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Michelle Teran
"Born in Canada, Michelle Teran explores the interaction between media and social networks in urban environments. In her work she looks at different aspects of how urban space is defined, occupied and mediatized. She has a socially and site-specifically engaged practice, focusing mostly on the staging of urban interventions and performances such as guided tours, discussions, walks and open-air projections as well as participatory installations and happenings. Her projects such as Life: A User’s Manual and Buscando al Sr. Goodbar are internationally known and have garnered several prestigious awards.
She is the winner of the Transmediale Award, the Turku2011 Digital Media & Art Grand Prix Award and has received numerous other grants and accolades for her work including the Prix Ars Electronica honorary mention (2005, 2010) and the Vida 8.0 Art & Artificial Life International Competition (Madrid). She is currently a research fellow at the National Academy of Art in Bergen (KHIB). She lives and works between Bergen and Berlin" (http://www.ubermatic.org/).
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 17.01.2011 - 15:55
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Chris Funkhouser
Chris Funkhouser is an Associate Professor and Director of the Communication and Media program in the Department of Humanities at New Jersey Institute of Technology, where he teaches Cybertext, Digital Poetry, Electronic Literature, and other courses. He has also taught courses at Naropa University (Creative Cannibalism, 2007) and University of Pennsylvania (Digital Poetry, 2010), where he is also a Senior Editor at PennSound. He is a digital poet and author of the documentary study Prehistoric Digital Poetry: An Archaeology of Forms, 1959-1995, LambdaMOO_Sessions (Writer's Forum, 2006), and an e-book (CD-ROM), Selections 2.0, which was published by the Faculty of Creative Multimedia at Multimedia University (Malaysia), where he was a Visiting Fulbright Scholar in 2006.
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 17.01.2011 - 16:08
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Daniel Apollon
Daniel Apollon is an associate professor in digital culture at the University of Bergen. He has broad interests covering cultural and social perspectives on information technology, electronic text and edition, semantic web and the philosophy of networked knowledge society. Until 2008 Daniel Apollon headed the Research Group on Text Technologies at UNIFOB AKSIS AS, Bergen. Daniel has been involved as European coordinator in many EU projects on digital culture and electronic literature. He has also a long track record as academic expert for the European Commission, Agence Nationale de la Recherche, NFR, Unesco and the former European Rectors' Conference. He is also active in COST Actions on electronic edition and eContent projects. Daniel is also a film-maker with deep interest in ethnographic film-making and short film.
(Source: Author's Description)
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 17.01.2011 - 16:10
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Pluto Press
Pluto Press
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 18.01.2011 - 13:25
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À bribes abattues
L’œuvre de Philippe Bootz « À bribes abattues » est bien nommée parce que chaque poème animé utilise les mêmes mots jusqu’à ce que leur signification soit abattue. « Bribes » fait référence aux mots individuels qui jouent sur l’écran, mais aussi aux lettres dans les mots qui changent de façon indépendante pour changer la signification des mots et des strophes. Le titre est aussi un jeu de mot avec la phrase « à bride abattue » qui veut dire « à toute vitesse. » Le lecteur choisit quelle œuvre il va « lire » (entre guillemets parce qu’on fait beaucoup plus que lire ces œuvres, on en fait une expérience). Le choix nous donne la sensation de prise, mais en fait c’est un peu comme choisir un poème dans une anthologie. On ne fait que choisir l’œuvre ou la page ; on n’a aucun influence sur le texte-même.
Scott Rettberg - 20.01.2011 - 13:24
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Roderick Coover
Roderick Coover is Director of the MFA program in Film and Media Arts at Temple University. His works include museum installations, print publications, films and multimedia collaborations of fiction and non-fictional story. Examples of works include the interactive series, Unknown Territories (unknownterritories.org), which is a collection of interactive environments about how perceptions of the deserts of the American West are shaped through language and image, and the book, Switching Codes: Thinking Through Digital Technologies In The Humanities And Arts (Chicago), which brings together leading scholars, artists, authors, and computer scientists to discuss their changing practices. Some other recent works include From Verite To Virtual (Documentary Educational Resources), Outside/Inside (Museum of the American Philosophical Society), The Theory of Time Here (Video Data Bank), and Cultures In Webs (Eastgate). He is the recipient of Fulbright, LEF and PIFVA awards among others.
(Source: Author's bio)
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Eric Dean Rasmussen - 20.01.2011 - 15:20
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Mark Jeffery
"Mark Jeffery (B. 1973 Doveridge, UK) Performance / Installation Artist was a member of Goat Island Performance Group from 1996 - 2009. He created and performed in 5 of Goat Island works and performed these works and taught extensively across North America, teaching 10 summer schools at the School of the Art institute of Chicago and Western and Eastern Europe including Glasgow, Bristol, Aberystwyth, Berlin, Zagreb and Prague. Goat Island completed touring its last performance work The Lastmaker in February 2009. Recent performances include Chapel Hill, NC, P.S 122 NYC, MCA Chicago, Eureka Zagreb and The House of World Cultures Berlin. The company presented their penultimate work 'When Will the September Roses Bloom Last Night Was Only a Comedy' at the Venice Biennale in 2005.
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 20.01.2011 - 16:33
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Jörg Piringer
born in 1974. currently living in vienna/austria. member of the institute for transacoustic research. member of the vegetable orchestra (das erste wiener gemüseorchester). student at the schule für dichtung in wien (curd duca, sainkho namtchylak, etc). master degree in computer science. sound poet.
(Source: Author)
Note: Jörg is sometimes spelled Joerg in English texts.
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 20.01.2011 - 16:43
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Kate Pullinger
"Kate Pullinger is a Canadian novelist living in England. Her books include the novels A Little Stranger, The Last Time I Saw Jane, Where Does Kissing End?, Weird Sister, and When the Monster Dies, as well as the short story collections, My Life as a Girl in a Men's Prison and Tiny Lies. She co-wrote the novel of the film The Piano with director Jane Campion. Her latest novel, The Mistress of Nothing, is currently shortlisted for a GG, a Governor General's Literary Award for Fiction, one of Canada's main annual literary prizes. Kate Pullinger also writes for digital media. Her current projects include 'Lifelines' - digital stories for secondary schools, 'Inanimate Alice' - a digital novel in episodes, and 'Flight Paths: a networked novel' - a project aimed at creating a novel on and through the internet. She is Lead Writer on a game for Facebook, to be launched in 2010. See http://www.katepullinger.com/blog for urls.
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 20.01.2011 - 16:52
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Panoramic Poems, Narratives and Travels
"Fragmentation and layering in time and language form the basis for a series of experimental cinematic works in video poetry, montage and panoramic animation."
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 20.01.2011 - 17:37