„The Dystopia Files“ at g-mk is the newest iteration of Mark Tribe's ongoing project, which recontextualizes the history of demonstrations in the US. This American artist had gathered an archive of protest footage, which serves as a base for creating site specific video installations in gallery and museum spaces. The work poses the questions about power relations, spectatorship, image manipulation, participation, interaction and political engagement.
The relationship between these issues and recent curatorial practices will be discussed during the workshop held by Mark Tribe. Following the workshop, there will be a lecture by the artist, who will present his multimedia artistic practices, including his previous acknowledged projects such as Rhizome and Port Huron.
All interested in participating in the workshop are kindly asked to contact us at info@g-mk.hr. We are looking forward to your participation!
--
Mark Tribe (American, b. 1966) graduated in 1990 from Brown University, Providence, RI, and received a MFA in Visual Arts from the University of California, San Diego, CA in 1994. His acclaimed art projects often incorporate various media and technologies. They revolve around institutional critique, activism, audience participation and collaboration, and raise questions about performance, mediation and public sphere. Tribe’s art work has been exhibited at Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, OH; LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions); Ronald Feldman Gallery, New York, NY; the DeCordova Biennial at DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park, Lincoln, MA; Aspen Art Museum, Aspen, CO; Park Avenue Armory, New York, NY; Haifa Museum of Art, Haifa, Israel; and the National Center for Contemporary Art, Moscow, Russia. He has organized curatorial projects for the New Museum of Contemporary Art, MASS MoCA, and inSite_05. Tribe is the author of two books, The Port Huron Project: Reenactments of New Left Protest Speeches (Charta, 2010) and New Media Art (Taschen, 2006), and numerous articles. He has lectured at CalArts, Goldsmiths College, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, MIT, and UCLA. He is Assistant Professor of Modern Culture and Media Studies at Brown University, where he teaches courses on digital art, curating, open-source culture, radical media, and surveillance. In 1996, Tribe founded Rhizome, an organization that supports the creation, presentation, preservation, and critique of emerging artistic practices that engage technology.
 

 

Archive - 2010

Micropolitics_Differentiated neighbourhoods of New Belgrade_Monday, January 11, 2010 at 19.00

BLOK and DeLVe invite you to the presentation of the project of the Centre for Visual Culture at MoCA Belgrade with projections, promotion of the publication and public discussion with Aleksandar Dimitrijevic, Stefan Römer and Helmut Weber moderated by the project curator Zoran Eric. The project explores different connotations of the term neighbourhood, in the vocabulary of its urban, architectural and social contexts, and analyses the historical development and actual dynamics of urban transformations of the neighbourhoods of New Belgrade. This sentence could be seen as a common denominator and a platform for all different approaches to the topic developed in the course of more than a year long process of working within an international and interdisciplinary team.The particular topics of the public debate are: - How to build on the local socio-political legacy of workers self-management and reaffirm this concept in the new context where different kind of self-organization would be desirable? - How to deal with rapid urban transformations resulting in socio-spatial homogenisations and segregations?, and - Is there a possibility for spatial justice in the city neighbourhoods?

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