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December 16, 2005

DIY

DIY ethic

As we want to include the principle of DIY in the theoretical part of our final assesment here is a description of DIY ethics. See more or read related links here.


The DIY ethic refers to the idea of 'doing it yourself', i.e., of making and promoting music without major record label backing, and without any great level of "selling out". A popular slogan of the DIY movement is "DIY not EMI", an explicit rejection of the major label of that name.

Many DIY artists argue that a DIY-style career is not only an alternative to mainstream success; it is preferable. DIY artists share much more in common with and are thus more able to reach out to their audience than "arena rockers".

Many punk bands have embraced the DIY ethic, promoting self-organised gigs in small halls and setting up small independent record labels and distribution networks such as Dischord Records (a renowned D.C. DIY label), Flat Earth Records (based in Leeds, UK), Loony Tunes Records (set up by the Scarborough, UK band Active Minds), Sudden Death Records (started by the Vancouver band D.O.A.), Slampt (influential and now defunct punk label from Newcastle, UK), and Profane Existence [1] (http://www.profaneexistence.com/) (a fanzine, record label and anarchist collective based in Minneapolis, USA). In England from the late 1970s to the early 1980s labels such as Falling A Records expanded the DIY idea into a movement that used the cassette tape medium as a cheaper and more easily accessible alternative to vinyl (although vinyl was still used by them at times), a trend referred to as the DIY cassette movement or cassette culture.

Such labels and collectives tend to have relatively small outputs and sales, although there are groups who have been able to achieve levels of mainstream success while maintaining a fiercely independent and uncompromising stance. Notable examples include the UK band Crass and US singer/songwriter Ani DiFranco. Dischord's Fugazi rarely charged more than $5-10 admission to their live (all-ages) shows, and have kept their album prices at about $10, as with other bands on the label.

The DIY punk ethic also extends to how any group or individual applies DIY political stances to daily life—especially how they avoid contributing to institutions they see as exploitive. These efforts include converting cars to run on biodiesel or greasel (http://www.greasel.com/), learning bicycle repair, starting gardens, dumpster diving, etc. To a certain extent, DIY is simply a way of finding ad hoc solutions to problems that are otherwise usually solved with wealth or corporate support.


check an extended definition and sound samples here


November 30, 2005

New module-Sound technologies and cultural practices

The 4th module has come! Sound technologies and cultural practices.
As our final assingment we will have to produce a radio documentary on a relevant topic link to the name of our module. I will soon update the weblog to add some details of my research plan.

October 24, 2005

Riddle

The last skills training was fun!
We had to make a digital representation out of the MRI slices we've received.

This is a result of my groups' work
and this is a final view of the images we've made all together

What can you see there?
Stone? wall? mirror? fruits and vegetables?
If yes, then I'm sorry - it's non of these.
It's a virtual representation of a KNEE.
Can then virtual imaging have any use for people not educated in medicine without some guidlines or an explanation?

October 23, 2005

Digital Anatomy


On our last tutorial group meeting we were wondering how does the object of representation change through digitalization and if this way of making represenatations can be called objective or not.

Short list of questions to think about :
- how did the knowledge of human body change?
-how much do we know about the body?
-do we know more with the progress or is it a different knowledge?
-is digitalliazation continuing mechanical objectivity or truth to nature? both? none?
-whitch other knowledge/skills do we need to use the modern technologies?
-how does the object of represenation change through digitallization?
and last but not least - is digital imaging objective?

The last question is an interesting starting point for a discussion cause scientists through the ages were seeking for an objective tool to create representations. Firts mechanical objectivity now digital imaging seems to be the dream come true. Both mechanical objectivity and digital imaging involve the use of mechanical tools that seem to work by itself. Yet it is not the light that draws the image through the camera lens and it's not the MRI scanner that makes the brain scans just on its own. It is the scientist who decides what will be on the picture apart from the object, how the object will be positioned etc. ( in mechanical objectivity) or how the scans will be coloured, how will the body be positioned in the scanner, how the body will be resting etc.(digital imaging). Therefore it seems to me that the quest for an objective tool of creating representations is still going. Go inventors!!!

October 7, 2005

Bruno Latour

On our second tutorial group meeting (assignment 1) we struggled with a very interesting but difficult questions-
what is scientific knowledge? Can scientists be objective? How to solve the problem of reference- do the drawings or schemas realy resamble nature? All this questions poped up because of Bruno Latour's text ( Circulationg Reference. In Pandora's Hope. Essays of the Reality of Science Studies)

According to Latour there is a problem with correspondence between the real object and the representation. We asks if we get more knowledge with the progress of the world and he answers- no. In his oppinion it's just a temporary end result. We don't really know more about the object, in this context, the body. We know more only about the represantations we create, not about the real objects.

Continue reading "Bruno Latour" »

September 19, 2005

Reality Tv, digitalisation and ethics.

realityTV_1024.jpg

After our tutorial meeting on 15.09 I had quite a bit of thoughts in my head. I was wondering about among others about the phenomena of reality tv.

Continue reading "Reality Tv, digitalisation and ethics." »

September 12, 2005

ZKM - Media space

...a lot of space..
I don't know the exact size of the Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe, but it seemed huge to me. Only the Media Art Museum takes three spacious floors. But ZKM it not only Media Art Museum, it's also Museum for Contemporary Art, the Institute for Visual Media, the Institute for Music and Acoustics, the Institute for Basic Research, the Institute for Media and Economics, the Filminstitute, and Mediothek.

The uniqness of ZKM lies in it's variety. It's both a place where art is exibited and created, it's both a musuem and a reserch center. galerie.jpg
A former weapon factory that was opened for public in 1997 as our kind guide told us.
Crazy place..
You completely loose ability to tell reality and virtuality apart. Well, maybe not..you know what is the art piece and what is the museum building but when it comes to interacting with the art pieces you think you know that f.e the bubbles you see aren't real but on the other hand they interact with your shadow, that if a part of you..in a way..so it's like you re playing with the bubbles, but they arent real so how can you play with them?????
Maybe it's a bit naive what I wrote but after a few hours in ZKM I really felt confused.
You leave the building wondering if anything you touch will interact.
Luckly the bus that took us home was real and we arrived safely in Maastricht.

"it's academic but it's short"

12.09?? oh!! it's my birthday!!!
Weblog - Introduction

Jack Post's advices:

"it's spontaneous-just write it, publish it and see what happens"

"research= thinking + writing" - formula of humanistic's

"it's your voice"

"it's your archive"

"you don't publish abstract thoughts" - ( will i follow this rule??)

"don't be shy to publish"

"there are just a few strategies to write. go on and copy"

picture_3.jpg


I've never published a weblog in my life!
i'll write a bit now...let's see what happens...