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dc.date.accessioned2019-05-29T13:55:07Z
dc.date.available2019-05-29T13:55:07Z
dc.identifier.urihttp://95.216.75.113:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/137
dc.descriptionBiography: Patrick is a conceptual artist, curator, and theorist exploring how media shape our perception of reality as well as the borders between the digital and the material. He is known for his solo and collective work as part of the groups Second Front, RTMark, They Yes Men, and Terminal Time. He is a CalArts/Herb Alpert Fellow and Whitney Biennial exhibitor as part of the collective RTMark. He has presented and exhibited internationally at numerous biennials and triennials (Yokohama, Venice, Performa, Maribor, Turin, Sundance), and conferences (ISEA, SIGGRAPH, Popular Culture Association, SLSA, SxSW). His recent book, “Variant Analyses: Interrogations of New Media Culture” was released by the Institute for Networked Culture, and is included in the Oxford Handbook of Virtuality.
dc.language.isoen
dc.typePresentation
dc.titleThe World, Another 24 Hours: Practice-Based Research and the works of Robert Adrian X & Bill Bartlett
dc.contributor.authorLichty, Patrick
dc.description.abstractIn 1982, Robert Adrian X, Bill Bartlett, and a host of artists staged a worldwide telecommunications performance entitled “The World in 24 Hours” «Die Welt in 24 Stunden». In it,16 different timezones connected to the Ars Electronica Centre in Linz, Austria to engage in Telematic performances, including Telefonmuzik, teletype (Ascott), and Slow Scan TV performance (Bartlett, Bull). Actually the third of Victoria, BC artist Bill Bartlett, and Robert Adrian’s Wiencouver telematics soirees between the Western Front Space in Vancouver and Adrian in Vienna, “W24H” is a performance that is frequently mentioned, but little in-depth work has been done about it. This paper is a historiographical narrative about the author’s revisiting of the 1982 work for and “updated” performance at the Ars Electronica Festival in 2017 or 2018 as a research intervention in considering the contemporary implications of the 1982 work. The presentation will give a detailed overview of The World in 24 Hours, research, archival and meetings with the surviving members of the performance, as well as a framing and discussion of the new piece, and expansion on the project’s outcomes moving forward. The World in 24 Hours, while frequently mentioned, has only been delved into deeply on rare occasion, and this project seeks to examine this seminal work, discuss its impact on media art histories, and explore its lasting implications in the 21st Century.
dc.subjectTelematic
dc.subjectAdrian
dc.subjectGrundmann
dc.subjectBartlett
dc.subjectBull
dc.subjectAscott
dc.subjectArs Electronica
dc.subjectWorld in 24 Hours


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