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Art, technology, and participation in development. Tracking collage, assemblage, construction... arts education, crafting and other ways to use the arts in service of human development - around the world. From Rauschenberg to Banski; the Dadaists to... what ever is out there today.

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An international network of artists and arts educators using mixed media as a way to engage young people around the world in a creative process that cultivates their individual voice on contemporary issues...

Archive: Media

Matthew Richie and the Lie of Time

Scrappy notes from a break-neck talk.Dealing with some concepts, linear time of Carnot (1846) forward – which intersects with music, eg harmonics and the end of time. Movement toward entropy. Question emerged, is it possible to move beyond the ruin of it all? NO! Let’s destroy it. So, with art and history, source of these ideas – middle Europe – disappears, along with it the old notions/nations. For the first time, time in art emerges – Dali, Picasso to Pollack. Destruction of the future.So, “Is there such a thing as ‘neutral’ time?”Getting quantum, where I fall apart, and things start to begin to behave strangely. No predictable rest state. Quantum underlays the universe, which turns out is chance. And the spiral, “if you look at it the other way, is a dead end.” Which brings us back to the end.Back to the ruin of the future (part 4?)…So, um, what we need is a better brain that stops repeating itself… Enter the light cone, how information crosses the universe, spin networks, and the idea that the universe is a hologram, an image… An image being information.Enter our information collectors and processors, our ever more powerful computers. These become rudimentary extensions of our, uh, inferior brains. So, here we are at the “new” 21st century, where content and moment rule. Information is everything – it is not a way of describing things, not knowledge, not simply a way of describing anything. Doesn’t want to be free, etc. It simply is. Hullo Kurzweil. So, enter the morning line project – take everything and fold it into a tetrahedron. combine them, wrap them up, turn them into a building. which isn’t a drawing but a drawing in space… add some music, and here we are.

MUTO: Wall-painted Animation

Thanks to dear friend Jon for this must see international video collaboration. I am completely taken with the idea of using the urban landscape as a canvas. And even though the subject is kind of dull and reductive, the inspiration is brilliant!

MUTO

Home Grown Forums and Media “Democracy”

There’s an interesting model of neighborhood-based social networking evolving in Vermont called the Front Porch Forum. I was recently struck by its connection to broad, national concern about the loss of local news coverage. But before I go further, I have to confess some skepticism about the recent sense of malaise around the media. Here’s why:

Just about everywhere you turn, you are bound to read omphaloskeptic writing about the sufferance of media – its consolidation, how it is biased, how there has been a turn from the local, and certainly the absence of an “alternative” voice. At its finest, some have even called Viacom-produced shows like the “Colbert Report” “independent” news sources. This all plays up the general state of disarray and incoherence out there – but not, at least to me, a state of crisis. And perhaps part of the equation lies in some of the unique qualities of a state like Vermont: small, northern, rural, inconsequential, largely and often overlooked. Perhaps this has allowed something other than the dominant narratives to play out among our bonny green hills.

One of those is the healthy ecology of small town newspapers. Right here in the northern piedmont we have more than a dozen local papers serving a disbursed population of roughly 70,000. Which are all complemented by the circulation of the larger area papers – the Times Argus, Burlington Free Press as well as out of state ones, including the Boston Globe and the New York Times.

So why the health of so many local papers?

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Dialogue, Deliberation and the Media

[Crossposted at thataway.org] Recently a couple of news items have caught my attention as exemplary of what NCDD’s Dialogue Bureau aspired to achieve. Readers might recall that during 2004 and 2005 NCDD sponsored research into the feasibility of a service that would: 1) assist news outlets make better use of dialogue and deliberation techniques to augment reporting; 2) help dialogue and deliberation practitioners make better use of partnerships with news outlets to expand reach, recruitment, and coverage; and 3) help track and promote dialogue and deliberation in the news.This week, two news items caught my attention for their salience to how dialogue and deliberation can enrich the coverage of local and national issues. The first is the City of Portland’s Restorative Listening Project sponsored by the city’s Office of Neighborhood Involvement headed by NCDDer Judith Mowry. The second is the recent establishment of a National Commission on Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy.

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Local News Loss and Local Democracy

I’m excited to be part of an advisory group to new effort to look at the way the evolving landscape of media channels and content impacts the contemporary democratic experience in the U.S. Its something I’ve thought alot about since carrying out a research project for the National Coalition for Dialogue and Deliberation about 5 years ago – we were looking at the ways democratic deliberation can better inform news coverage of urgent local, regional, national and international issues (think about it perhaps as if the media relied on how informed people talk about issues in representative groups at least as much as they do on opinion polls). In particular the way these stories are framed and the way public values are ascribed to trade-offs and policy alternatives.

Anyway, AP recently distributed an article on the public face of the effort:

Local News Loss Focus of New Commission

By JENNIFER C. KERRWASHINGTON (AP) — As people turn increasingly to the Internet for their news, there is concern whether they are learning enough about what goes on in their communities.

With “the thinning down of newspapers and local television in America, there is measurably less local, civic information available,” said Alberto Ibarguen, president and chief executive of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. “So what are the consequences of that?”

The foundation and the Aspen Institute, a nonpartisan think tank, hope to find out.

They are setting up a commission, funded by the foundation, to analyze whether people are getting the local news they need to make decisions in their communities. The panel will make recommendations that might include actions by the Federal Communications Commission or tax policies aimed at helping communities better meet their information needs, said Ibarguen, former publisher of The Miami Herald.

The commission will be led by Theodore Olson, former solicitor general who represented George W. Bush before the Supreme Court in the contested 2000 presidential election, and Marissa Mayer, vice president of search products and user experience at Google. The foundation said Olson was selected for his expertise in First Amendment issues and Mayer for her experience with new media and technologies.

About a dozen other members, including those with a journalism background, will be chosen.

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