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International
Necronautical Society
Second First Committee Hearings: Transmission, Death, Technology
Saturday 16 November 2002, 1500h
free admission to the public
Cubitt, Gallery and Studios, 8 Angel Mews, London N1 9HH
Underground: Angel, T 020 7278 8226, F 020 7278 2544
INS First Committee Delegation:
Tom McCarthy (General Secretary)
Anthony Auerbach (Chief of Propaganda)
Zinovy Zinik (Extra-mural Assessor)
more info
Witnesses:
Heath Bunting (retired artist)
John Cussans (writer and cultural theorist)
Ken Hollings (novelist)
Cerith Wyn Evans (artist)
Jane Lewty (researcher)
Manu Luksch and Mukul Patel (ambientTV.net)
more
info
The
First Committee of the International Necronautical Society has called
a public hearing in preparation for its planned radio transmission
project. A range of practitioners and theorists with special knowledge
and expertise in the fields of sound, wireless electronic communication,
cryptography and broadcasting will be examined by a delegation of
the INS First Committee. Their statements will be recorded and analysed
as the INS Communications and Encoding Group begin to configure
the future INS station.
'We've been looking at
the lines of code transmitted over the wireless by the poet Cégeste
just after he was killed in a road accident. The messages are picked
up by Orphée on his car radio, in the dead zone between stations.
Now, Orphée is the most celebrated writer in the world, but
he knows that just one line of Cégeste's blows his work out
of the water: "Jupiter rend sage ceux qu'il veut perdre. Une
fois. Je repète: Jupiter rend sage ceux qu'il veut perdre.
Deux fois. Je repète ..." The broadcasts are modelled
on British agents' or Resistance transmissions from occupied France.
Obviously, that's an important reference for Cocteau in the fifties.
'These are transmissions coming from an other place, i.e. death,
full of cryptic meanings which they parade right in front of you,
but without giving you the key that would decode them. That's great.
Our own Communications and Encoding Group could learn a lot from
that. That's why we're holding these Hearings: to work out how best
to set up our own transmission unit and what to put out over it.'
Tom McCarthy, speaking at the Aconvention, Liverpool Biennial, 2002.
click
here for an image of Orphée
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Press Accreditation
Owing to limited space available for press and public, ONLY
accredited reporters will be admitted to the Press Area. To obtain
your accreditation, please contact Anthony Auerbach stating your
name and your newspaper or journal (T 020 7370 7976, E auerbach@dial.pipex.com).
A press pass will be prepared for you. Please note that photography,
audio- or video recording will not be permitted. Official photography
will be made available through Vargas Organisation to accredited
reporters. Transcripts will be made available after the INS Communications
and Encoding Group has completed its analysis.
Please find below additional information
on the people taking part in the Hearings. For more background information,
please see http://www.necronauts.org
or contact the INS General Secretary Tom McCarthy (T 020 7253 9417,
E tom@necronauts.org).
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The Witnesses
Heath Bunting is a 'retired artist'
who emerged from the 80's committed to building open/democratic
communication systems and social contexts. Besides setting up radio
projects such as Radio 90, EMI (Electromagnetic Installation) and
Cellular Pirate Listening Station, he has also been involved in
mobile phone and fax/mail art. He has produced many internet projects,
some highly recognised, and has helped form a strong context for
the practice of net.art. Recently, he has moved into the field of
genetics, proclaiming it to be the next 'new media', and is also
developing work in the area of physical network performance.
http://www.irational.org
John Cussans is a writer and cultural
theorist. As co-initiator of The London Bughouse, an ongoing art
project revolving round the writing and ideas of author Philip K.
Dick, he has extensively explored the relationship between telecommunications
and death, incorporating his research into a series of performances
and networked, semi-fictitious 'events'.
http://www.globlocal.com/bughouse
Cerith Wyn Evans has worked with
a wide variety of media, including film (he worked with Derek Jarman),
mirrors, neon lights and even fireworks. Spelling out Situationist
and Marxist slogans in this last medium, he has created what have
been described as 'subtitles for an unseen narrative incorporating
translation and a distortion of the original meaning.' His mirror
work Inverse Reverse Perverse, included in the Royal Academy's 1997
Sensation exhibition, also involves linguistic translation and inverted
representation. In his 2002 work Cleave 00, shown at Tate Britain,
he had passages of Blake's writing randomly selected by computer,
translated into Morse code and refracted off a large mirror ball
-- a technique he replicated in Documenta XI using passages from
George Bataille's The Accursed Share. He is currently working on
transmitting sound from crystal chandeliers.
Ken Hollings is a novelist who
has written on sound and transmission networks for a number of publications
including The Wire and Sight and Sound. He has also written widely
on the viral broadcast theories of William S. Burroughs. In collaboration
with electronic composer Huib Emmer he is currently producing Welcome
to Disturbia, which will be broadcast on Dutch Radio in December
2002. His novel Destroy All Monsters is published by Marion Boyars.
Jane Lewty is a researcher in Literature
at the University of Glasgow. She has written widely on the impact
of radio -- and in particular of the wartime transmissions of Lord
Haw Haw -- on modernist writers such as Ezra Pound, Stephen Spender
and Virginia Woolf. She recently spoke at the James Joyce Biennial
Symposium in Trieste on the relation between Joyce's Finnegans Wake
and Raudive's EVP Experiments.
Manu Luksch and Mukul Patel have
worked on a series of projects using sound and networked media,
including Stealth Waltz (Ars Electronica), Karaoke Busking (White
Space Gallery), Telejam (Public Life/radio FRO) and Acoustic Space
Lab VR (in which twenty-five media artists generated work from the
Latvian site of a Soviet-era 32-metre dish antenna formerly used
to spy on satellite transmissions between Europe and North America).
They are currently developing a telematic theatre piece, flipflop,
using WLAN and live streams, with New York-based motion poet Ajay
Naidu. Patel's primary medium is sound, which he attempts to sculpt
into novel and resonant textures. For many years he worked with
Talvin Singh as part of the Anokha and Calcutta Cyber Café
collectives. Currently he collaborates extensively with dancers,
writes on science and technology (and their intersection with the
arts) and studies the classical music of India. Luksch is a film
maker who works outside the frame. With an academic background in
Fine Arts (Vienna, Bangkok) and the Artistic Directorship of the
Munich Media Lab behind her, she began to conceive and produce interdisciplinary
projects related to media and net culture. She founded ambientTV.net
as a platform for the investigation of generative networks in both
social and technical senses.
http://www.ambienttv.net
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International Necronautical Society
First Committee Delegation
Tom McCarthy is General Secretary
of INS
Anthony Auerbach, INS Chief of
Propaganda (Archiving and Epistemological Critique) is an artist.
Zinovy Zinik, Extra-mural Assessor,
is a novelist and broadcaster. Born in Moscow, Zinik has lived in
London since 1976, where he is editor and presenter of the BBC's
West End Radio Review. His seven novels, which have been translated
into several European languages, include Russian Service, set in
a fictitious émigré radio station, and Sounds Familiar
(a New Frankenstein), which deals with the transformation of sound
into matter. His novel The Mushroom Pickers was serialised by the
BBC in 1994. He is also founder, in collaboration with the New York-based
Russian artists Komar and Melamid, of the Safety Pin Society of
Great Britain.
The INS Second First Committee Hearings
will take place in an environment designed by Laura Hopkins,
previously set designer for among others the Globe Theater and English
National Opera.
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