MachineMachine /stream - tagged with korea https://machinemachine.net/stream/feed en-us http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss LifePress therourke@gmail.com <![CDATA[Augmented hole]]> http://tumblr.machinemachine.net/post/92342673354

Augmented hole

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Sun, 20 Jul 2014 09:56:40 -0700 http://tumblr.machinemachine.net/post/92342673354
<![CDATA[GLTI.CH Karaoke @ Crystallize Media Art Lab]]> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tlAS6SCGRqo&feature=youtube_gdata

A pioneering and collaborative spirit brings 16 UK and Korean artists together in a celebration of technology and creative culture

The legacy of Nam June Paik and the "electronic superhighway" is at the heart of a new exhibition in London this autumn. 16 artists from Korea and the UK explore how contemporary artwork is expressed through scientific technology, through IT, social media and cinema. If Paik's legacy is his ability to embrace electronic media and technology creatively, using it as a medium and a language to articulate his artistic interpretation of modern culture this three day exhibition explores how with creative technology at the fingertips of the masses, does the artist crystallize their ideas? Technology offers a common language for artists working in two different cultures. The work featured in the historic vault at Billingsgate illustrates how contemporary artists across the globe are harnessing fascinating media empowering them to express global culture, domestic behaviour, politics and ideas.

The exhibition is part of the wider Korea Brand and Entertainment Expo 2013, celebrating Korea's 'creative economy', a strategic vision aspiring to emulate the success of the UK's creative industries. At the heart of the exhibition along with an innovative use and communication through technology is the spirit of collaboration, of shared ideas, mutual respect and a desire to fix a lens on modern culture.

Nam June Paik, the Korean artist, world famous provocateur and founder of video art pioneered the innovative use of technological tools that artists continue to practice today. The first to voice the phrase "electronic super highway" as early as 1974, Paik saw the boundless possibilities offered by broadcasting and the Internet age. Within the exhibition a shrine to Paik features 'Documenta 6 Satellite Telecast' (1977) his collaborative work with Joseph Beuys and Douglas Davis, the world's first live satellite performance broadcast simultaneously into 25 different countries. From this genesis sprouts the contemporary work of the artists featured.

The curator for 'Crystallize', Stephanie Seungmin Kim (ISKAI Contemporary Art) has carefully selected the 16 artists who each embrace art, science and creativity. Collaboration across industry and practice roots this exhibition in a language of exploration.

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Wed, 22 Jan 2014 15:32:26 -0800 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tlAS6SCGRqo&feature=youtube_gdata
<![CDATA[Portals at CRYSTALLIZE: The Aftermath + interview for BBC World]]> http://glti.ch/portals-at-crystallize-the-aftermath/

We just finished a 3 day marathon we called GLTI.CH Portals, at CRYSTALLIZE exhibition. Part of a 3 day New Media art installation at the 2013 Korea Brand & Entertainment Expo, held at Old Billingsgate, London. Below are photos from the event. You can also listen to a brief interview we did with BBC Radio’s Dan Damon for World Update (listen from about 17mins in). We really want to thank everyone who took part and all those who brought this exhibition together, especially Stephanie Seungmin Kim, Heejin Cho and Hyemi Na for inviting, curating and welcoming us into the Korean/UK collaborative fold. This might very well be the last time GLTI.CH host a Karaoke event. We have news of this soon, but for now, please enjoy the wondrous smiles on all the GLTI.CH Portal participants’ faces.

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Thu, 07 Nov 2013 04:25:10 -0800 http://glti.ch/portals-at-crystallize-the-aftermath/
<![CDATA[North Korea’s Digital Underground]]> http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/print/1969/12/north-korea-8217-s-digital-underground/8414/

The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea is the very archetype of a “closed society.” It ranks dead last—196th out of 196 countries—in Freedom House’s Freedom of the Press index. Unlike the citizens of, say, Tunisia or Egypt, to name two countries whose populations recently tapped the power of social media to help upend the existing political order, few North Koreans have access to Twitter, Facebook, or YouTube. In fact, except for a tiny elite, the DPRK’s 25 million inhabitants are not connected to the Internet. Televisions are set to receive only government stations. International radio signals are routinely jammed, and electricity is unreliable. Freestanding radios are illegal. But every North Korean household and business is outfitted with a government-controlled radio hardwired to a central station. The speaker comes with a volume control, but no off switch. In a new media age awash in universally shared information—an age of planet-wide instant messaging and texted manifestos

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Wed, 09 Mar 2011 06:11:43 -0800 http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/print/1969/12/north-korea-8217-s-digital-underground/8414/