event
panels and round table
Burning The Interface
date: 1996 09-18
location: Rotterdam Holland

The exhibiting and distribution bodies have developed expertise over the last 20 years in the field of video art, over the last 10 with digital media installations. Current work on Cd-Rom is beginning to define the standards that will be expected of computer networks as bandwidth increases. High-end installations indicate other ways in which computer-mediated art will develop. The art organisations and institutions will remain inexorably linked with making this potential available to others to experience. They will also need to mediate between the artist and the consumer to make this possible politically. The session will focus on these political issues and the logistical problems associated with exhibition of artwork the issues anticipate. The experience of developing and staging of the exhibition, 'Burning the Interface<International Artists CD-ROM>' has contributed greatly to our appreciation of the dynamics of the development of this new medium. Many other festivals, galleries and museums around the world over the last 12 months have likewise evaluated the many issues that work on Cd-Rom raises. At ISEA95 a session attempted to deal with this area but it was less productive than it could have been by attempting to bridge across too broad a front with many speakers. The session must be focussed and specific and preferably involve prior circulation on the Web of papers.
BURNING THE INTERFACE<International Artists' CDROM>
On-line info: http://www.gu.edu.au/gart/Fineart_Online/info/cd-rom.html
Mike Leggett
Stephen Bode
Annick Bureaud
Jill Scott
Related article (Abstract) Burning the Interface
Related article (Abstract) Electronic Space & Public Space: Museums, Galleries and Digital Media (ISEA96 Proceedings)