Rotterdam Experiences: Off the Press: Electronic Publishing in the Arts and DEAF
art and politics art publishing blog exhibits talking we make stuff
Last week the Institute for Network Cultures and Digital Publishing Toolkit brought us to Rotterdam to speak about The People’s E-book. The conference brought together an interesting mix of academics, students, artists, practitioners, and a few other designers and publishers. There was a focus on what are artists producing in terms of e-books, what different production workflows look like, and what the future for libraries looks like. They did a great job documenting most of the conference, so I thought I would continue that trend.
program for the conference
You can view many of the presentations here:
You can see images of the days here:
There are re-caps of most of the presentations here and here.
Making Epubs Easy with The People’s E-book:
Oliver did a demo of the tool, explained pe-epub (the open source epub generator that we built for People’s E-book), and talked about Streambooks, our Tumblr to epub conversion tool.
Off the Press – Oliver Wise: Making ePubs Easy with the People’s E-book from network cultures on Vimeo.
As you’ll see in the video, we had a little trouble with the slides, but you can see them below!
Publishing Constitutes a Public
There aren’t photos or video from the Arts and Crafts Session organized by Silvio Lorusso, but our slides are below and you can read the full text of our presentation here. Oliver and I spoke about our thoughts about publishers as a support structure for a public, our past work that relates to digital publishing, and how and why we focused on artists when building The People’s E-book.
DEAF: The Progress Trap
We also were honored to be a part of the DEAF (the Biennial Dutch Electronic Arts Festival) at the Het Niewe Institute in their TV Lunch Program. It was more of a casual conversation about our practice as well as the others’ who were also a part of the conversation.
The exhibition at Het Niewe Institute to go along with the festival, whose theme this year was “The Progress Trap” was pretty great. I especially loved Revital Cohen and Tuur van Balen‘s work: 75 Watt. They designed an object whose primary function was to choreograph its creation.
75 Watt – trailer from Revital Cohen & Tuur Van Balen on Vimeo.
Another favorite was also a video installation, by Gabriela Golder, entitled “Conversation Piece” which showed the artist’s mother – a militant in the Argentine Communist Party – reading the Communist Manifesto with her two young granddaughters.
CONVERSATION PIECE (the installation) from Gabriela Golder on Vimeo.
And Rotterdam has a pretty interesting mix of architecture. It was fun to be around.