Books
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Mirthe Berentsen: Ouranophobia or the right to be forgotten
Invisible flying machines are in the skies above us, remotely controlled, led by software, suspended between wonder and terror.
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6PM Your Local Time Europe – The Book
6PM YOUR LOCAL TIME (#6pmylt) is a networked, distributed, one night contemporary art event taking place simultaneously in different locations, coordinated from one central venue and documented online via a web application.
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Geoff Cox: Real-time for Pirate Cinema
In this essay, Geoff Cox opens up a discussion on the temporal complexity and the radical montage of multiple realities reflected in the project The Pirate Cinema by French artist Nicolas Maigret.
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Fassone & Manzotti: If Art Were To Disappear Tomorrow What Stories Would We Tell Our Kids?
If Art Were To Disappear Tomorrow What Stories Would We Tell Our Kids? is a project that aims to create an archive of tweet-structured texts capable of describing contemporary artworks.
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Addie Wagenknecht: Technological Selection of Fate
From 2000 to 2009, Addie Wagenknecht used her livejournal account as a “private space” where to share her relationships failures to her “online only” friends.
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Smetnjak: We Started a Meme Which Started the Whole World Crying
This essay by the Slovenian art collective Smetnjak is an excursus about Internet memes, especially about the kind known as the image macro.
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Mladen Dolar: What’s In a Name?
In his book-length new essay What’s in a Name? Mladen Dolar gives us a philosophical joy ride through the name and naming as well as name change of the three Janez Janšas.
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Marko Batista: Temporary Objects & Hybrid Ambients
Marko Batista is an artist working at the intersection of science and art. In this book Jurij Krpan, Andreja Hribernik, Ida Hiršenfelder and Luka Zagoričnik brings together four different perspectives on his work.
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AAVV: Eternal September. The Rise of Amateur Culture
An exhibition catalogue featuring a curatorial text by Valentina Tanni, an interview with Matthias Fritsch, an essay by Smetnjak and documentation of the show and Tanni’s ongoing project The Great Wall of Memes.