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  1. Whitney Artport

    Artport is the Whitney Museum’s portal to Internet art and an online gallery space for commissions of net art and new media art. Originally launched in 2002, Artport provides access to original art works commissioned specifically for artport by the Whitney; documentation of net art and new media art exhibitions at the Whitney; and new media art in the Museum’s collection.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 23.01.2013 - 12:49

  2. Interactions: Newspoetry

    About Newspoetry

    Newspoetry is an alternative online news source that presents a poem or prose every day responding to current news. The Urbana, Illinois-based writing collective's efforts produce a unique and ongoing form of social history, commentary, satire, and poetry. An ensemble reading will be performed by a group of newspoets including founder William Gillespie, editor-until-chief Joseph Futrelle, singer-songwriter Paul Kotheimer, Nicolle Ruth Neulist, Anne Bargar and others. Following the reading a discussion of the work will be led by Notre Dame University Associate Professor of English Steve Tomasula.

    About the respondent, Steve Tomasula

    Steve Tomasula's fictions and essays are forthcoming or have appeared most recently in Fiction International, The Iowa Review, New Art Examiner, Kuntsforum, Circa: The Journal of International Visual Culture, Leonardo, American Book Review, The Review of Contemporary Fiction, Emigre and Black Ice. He received his Ph.D. in English from the University of Illinois at Chicago. He serves on the editorial board of ebr, the electronic book review where he guest-edited issues on narrative theory and image.

    Scott Rettberg - 27.01.2013 - 21:55

  3. Interactions: Poems that Go

    About Poems that Go

    Megan Sapnar and Ingrid Ankerson are the co-editors of Poems That Go, an influential kinetic poetry Web site. Megan Sapnar is completing the M.A. Program in Communications, Culture and Technolog at Georgetown University. Ingrid Ankerson is completing the M.A. Program in Publications Design at the University of Baltimore.

    Poems that Go exists to unite words, design, music and motion and to celebrate poetry through technology and the Internet. The Editors write that: "We are interested in exploring a new form of poetry - one that abandons the traditional approach to literature. One which expresses experience, ideas and emotions through motion graphics and animation. One which integrates these art forms to challenge the definition of poetry. One which challenges you, the new writers and artists, to discover extraordinary ways to express emotion."

    About the respondent, Michelle Citron

    Scott Rettberg - 27.01.2013 - 22:22

  4. Interactions: 2001 Electronic Literature Awards Winners at the Chicago Humanities Festival

    As part of the Chicago Humanities Festival, Caitlin Fisher, winner of the 2001 Electronic Literature Award for Fiction for "These Waves of Girls" and John Cayley, winner of the 2001 Electronic Literature Award for Poetry for "Windsound," will read from and demonstrate their work. Following the reading, they will be joined by Scott Rettberg and the Judge of the 2001 Award for Fiction, Larry McCaffery, for a discussion of their work and of the field of electronic literature.

    About John Cayley and Caitlin Fisher

    The winner of the 2001 Electronic Literature Award for Poetry, London-based Anglo-Canadian poet John Cayley is a bookseller and the founding editor of the Wellsweep Press. He is widely known for his writing in networked and programmable media. He has lectured on the writing program at the University of California, San Diego and is now an Honorary Research Associate of Royal Holloway College, University of London, and an Honorary Fellow of Dartington College of Arts, associated with their degree-level course on Performance Writing.

    Scott Rettberg - 27.01.2013 - 22:41

  5. Interactions: Shelley Jackson

    About Shelley Jackson

    Shelley Jackson is the author of the virtually-canonized hypertext novel Patchwork Girl published by Eastgate. Jackson was recently selected as a Village Voice Writer on the Verge. Jackson describes herself as the lovechild of Samuel Beckett and Pippi Longstocking. On her website, ineradicablestain she writes: "Shelley Jackson was extracted from the bum leg of a water buffalo in 1963 in the Philippines and grew up complaining in Berkeley, California. Bravely overcoming a chronic pain in her phantom limb, she extracted an AB in art from Stanford and an MFA in creative writing from Brown. She has spent most of her life in used bookstores, smearing unidentified substances on the spines, and is duly obsessed with books: paper, glue, and ink.

    Scott Rettberg - 27.01.2013 - 22:57

  6. Agence Topo

    At the crossroad of visual arts and literature with new media, Agence TOPO is an artist-run center dedicated to the production, dissemination and distribution of independant multimedia works.

    Scott Rettberg - 30.01.2013 - 00:50

  7. Teaching the Cybertext Taxonomy with Dice

    Teaching the Cybertext Taxonomy with Dice

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 06.02.2013 - 14:40

  8. Ars Electronica

    Ars Electronica is and art and technology organization based in Linz, Austria. It was founded in 1979 around a festival for art, technology and society as part of the International Bruckner Festival. 
    Since 1986 it became a festival on its own, as the Ars Electronica Festival, running annually.
    Today Ars Electronica consist of four divisions: The Ars Electronica Center - a museum and media center, the Ars Electronica Prix competition, the Future Lab - an inhouse resource and development facility, and finally, the Ars Electronica Festival. 

    Ars Electronica is also running the Ars Electronica Archive website, which is collecting documentation about people, artworks, events and publications related to organization's activity.

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 27.02.2013 - 14:16

  9. Bypass Editions

    Bypass Editions is an independent press on art and architecture, artists' books, fiction, poetry, essay, theatre and yet-to-name genres.
    Bypass Editions explores the boundaries and gaps between the visual arts, literature, architecture, theatre, performance arts, with experimental proposals, both in terms of editorial concept and graphic design.

    Alvaro Seica - 18.03.2013 - 00:43

  10. Piksel

    "Piksel is a netwrok and an annual event for artists and developers working with free and open source software, hardware and art. Part workshop, part festival, it is organised in Bergen, Norway, and involves participants from more than a dozen countries exchanging ideas, coding, presenting art and software projects, doing workshops, performances and discussions on the aesthetics and politics of free and open source software.

    The development, and therefore use, of digital technology today is mainly controlled by multinational corporations. Despite the prospects of technology expanding the means of artistic expression, the commercial demands of the software industries severely limit them instead. Piksel is focusing on the open source movement as a strategy for regaining artistic control of the technology, but also a means to bring attention to the close connections between art, politics, technology and economy.

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 20.05.2013 - 12:00

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