Leonardo Vol. 36, Issue 5 (2003)
Leonardo is a print journal, published five times a year. Leonardo is edited by Leonardo/the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology, and published by the MIT Press.
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[ See also the Tables of Contents and Abstracts of past issues of Leonardo and LMJ ]
Special Section: The Art of Burning Man
Introduction: Desert Weirdness Introduces a New Era of Art
by Louis M. Brill
Curator's Overview: The Outsider Art of Burning Man
by Lady Bee (a.k.a. Christine Kristen)
ABSTRACT: The author describes art installations featured at the annual Burning Man event at Black Rock City, Nevada. Burning Man is community based, collaborative and interactive and
attracts a unique community of artists, performers and free spirits. The goal of the event is to remove the artist from the world of commerce and competition, emphasizing instead
collaboration, cooperation and shared experience.
Artists' Statements
Mobile Installations
The Bone Tree
by Dana Albany
The Voice of the Nebulous Entity
by Aaron Wolf Baum
The Flaming Metal Dragon
by Lisa Nigro
The Futura Deluxe Bubble Fountain & Porta-Temple
by Steven Raspa
Dr. Megavolt
by Austin Richards
Sculpture
Flock
by Michael Christian
Interactive Installations
The Telestereoscope
by Cassidy Curtis and Chris Whitney
The Cradle
by Deidre DeFranceaux and Jann Nunn
The Ammonite Project
by Hendrik Hackl
Firefall
by Cynthia "Kiki" Pettit
The Myth of Sisyphus
by Kal Spelletich
The Ribcage
by Jenne Giles and Philip Bonham
The One Tree
by Dan Das Mann
The Golden Tower Project
by Susan Robb
The Plastic Chapel
by Finley Fryer
Light Sculptures
The Afterlife
by Radiant Atmospheres
L2K Ring Project and Ship to Ship
by Tim Black
The Lily Pond
by Jeremy Lutes
Spin
by Christopher Schardt
Beaming Man
by Russell Wilcox
Special Section: Global Crossings: The Cultural Roots of Globalization
Introduction
by Mark Beam
Uncomfortable Proximity: The Tate Invites Mongrel to Hack the Tate's Own Web Site
by Graham Harwood
ABSTRACT: Uncomfortable Proximity is a critical web hack of the Tate Gallery's web site, created by Graham Harwood, a member of the Mongrel collective. Commissioned by
Tate National Programmes, it mirrors the Tate's own web site, but offers new images and ideas, collaged from HarwoodÍs own experiences, his readings of Tate works and
publicity materials and his interest in the Tate Britain site. A related critical text by Matthew Fuller provides wider cultural context.
The Crying Post Project: A Multi-Part, Multi-Media Artwork to Memorialize Global Sites of Pain
by Dennis Summers
ABSTRACT: The author describes The Crying Post Project, an artwork consisting primarily of wood staffs with solar-powered "cry generators" placed at different sites
throughout the globe, at locations of environmental and/or social damage. Its two other components include an interactive 3D web site, which has been created as an alternative, data-rich
venue for the project, and a series of digitally created photographic prints designed to capture the artistÍs emotional response to the sites. The artist also discusses how this artwork
has been inspired by his research on the cross-cultural symbolism of trees, the indigenous Australian worldview, mapping theory and the relationship between language extinction
and environmental destruction.
Historical Perspective
The Dilemma of Media Art: Cybernetic Serendipity at the ICA London
by Rainier Usselmann
ABSTRACT: One year after the 1967 Summer of Love and at a time of considerable political unrest throughout the United States and Europe, Cybernetic Serendipity---The Computer
and the Arts opened at the Institute of Contemporary Art in London to much critical and popular acclaim. This paper outlines the conceptual framework of this seminal exhibition and looks at
some of the accompanying press reception in order to address a key question: how media art deals with its own historicity and the underlying socioeconomic forces that render it possible.
Presented 35 years ago and still paradigmatic for the ever-shifting boundaries between art, technology, commerce and entertainment, Cybernetic Serendipity epitomizes some of the
complicated dynamics that delineate the gamut of media art today.
Commentaries
by Herbert Franke, Eduardo Kac
Leonardo Reviews
Reviews by Claire Barliant, Roy R. Behrens, Chris Cobb, Sean Cubitt, Luisa Paraguai Donati, Dene Grigar, Amy Ione, Michael R. Mosher, Jack Ox,
Robert Pepperell, Soh Yeong Roh, George Shortess, Stefaan Van Ryssen
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