13 September 2006

The Ben & Marisa Show!!!!!!!


If you're in NY, please come to Monkeytown on Saturday, 9/30, for The Ben & Marisa Show, curated by Nick Hallett. It's going to be a fun screening in which Ben Coonley and I both show some rarely-seen pieces and some brand new work--including my first multi-channel works and some fun collaborative videos we're making just for the event. There will also be a bit of live performance by Ben, who is as hilarious as he is smart! There are two screenings: one at 7:30 and one at 10pm. Monkeytown only seats about 30 people per screening, so reservations are encouraged... I hope to see you there!

Meanwhile, thank-yous to Ben, Nick, John Michael Boling, and Montgomery Knott

Update: Thanks to everyone who came. We had a great time. Mriver posted some pix on his photo blog.

11 September 2006

A Monumental Day


Today I begin teaching at Parsons. I'm teaching an MFA thesis class in their Communication Design & Technology department. I usually post my syllabus here on the first day of every class I teach, but this semester I'm waiting to meet the students and hear about their projects before finalizing the reading list. Stay tuned. Meanwhile, I feel compelled to say something about the fact that today is the 5th anniversary of 9/11--mostly because I can't believe we're still in this stupid sham of a war. Somehow, I've always associated Parsons with 9/11. A couple days after the attack, I had a residency at the Banff Centre and I met Scott Paterson at a New Media Institute seminar on 'Emotional Architecture.' We all put everything on hold to talk about 9/11 and Scott said that he was teaching a class at Parsons that morning. He said that someone dragged a tv into the room and even though they could see the towers very clearly from the classroom windows, they could not remove their eyes from the tv. I've probably thought about this anecdote every day for the last five years. I feel like many of us take comfort in representations--even horrific ones, because there is the possibility that they aren't real. It's sort of the opposite (yet semiotic equal) of Freud's 'wish fulfillment.' But I also feel like the Hollywoodizing of terrorism and even the YouTube aggrandizing of the war in Iraq are keeping us in an imaginary make believe state about the disgusting things happening in our own country and as a result of our country's policies. So while I'm excited about teaching at Parsons, on a day like today, I must admit that I feel weird taking on a new position of authority when all I can think about is our public responsibility to question authority.

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