RE-IMAGINING CULTURE: FUTURES IN COLLECTIVE WORKING
Beyond economics, what are the possibilities in open source, crowd-sourcing and resource sharing for artists, organisations and industry? What new ways of working does digital technology offer for a renewed vision for culture?
Tuesday, 28 September 2010
Weiden and Kennedy – The Cole Building
…16 Hanbury Street (off Bricklane) – 2nd Floor, stairs only
6:30-8:30pm
Please RSVP: info@doxacollective.org / 07595917229
Speakers:
Joel Gethin Lewis (Co-Founder of Hellicar & Lewis, former Interaction Designer at United Visual Artists)
Ele Carpenter (media art curator, lecturer at Goldsmiths MFA Curating)
Francesca Bria (PhD Researcher, Imperial College, filmmaker and network activist)
Chair: David Rogerson (Digital and New Media Manager, Sound and Music)
Respondent: Yuk Hui (Co-Founder, DOXA)
In a time where the UK Budget is undergoing a mass overhaul with the depletion of public subsidies and the cutting of councils, what are the opportunities now in networked technology and collective working beyond ‘cost-efficiency savings’ and business exploitation for the development of culture, ideas and a thriving social ecology? In following an enriching first event in May, DOXA presents a second discussion ‘Futures in Collective Working’, which looks at not so much on the problems of the current cultural and economic system, but the new possibilities in forms of collective working including open source, crowd-sourcing and resource sharing. The discussion begins yet does end with digital technology and seeks to explore practices and models of work that can nourish, as well as, sustain creativity. ‘Futures in Collective Working’ brings together a diverse group speakers from backgrounds of media arts, the media industry and academia to look at various collaborative practices and emerging models to approach a renewed visions of culture for the future.
DOXA will soon publish the transcript from the first event ‘Re-imagining Culture’ that took place 18 May 2010 at A Foundation with speakers Sonya Dyer, John Kieffer and William Wong. Please check the website for its release: www.doxacollective.org
DOXA is an international collective of artists, theorists, designers, architects, engineers, etc. Through an on-going project on ‘Creative Space’, DOXA generates research through transdisciplinary dialogue and facilitates production through experimentation explore new possibilities for urban and cultural development. DOXA (δόξα): A common belief, as opposed to knowledge, doxa is associated with community, dialogue and truth.
Supported by Openvizor and Weiden and Kennedy
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