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February 2013

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Theorizing the Web 2013 (#TtW13) Conference, March 1-2, The Graduate Center, CUNY


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Theorizing the Web 2013 (#TtW13) Conference

Saturday, March 1-2
The Graduate Center, CUNY
365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY

Conference program:

http://justpublics365.commons.gc.cuny.edu/events/ttw13-conference/


I am speaking at Memory and the Speed of Data | Room C | #c1 session, Saturday May 2, 11:00am-12:15pm.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Mary Flanagan 4:00pm-5:30pm, Room C204-205, CUNY Graduate Center


Thursday February 28:

Mary Flanagan

“Never Mind the Body, Here’s a Gamepad? Considering Embodiment in The Age of Play”

4:00pm-5:30pm, Room C204-205, CUNY Graduate Center,
365 5th Ave, New York.



Sponsored by the English Student Association, Doctoral Students’ Council, GC Digital Initiatives, and CUNY Digital Humanities Initiative.

Opening keynote for Minding the Body: Dualism and its Discontents, an interdisciplinary conference hosted by the English Student Association at CUNY Graduate Center.

This keynote presentation explores a pervasive onscreen/offscreen split of identification and the body in what we could now call The Age of Play. Citing examples from artists’ work and popular culture, with a focus on games, Flanagan leads the audience on an investigation of current trends that are in diametrical opposition: on the one hand, a hunger for embodied, resonant experience; and on the other, a desire for control for the body, a recurring motif in fields from psychology to public health, manifesting in plastic surgery and digital manipulation of the body.

Mary Flanagan is Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Professor in Digital Humanities at Dartmouth College and Director of Tiltfactor Laboratory. She writes at Grand Text Auto; see also her work on Values at Play.



Friday, February 15, 2013

Our guide for working with cultural data: organizing, cleaning, summarizing


I put together detailed notes for my how-to class working with cultural data

Organizing data, cleaning data, preparing data for analysis and visualization, creating data summaries

(wait for the link to load since its inside a long web page for my whole course)

The selection of topics and techniques is based on our work in the lab with hundreds of data sets since 2007, and the number of courses I taught on cultural data analysis and visualization for both undergraduates and graduate students.

These topics and techniques can be taught in a 2-3 class.

Intended audiences: all beginning digital humanities people (faculty and students) regardless of the field (art history, literary studies, commmunication, etc); people interested in visualizing data; data journalism.







Wednesday, February 13, 2013

OS XXI: Art’s Digital Future panel, Feb. 13 (today) The Graduate Center, CUNY



OS XXI: Art’s Digital Future

Panel discussion

Martin E Segal Theatre Center, CUNY Graduate Center

12.30-2pm, 13 February 2013

Speakers:


Paul Chan is an artist, who founded the press Badlands Unlimited in 2010. Badlands’ latest book is Marcel Duchamp: The Afternoon Interviews by Calvin Tomkins, available as an enhanced e-book on Apple iBooks and Amazon Kindle and IRL at all fine independent bookshops.

Brian Droitcour is a critic and curator, and a doctoral student in the Department of Comparative Literature at NYU. He writes frequently on new media art.

Lev Manovich is Professor of Computer Science at CUNY Graduate Center, whose research focuses on visualizing massive image sets including painting, film and user generated art. His publications include The Language of New Media (2001) and Software Takes Command (2013).

Virginia Rutledge is an art advisor and lawyer focused on contemporary art and intellectual property. A Graduate Center alum, she has also been a curator (LACMA), corporate litigator (Cravath) and nonprofit VP and general counsel (Creative Commons).

Chaired by Claire Bishop, Associate Professor in the PhD Program in Art History, CUNY Graduate Center.


The art market still revolves around artefacts produced as one-offs or in limited editions, and which still bear the traces of the artist’s hand – in the form of signatures, certificates of authentication, or customized dvd presentation boxes. At the same time, we increasingly consume art digitally – via search engine queries, online databases, gallery websites, our own photographic documentation, or on ubu.web. How is the digital revolution affecting the production and dissemination of art? What opportunities does the internet afford a younger generation of curators, researchers and critics? And finally, are we making too much of the digital as a rupture – or can it be placed in a continuity with earlier developments in reproductive technology (photography, film, video)?

Sponsored by the Ph.D. in Art History, CUNY Graduate Center, and supported by the Sally and Nick Webster Art History Fund.


Saturday, February 2, 2013

MA Thesis: Identifying Affordances in Adobe Photoshop


New software studies publication which analyzes the key artistic tool of out times - Photoshop:

Identifying affordances in Adobe Photoshop:
An investigation into the theory of affordances and its use insoftware analyses

MA Thesis by Herman van den Muijsenberg

New Media & Digital Culture, Utrecht University
Advisor: Dr. Ann-Sophie Lehmann

76 pages.