[Air-L] Fwd: CFP Deadline extended - CHArt annual conference 2011- The Challenge of Ubiquity in Digital Culture

jeremy hunsinger jhuns at vt.edu
Wed Jun 22 22:36:34 PDT 2011



Begin forwarded message:

> From: Vicky Brown <victoria.brown at HOA.OX.AC.UK>
> Date: June 21, 2011 2:11:22 PM GMT+01:00
> To: DIGITAL-PRESERVATION at JISCMAIL.AC.UK
> Subject: CFP Deadline extended - CHArt annual conference 2011- The Challenge of Ubiquity in Digital Culture
> Reply-To: Vicky Brown <victoria.brown at HOA.OX.AC.UK>
> 
> With apologies for cross-posting:
> 
> 
> Please note the deadline extension to 1 July 2011.
> 
> The Challenge of Ubiquity in Digital Culture
> 
> CHArt 27th Annual Conference, Thursday 17th and Friday 18th November 2011, London venue to be confirmed
> www.chart.ac.uk
> 
> Utopian hopes for the ubiquity of digital and networked technologies  leading to a more transparent and democratic society  are being met by expressions of concern about their implications for art. Nicholas Bourriaud has observed that such technologies can bring about a “collective desire to create new areas of conviviality and introduce new types of transaction with regard to the cultural object”. However, others perceive an imminent threat, characterised by such terms as a digital 'deluge' or 'oblivion’.  CHArt is interested to examine critically both positive views and apocalyptic concerns about the implications of the widespread merger of telecommunications and computer technology in society for art, its history and practice.
> 
> We are looking for papers that engage with issues including, but not limited to:
> The implications of the ubiquity of digital and network technologies for evaluating what constitutes an original work of art and the originality of its creator(s). 
> What effects have these technologies had on valuing art in terms of its aesthetic quality? 
> What impact have real-time technologies had for the creation, ownership and distribution of culture?  
> What are the impacts of the widespread proliferation and use of such technologies on curatorial practice and the processes of selecting, preserving and enabling access to art? 
> How have they affected both the content and methods of teaching the history and practice of art? 
> Are other disciplines and areas of society affected by art mediated by real-time technologies? How?
> We are particularly interested in work that engages with such questions and extends beyond simply understanding digital and network technologies as transparent conduits of data and information. CHArt encourages proposals addressing complex artefacts that, in Friedrich Kittler's words, “determine our situation”.
> 
> Contributions are welcomed from all sections of the CHArt community on the intersection between art and art history and semantic web developments; cloud computing; data mining; screen scraping; crowd sourcing; mashups; and freely available sites that enable data and images to be stored and accessed. 
> 
> CHArt seeks papers from art historians, artists, architects and architectural theorists and historians, curators, conservators, computing scientists, scientists, cultural and media theorists, archivists, technologists, educationalists and philosophers.
> 
> Postgraduate students are encouraged to submit a proposal. CHArt is able to offer assistance with the conference fees for up to three student delegates. Priority will be given to students whose papers are accepted for presentation. An application form and proof of university enrolment will be required. For further details about the Helene Roberts Bursary please emailanna.bentkowska at kcl.ac.uk.
> 
> Submissions should be in the form of a 300-400 word synopsis of the proposed paper with brief biographical information (no more than 200 words) of presenter/s, and should be emailed tochart at kcl.ac.uk  by Friday July 1st 2011.
> 
> Notification of paper acceptance: 1 September 2011
> Submission of papers: 17 October 2011

Jeremy Hunsinger
Center for Digital Discourse and Culture
Virginia Tech


Live without dead time.
-graffitti Paris 1968







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