Cinco grados de separación entre el arte y los nuevos medios: proyectos de arte y tecnología bajo el prisma crítico Resumen Dado el incremento de las teorías participativas, sorprende que los proyectos pioneros de arte y tecnología y de nuevos medios se hayan excluido generalmente de las principales trayectorias de la historia del arte que han descrito la emergencia de las formas de arte comprometidas socialmente con el espectador. Five Degrees of Separation between Art and New Media…. Keywords art and technology, new media, participatory art practices, relational aesthetics, system aesthetics. I argue that the heated discords over the value of early art and technology projects foreshadowed current debates over the social implications of new media. Some of these criteria highlighted the persistent separation between humanity and technology, contemplation and participation, perception and thought. By analyzing critical responses to exhibitions from the late 1960s and early 1970s, I aim to identify the main criteria employed in the evaluation of collaborations between artists, engineers, and art institutions. This separation is a sign of a much larger historical divide between new media and contemporary art. They have been mainly associated with theories of interaction rather than with Nicolas Bourriaud’s influential theory of relational aesthetics. Abstract Given the rise in participatory theories, it is surprising to note that early art and technology projects and new media have been generally excluded from the major art historical trajectories delineating the emergence of socially engaged forms of art spectatorship. Five Degrees of Separation between Art and New Media: Art and Technology Projects under the Critical Lens Cristina Albu University of Pittsburgh Submission date: June, 2011 Accepted date: September, 2011 Published in: November, 2011. Article New Media, Art-Science and Contemporary Art: Towards a Hybrid Discourse?. E-JOURNAL ON ART, SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY. A month isn’t that long a period of time.(1)Universitat Oberta de Catalunya. Honestly, we’d have given it no consideration. A month ago, we’d not have given thoughtful consideration to moving somewhere warm (I KNOW–Canada’s not warm). People talk everywhere, people need electricity everywhere–we could find work just about anywhere (she dreams short-sightedly and optimistically.). But for the weather, Toronto would be in the lead (obviously!), but today the Pacific Coast is my pretend new Canadian home. I’ve been joking (ummm, sorta joking) that I’m heading for the northern border if our nation supports and elects a certain political candidate for its presidency. There are speech-language pathologists across the US and Canada. He can’t do them here in the middle of winter. Swimming, biking and walking are pretty much the only activities my kid can do. Too young to give up the bricks and mortar for an RV, but not so young that warmer climes are positively out of the question. I dream of not being so cold that my hips and face hurt from the bitter sting of winter. I’ve been imagining what it would be like not to be so cold that my fingers become waxy and discolored every day it’s below 30 degrees. I’ve been thinking much about this since Saturday. Their children are in middle and high school, and though not all of their children are ecstatic about this move, they’re going. During my stay, I met friends of my friend who are relocating to Japan for approximately one year. I always admired that willingness? (scratch that–maybe not exactly willingness every time) ability? to relocate. Her husband is a retired Air Force officer, and as such, he and their family were reassigned and moved at the military’s discretion. Prior to Cali, she’s lived all over the country.
My best friend, she of my last two posts, currently resides in southern California. My husband was more serious than I have ever known him to be about this issue, and I’m starting to see potential here.
I felt certain it had more to do with his having worked outdoors in this bleak, dark midwinter one wake-up too many than it did with our son’s medical condition, but now I am wondering a bit. Shortly after our son’s diagnosis, my hubby suggested moving somewhere warm. My husband is an electrician and works outdoors year-round. I’ve lived here all my life, and until recently never considered seeking residency in another part of the country. I woke up today at home, and the temperature was -4 degrees. I woke up yesterday in Los Angeles, and the daily high temperature there was to be about 71 degrees.