Lachlan Brown on Thu, 11 Oct 2001 20:18:02 +0200 (CEST)


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[Nettime-bold] So Far So Good.




Almost seven years ago, in December 1994

 Digital Revolutionaries

met in the Committee Room of 

The Baths on Laurie Grove 

at Goldsmiths College

University of London

to discuss the subject of

the World Wide Web 

and the question:


‘What’s to be Done? and how to go about doing it?”


It was agreed unanimously, without dissent, 

to agitate, to be ‘playfully serious’ in curation, 

editing, and arts and design practise as well as in

 criticism of the coming digital revolution. It was 

further agreed to radicalise under 'playfully 

serious' principles everyone each of us came across

in our respective fields.


The group agreed to reconvene in seven 

years time, and to bring along all those they 

had radicalized in the interim to discuss

progress and to implement the next ‘seven year plan’.


It was felt that a seven years intervention 

being ‘playfully serious’ (Bruckman+Resnick)

in several fields ought to be followed 

up with a further seven years being ‘seriously 

playful’.


Those in attendance included:

Rachel Baker – design/artist discussed strategies for
getting ‘street theatre people’ and ‘small press poets’ 
involved as well as the ‘design community’ in general.

Lachlan Brown – cultural studies publishing and research
who discussed the forthcoming ‘difference engine’ intervention
and the academic/publishing community in Canada and the UK.

Lisa Haskel – new media curation and policy who discussed
the ‘labelling’ properties of object-oriented language, as well
as getting some Europeans involved.

Simon, Pauline and Tina, founders of Mute discussed plans for
the magazine Mute and its digitalartcritique

a representative of HRC Westminster (Jeremy Quinn) 
didn’t really get any of it at all.

Alessio Qartzo-Cerena – marketing and advertising sector
discussed ‘cynical reason in advertising’.

John Wood, chairperson and host, waffled on about 
‘the web, ecology, crop-circles’ and 
helped make the tea.


Sean Cubitt agreed earlier in 1994 (Sept) to help further the aims
of the group by developing The Digital Cultures course (96) 
and writing Digital Aesthetics (97)
a seminal work confusing to abstraction the real terms of the 
digital revolution, and to insinuate himself in International
bodies concerned with scholarship and policy on Internet with disasterous outcomes.

Rachel focused in ‘new media arts practice’ bringing in
Heath Bunting, James Stevens, The Old Boys Network, and many others.

Lisa focused in ‘administration and policy of new media’ in a determined and single-minded way.

Alessio radicalized new media marketers ultimately 
confusing and deflecting the ‘dot.com’ boom in London.

Simon and Pauline developed the peerless Magazine Mute.

A full transcript of the debate of December 1994 will be made available via Difference Engine.

The proposed title for the forthcoming meeting of December 2001 is

‘So far, so good.’





Lachlan Brown

http://  whatever

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