Visual Arts Exhibitions and Projects, School of Art
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Browsing Visual Arts Exhibitions and Projects, School of Art by Author "Bertie, Sarah"
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Item Copy Rights: Open Orders of Global Information, Provisonal Research Journal, A Provisions Library Journal, Volume 1, Issue 3(Provisions Library, 2013) Sherman, Stephanie; Russell, Don; Garvey, Drew; Bloom, Greg; Larson, Nate; Moore, Anne Elizabeth; Schwartz, Tim; Harris, Clay; Bertie, Sarah; Lokoff, Amy; Rakowsky, EmilyCopy Rights Research Residency assembled four researchers-- Greg Bloom (DC), Nate Larson (Baltimore), Anne Elizabeth Moore (Chicago), and Tim Schwartz (LA) in Washington DC to investigate individual and collective authorship in the digital age. The three week residency invited creative and critical explorations of the ways in which reproduction and replication enable free expression, empower creative re-use, and mobilize social justice actions. The group considered the structure of mass digital communication systems, examined debates around media policy, and reflected on the future power of shared intellectual property. Their projects addressed the implications of universal access, digital connectivity, copyrights and patents, privacy, information regulation, and dissemination in this emerging field.Item The Case for Space: Reviving Cosmic Conscience, Provisional Reasearch Journal, A Provisions Library Journal, Volume 1, Issue 4(Provisions Library, 2013) Sherman, Stephanie; Russell, Don; Garvey, Drew; Bloom, Greg; Larson, Nate; Moore, Anne Elizabeth; Schwartz, Tim; Harris, Clay; Bertie, Sarah; Lokoff, Amy; Rakowsky, Emily; Ngo, HuongThe Case for Space assembled researchers Heidi Neilson (NY), Huong Ngo (NY), Cassie Thornton (CA), and Kate Chandler (DC) in Washington DC to explore the ethos, aesthetics, and ecology of outer space and to creatively consider the role that space programs play in cognitive and spiritual life, social consciousness, and political progress. It proposed such questions as: how does space on a macro and micro level serve as a ground for human identification, relationship, and reflection? How do space technologies, tools, and tactics help us encounter plateaus of the possible? Can the diversity of cosmic orders help us imagine constellations for change here at home?