wave for lower pitch.

URL
http://www.myspace.com/elangeby
http://www.myspace.com/thepolyesterembassy
http://www.myspace.com/alphawavesisthenewwaves

hendy

Hendy Hertiasa aka Party Maker Inc. (b. 1970) and NRZ (b. 1979)
Hendy Hertiasa aka Party Maker Inc. were known as graphic
designer besides works as a lecture at Visual Communication Design, FSRD – ITB. Up until now, he often involves himself in some collaborative project with Biosampler, a multimedia performance group that was being established in year 2000. During that period, he also initiated a collaborative project with Nurus Syaifullah aka NRZ (b. 1979) who graduated from Physics Department ITB in 2003. Together, they started to applied experimentation on sensor technology, particularly on ultrasonic sensor. The first prototype that was made by NRZ is being used for the first time by Hendy during Insomnia48, a visual arts project that was held at the Old Parliament House (Singapore, 2004). He performs together with Biosampler under the project called no_placia, which also involves Sulasmoro, Ademus, Gustaff H. Iskandar, Niang and KRSGT.

**This program is being initiated by Bandung Center for New Media Arts/Common Room Networks Foundation in collaboration with NexxG and CCF Bandung. Organized by Electro Killer Corps. More information please contact: Nunung at 022-70800620

Bandung Center for New Media Arts/ Common Room Networks Foundation

Jl. Kyai Gede Utama No. 8
Bandung – 40132

West Java – Indonesia

PH. 022-70800620

Fax. 022-2503404

URL
http://www.commonroom.info



For The Record
February 19, 2007, 5:07 pm
Filed under: Articles

by Monica Narula/Raqs Media Collective
(from http://blog.raqsmediacollective.net)

A Place Like This, A Time Like Now
Sometimes it feels like things are beginning to get really interesting. We imagine that Calcutta in the 1940s and ‘60s (or in the 1880s) and Bombay in the 1920s and ‘50s or Delhi in the 1850s and (briefly) in the 1970s, might have been really rewarding times and places to live in. We have a sense that Delhi, today, in the first decade of our young century, is again showings signs of quickening to the possibilities of a new life.

This new life does not come upon us without its share of pain, because it exists simultaneously with the cruel transformation of the city that evicts hundreds of thousands of people, and destroys their carefully built frameworks of existence. It is not without its share of paranoia, as the shadow of the deep state, through a variety of surveillance networks, leaches into every street corner. It is not without its vulgarity as new money explodes and talks tough and dirty. Perhaps it is at times precisely such as this one – when large structural conflicts play themselves out on the urban landscape – that the forging of critical and reflective cultural practices seems all the more urgent and compelling. Perhaps that is why we sense them so keenly when they begin to intimate themselves to us.

And so, even as our city re-invents itself through escalating conflicts over extant and looming habitation and property, new migrants re-define the face and voice of the street, women take an increasingly visible place on the precincts and old urbane certainties crumble; a new sensibility takes hold. Delhi has outgrown the destiny of being a small town with a violent past and burdened with Imperial grandeur. It is now just a city, just another very big city. A city that has set out on a journey to find the world.

Circuits and Cities
Interesting connections are being formed, between Delhi and Bangalore, between Delhi and Lahore, Delhi and Kathmandu, Delhi and Berlin, New York, Beirut, Bandung. There is also a relationship with mofussil towns, and regional centres in north India which is not only extractive. Traffic between Delhi and Benaras, Allahabad, Gorakhpur, Ballia, Patna, Jabalpur and Jaipur has a different cultural significance now. People bring new thoughts and voices from these places, and return to them with the connections that they make in a place like Delhi. Within our city, entire worlds, like those of the resettlement colonies of Dakshinpuri or of the threatened riverside settlements like Nangla Machi or of inner city squatter zones, are finding a voice. The sense of Delhi being a place that contains entire worlds is more vivid today than it has ever been.

Writers, artists, practitioners, performers and audiences travel between spaces more than before, and the magnet of Mumbai, which necessarily took away the best of Delhi, seems to have weakened, replaced, in parts, by a genuine conversation. We can no longer think of our milieu only in terms of the physical boundary of the National Capital Territory of Delhi, of the Republic of India, or even of the South Asian region, but crucially, in terms of how different sub cultures and scenes in Delhi function as nodes in an expanding network that intersects at key points with other networks which may have originated in other cities. Here, the distance (or proximity) between Delhi and Bangalore or Mumbai, or for that matter Beirut or Bandung, becomes a function not of geography but of the affinities and interests that transcend frontiers of one kind or another.

What’s going on? Where?
In the domain of the imagination, images, sounds and thought, there is a quiet ferment that marks our city. Its signs are muted, nascent, fragile. There is nothing overt or spectacular about these symptoms and we must not rush headlong to any conclusions or prognoses. Everything is uncertain. But the symptoms of a specific sensibility are insistent on revealing themselves. They demand from us a renewal of the terms of engagement which have hitherto ruled the domain of cultural praxis and artistic work. New publics beckon us to join them at play. So many things wait to be done.

This is as good a time as any to initiate a conversation that indexes some of these developments around us, points to things further away that might be of interest, and pauses to take stock of what might lies head.

First, to take a look at what is around us:
Spaces like Khoj in Delhi which provide an excellent context of hospitality for new and emerging work, cross-border initiatives in modest and unconventional public spaces by artists and practitioners in India and Pakistan like Aar-Paar, (http://www.members.tripod.com/aarpaar2/02.htm), and the recent initiatives taken by documentary filmmakers to challenge censorship in exhibition (http://www.delhifilmarchive.org/) are signs that there exists a strong desire to re-write the terms within which cultural practice occurs in our milieu.

Younger practitioners are trying out new forms – lawyers (such as in the Alternative Law Forum http://www.altlawforum.org/lawmedia) are making comic books and html works against intellectual property and censorship, and the comic book or graphic novel is emerging as an interesting complex new form (see the work of Sarnath Bannerji, Vishwajoyti Ghosh and Parismita Singh, among others), as its practitioners explore difficult zones in personal experience and history. Architects and urban theorists, such as Solomon Benjamin, are experimenting with performance based presentation formats. A new generation of photographers is making edgy and personal work, without obligatory colourful turbans and the tyranny of the ‘well made photograph’. There is a new energy in the documentary, and the short and experimental film making scenes, made possible in part by more accessible technologies of production. Zines appear and disappear with an interesting frequency and broadsheets inaugurate the advent of a serial image-text essay form, and a new kind of critical fiction as well as non-fiction writing is making its presence felt in English, Hindi, Bangla, Tamil and Malayalam on Blogs. It appears that things are stirring.

Meanwhile, elsewhere…
At times like this, it also becomes useful to try and see what may be going on in other places and in other milieux. In our travels over the last six years, we have had the good fortune of observing many initiatives and practices all over the world that we think might serve as interesting provocations, so as to begin a conversation about what might be possible. We are placing this list on record also to register our kinship and solidarity with the people who have actualized these practices.

We are mentioning here only those spaces and initiatives that we consider to be modest. We need to focus on situations and processes that can be initiated and sustained with limited resources. What we have noticed in each of these instances is that a tight budget, or a lack of expansive resources, has not by any means implied a handcuffed imagination. Exciting things can also be done in small spaces, with little money, with no captive audiences, and by people who have full time jobs and next to nothing in terms of social security.

We have also restricted this list to instances where we have actually encountered the concerned practitioners personally. The list of practices and initiatives that we have found interesting, exciting and challenging which we have read about in addition to these, or seen in a show or on the internet, (although we may not have met the people involved with them) is far longer, and would require separate writing! This list is not exhaustive, and we intend to update and expand it from time to time so as to maintain a public database of the conceptual, intellectual and practice based context that we are nourished by.

There is no specific design or hierarchy implicit in the order in which they appear in the list below:

Queen’s Nail Annexe, San Francisco http://www.queensnailsannex.com/
A very small not-for-profit exhibition space (two rooms) which also doubles as a recording label in the Mission district in San Francisco, sustained by the innovative work of two dynamic persons. They work as community pedagogues, artists, facilitators and curators. The Queen’s Nail Annex offers space to young and old practitioners and curators who are able to offer a rigorous argument in their work. When we visited the Annex (which borrows its name from its neighbour – a Nail Beauty Parlour) we saw the opening of an exhibition devoted to videos and music produced by and in collaboration with the veteran experimental architecture and urbanism practice Archigram.

AndCompany, Frankfurt http://www.andco.de/
A group of performers, theatre artists, musicians and theorists, based mainly in Frankfurt. We collaborated with them on a ‘reading performance’ in connection with ‘The Wherehouse’, a process and work that reflects on the relationship between cities and people termed as illegal migrants. What attracted us to Andcompany&Co’s work was its practical adventurousness, which took in a strong interest in the legacy of Brecht’s work, along with theatre, music, acrobatics and theory with a sense of enjoyment in working together as an ensemble. Their commitment to music, fun and philosophy, within the constraints of a modest working style and a commitment to working with all available materials was interesting to engage with.

Mongrel, London http://www.mongrelx.org/
A collective of software programmers, artists, technicians, writers located in and around London. Mongrel considers its practice to be a kind of art hacking, and is founded on meticulous, almost obsessive research often initiated by Mongrel Graham Harwood in collaboration with itinerant theorist Matt Fuller. What continues to attract us to Mongrel’s diverse productivity is its eclecticism and serious irreverence. They are just as happy doing cut and paste xerox comic books and newsprint broadsheets as they are writing complex bits of code for a piece of software or hacking games and applications.

Park Fiction, Hamburg http://www.parkfiction.org/
An ensemble of people and practices located in close proximity to the depressed Saint Pauli district in Hamburg. A very successful instance of how cultural action within a community/neighbourhood context can stall the designs of urban redevelopment that might have resulted in eviction and demolition.

Atelier BowWow, Tokyo http://www.bow-wow.jp/
http://www.icon-magazine.co.uk/issues/022/bowwow.htm
An innovative architecture practice located in Tokyo, initiated by Yoshiharu Tsukamoto and Mayomi Kaijima, with whom we collaborated on the making of Temporary Autonomous Sarai (TAS) in Minneapolis in 2002. Atelier BowWow’s investigations in what they call ‘da-me’ or ‘not good’ and ‘pet’ architecture, with their accent on researching informal and improvised architectural interventions in dense urban spaces is something we have a great deal of sympathy for. BowWow’s take on built form in urban space privileges that which may seem marginal at first, but is actually vital to the life of a neighbourhood or a street. It gestures to a density of contact, a plurality of usage and function, to the animatedness of interstitial spaces, and to a democracy of the sidewalk, the verge and the back alley that we find resonant with the urban forms of our city. It would be interesting to see what could occur if architectural practices in South Asia began taking an active interest in the informal city as an expressive of an architectural language.

Torolab, Tijuana http://torolab.co.nr/
Another architectural practice, like Atelier BowWow with a strong presence in contemporary art venues. Torolab is based in Tijuana at Mexico’s northern frontier with the USA, and much of its work is by way of an imaginative and focused reflection and research on the special conditions of the border zone, the peculiar relationship between the twin cities of Tijuana in Mexico and San Diego in the USA and the forms of improvised and ’emergency’ architecture, using discarded automobile bodies, car tyres, crates and cardboard boxes that are a hallmark of subaltern urbanism in Tijuana.

Arab Image Foundation, Beirut http://www.fai.org.lb/
An archival initiative undertaken by a group of photographers, critics and theorists spread across the Arabic speaking world, and in the Arab diaspora, to archive and document popular photographic and image making practices, especially with a view towards the destabilization of the ‘Arab Image. They have spoken in Delhi, at an invitation from Khoj.

The Atlas Group Archive, Beirut/New York http://www.theatlasgroup.org/
A somewhat disembodied entity centred around the personage of Walid Raad that invokes an archival register to explore the contemporary history of Lebanon through mixed media installations, single channel screenings, visuals and literary essays and lectures/performances. What we find interesting in the work of the Atlas Group is the close attention to history, a sense of archival irony and a highly sophisticated visual language. What the Atlas Group Archive does is to use a historical imagination to weld a set of philosophical statements about the politics of seeing. The invocation of an image by the archive becomes an occasion for thinking about truth claims and uncertainty. Images, even the memories of images, become things to think with, not just objects to look at or recall. It may be interesting to see what happens were we to transpose aspects of this register of thinking with images and memories to the fractured history of our city.

Common Room & The Bandung Center for New Media Arts, Bandung http://www.commonroom.info/
A dynamic cluster of self-organized spaces in Bandung, Indonesia, with a special interest in expressing the enormous vitality of urban youth culture in Bandung, with its distinct political and critical edge and commitment to having a very good time, with music, murals, experimental video, street fashion, new media, publishing and comics. The Common Room and the Bandung Center are object lessons in the ability to organize a dynamic public space and presence that is non-commercial, that has little or no funding, and that survives because of a close relationship to a young public that nurtures it with time and with improvised resources.

Long March Foundation, Beijing http://www.longmarchspace.com/english/homepage.htm
A highly intense ensemble of artistic, cultural and archival practices, developed over many years and within the matrix of a densely collaborative framework, particularly interested in areas such as migration within China, that emerges from the space of the Cultural Transmission Center in Beijing. We found this practice, which we encountered for the first time at the Taipei Biennale 2005, to occupy a different, more nuanced but far more quietly subversive register of expression compared to the by now formulaic visual sensation of contemporary art from China.

kein.org: collaborative media production, Internet/Munich http://kein.org/
kein.org is a peer to peer network of cultural practices that encompasses software, theory, performance, events and conferences – kein.org has in its history been the site for very precise and focused online and offline interventions (‘Kein Mensch ist Illegal’ and ‘Deportation Class’) against the detention and deportation of illegal immigrants in Germany and Europe.

Metareciclagem, Rio de Janeiro/Sao Paulo http://www.metareciclagem.org/wiki/index.php/MetaReciclagemEn
Metareciglagem is a loose ensemble of people and practices that embody a critical free and open source practice with software, machines, people and spaces in Brazil. Equally distant from the NGO scene and the imperatives of self-consciously political language, metareciclagem is basically interested in initiating a set of creative processes that reclaim autonomies for human presence and subjectivity in all processes involving technological mediation, especially, but not only in those that use computers (accessible, assembled hardware) and software.

Chaos Computer Club, Berlin http://www.ccc.de/?language=en
A pioneering group of hackers and who were and continue to be active in the Berlin scene, intervening critically and through cultural and artistic work in areas to do with intellectual property, electronic surveillance and technological creativity.

Radioqualia, London, Bacelona, Auckland http://www.radioqualia.net
An online art collaboration by New Zealanders Adam Hyde and Honor Harger, it was founded in 1998 in Australia and is currently based in Europe. Using various streaming media softwares, r a d i o q u a l i a experiments with the concept of artistic broadcasting, using the internet and traditional media forms, such as radio and television, as primary tools, and aims to explore broadcasting technology within the context of philosophical speculation.

Bureau d’etudes, Paris/Strasbourg http://bureaudetudes.free.fr/
A practice consisting of researchers and cartographers who map flows of power and control in politics, economy, society and culture and render their work through elaborate diagrams, often exhibited within contemporary art venues and events.

Visible Collective, New York http://www.disappearedinamerica.org/about/collective/
A collective of artists, documentarists, legal practitioners, designers, programmers, cartographers and activists – creators of the ‘Disappeared in America’ project that documents the detention and disappearance of people in the United States of America following September 11, 2001.

Temporary Services http://www.temporaryservices.org/
Temporary Services is a group of three persons: Brett Bloom, Salem Collo-Julin and Marc Fischer. Their work draws on their varied backgrounds and interests to produce creative exhibitions, events, projects and publications. Within their work they create socially dynamic situations and spaces for dialogue. They are distinguished by their fondness of self published pamphlets, and public projects that are temporary, ephemeral, or that operate outside of conventional or officially sanctioned categories of public expression. We were especially struck by Temporary Services collaboration with a prisoner serving a sentence of life imprisonment that resulted in a project called ‘Prisoners Inventions’ consisting of a collection of ingenuous inventions made by a prisoner, a book and the replica of a prison cell.

Red 76, mainly Portaland, Oregon http://www.red76.com/
Red76 is the title used by a group of people working on collaborative projects in Portland, Oregon. The guiding constructs holding Red76 projects together are the facilitation of thought in public space and the examination of how to define what and where that space can be. The wish to charge space, to create an atmosphere where the public may become hyper aware of their surroundings and their day-to-day activities – such as making a lecture series in Laundromat shops – is an important construct for them.

Critical Art Ensemble, dispersed locations online http://www.critical-art.net/
A collective of artists, theorists and scientists known for their critical research and creative work located at the intersections of technology, biology, cybernetics, feminism and a trenchant critique of the military-industrial-information technology complex. CAE produces events, performances based on laboratory experiments, books and web-based renditions of research themes and ideas.

Middle Corea http://middlecorea.net/
Middle Corea describes itself as a virtual networked territory actually located in the Internet, and ideally located within the ecosystem of the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea. It realises itself through a variety of artistic and documentation activities undertaken by a group of artists, practitioners, photographers, theorists and curators loosely located in and around Seoul.

Mute and Metamute, London www.metamute.org
A print journal and website devoted to a wide ranging critical discussion of the politics and culture of new technologies of communication.

Improbable Voices http://www.improbablevoices.net
Improbable Voices is an archive of reflections in the form of interviews from inside a women’s prison, and a proposal for a monument to the prison-industrial system. The Improbable Voices project emerges out of a collaboration between a California based artist, Sharon Daniels, a group of ten women inmates who are incarcerated at the Central California Women’s Facility (CCWF) in Chowchilla, CA – the largest female correctional facility in the United States and Justice Now, a human rights organization that works with women in prison to build a safe, compassionate world without prisons.
———————————————————————————————————
From the above list it will be evident that the kind of practices that we are talking about range from comics to high theory, with software, web-based work, radio, documentary filmmaking, and self-published broadsheets in between. Crucially, each of these might involve either a level of sociality in the production of cultural processes or a willingness to engage with a discursive register (and sometimes both). This unties art and cultural work from decorative or propagandist demands and enables it to claim a space for forms that are generative of questions, thought, reflection and communitas.

Many of these formal approaches might seem somewhat alien to the current milieu of art exhibition practices in places such as Delhi, but we are certain that there is a change in the offing. New spaces will emerge and are emerging where new forms and new people will be at play. This is nascent now, but we think that this will take on a momentum of its own in a matter of years.

What is also evident is that as in other areas of human creativity (science, music, filmmaking) the rise of collectives, ensembles and networks will accelerate a vibrant cultural milieu.

We hope that this listing provides everyone in our milieu with reasons for reflection, and we look forward to carrying forward a conversation.

We look forward to more interesting times in our city!

August 1, 2006