Claire Keane

oozey mess

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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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Xuebing Du
occasionally subtle
Cosmic Funnies

Kaledo Art

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$LAYYYTER

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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Mike Driver

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@radiowebmacba-blog
McKenzie Wark on his essay, "My Collectible Ass," published in the 85th issue of e-flux journal, October 2017. In conversation with journal editor Stephen Squibb. Read the essay: http://ww
So happy to welcome e-flux to the podcasting family!
In this featured episode, radio advertising producer, writer and composer Clive Desmond covers the golden age of radio ads, including Frank Zappa, Ken Nordine, Linda Ronstadt, and Randy Newman. While the 1960s shift in print and TV advertising has been heavily documented and mythologized by Mad Men, Madison Avenueâs radiophonic collision with the counterculture is
The Lake is a Scandinaviannon-profit online radio station.
It makes a nice listening while working and a few gems and experiments come and go.
Writings on art, culture, and media technology
Podcast with Franco Bifo Berardi on the free radio experience Radio Alice: http://rwm.macba.cat/en/specials/radio-alice-franco-berardi/capsula
Radio Alice was created in Bologna in the late seventies by a group that brought left-wing activists together with artists who worked with counterinformation, or what Franco âBifoâ Berardi (one of the core members) called âthe creation of divergent realitiesâ. Perhaps to the surprise of the powers that be, the liberalisation of the radio airwaves that brought with it the countryâs first free and non-commercial radio stations soon gave way to a local, short-range guerrilla movement that ruptured the long, tedious monopoly of the state media. Radio Alice was by no means the only free radio experiment in Italy, but in spite of its short lifespan â the station initially operated from 9 February 1976 to 12 March 1977 â it had a strong influence on the social and political life of the capital of the Emilia-Romagna region. Reflecting the opinions, obsessions, and stories of its listeners and organisers, and establishing itself as a creative platform in the new non-commercial radio space, this small neo-dada bastion was an important piece in the jigsaw puzzle of life in Bologna, eventually amplifying the voice of the popular uprising and the clashes between students and the police in early 1977 (the chain of events that eventually led the station to be shut down). The strong personality of Radio Alice was more than just the sum of the points of views of the original collective (Franco Berardi, Paolo Ricci, Filippo ScĂČzzari and Maurizio Torrealta, among others). Rather, it can be seen as a complex collage of the ideas of the autonomous movement (which emerged in Italy in the sixties) mixed with the influence of the Situationists, the pre-punk seed that was starting to spread in Europe, and the work of Gilles Deleuze and FĂ©lix Guattari.
FM radio will be shut off within a few year in many European countries and DAB+ is sold as the digital - thus better - alternative. Well, DAB+ does have some...
Trying to understand what the FM radio shut off means and what will happen with the frequencies that will stop being used.Â
Interview with Douglas Kahn, exploring the different instances when what he calls Natural Radio takes place, the âradio that is generated by activities within the atmosphere of the Earth, the ionosphere and the magnetosphereâ.
After a debilitating accident, Eddie McCoy took his passion for local history and a scavenged cassette recorder from a trash can and began taping his town, from the oldest citizen on downâhidden stori
Andrea Jane-Cornellâs âLiminal Transmissionâ: probing the limits of FM frequency
Since I discovered this gem, I always use it as an inspiring example for my students.
âLiminal Transmissionâ is a theoretical and experiential research-based project concerned with testing the limits of FM radio's frequency response (30Hz - 15kHz). Using tone generators and sound art works that employ frequencies situated along the upper and lower ranges of human auditory perception, this broadcast will probe the poles of the FM frequency response spectrum through a live experiment conducted on WGXC.
https://wavefarm.org/ta/works/s8w0c0
With the S.W.I.M. (Sequential Wave Imprinting Machine) you can see otherwise invisible sound waves and radio waves, imprinted onto your retina, onto photographic media, or eyeglass/camera.This is due to something I call Phenomenological or Phenomenal Augmented Reality, i.e. the AR (Augmented Reality) of physical phenomena.A unique feature of Phenomenal Augmented Reality is that the alignment (registration) between the direct view and the overlaid information is near-perfect, because the alignment happens naturally, in the feedback loop of the process. In this sense SWIM is a Natural User Interface.SWIM is a super-simple-to-build form of augmented reality == so simple to build, in fact, that I built the first one 42 years ago, back when I was 12 years old, out of a bunch of old Christmas tree lights that were thrown in the garbage, which I mounted to some scrap wood, driven by a home-made wearable computer I built from surplus parts.You ...
Steve Man promises that for less than $10, some circuitry and dexterity, you can build one of his SWIM (Sequential Wave Imprinting Machine) machines, allowing you to see otherwise invisible sound waves and radio waves. Just do it!
In this podcast, self-taught filmmaker Lizzie Borden explains the various reasons that led her to take an interest in the phenomenon of European free radio in her seminal film âBorn in Flamesâ, and how it helped her to connect the various agendas of this cult movie.
http://rwm.macba.cat/en/specials/lizzie-borden-pirate-radio/capsula
In the low frequency range of the radio spectrum we can find 'natural' radio emissions that originate from lightning and interaction of the earth's magnetosphere with the Sun. Natural radio signals can be received with specially build antennas and receivers. Edwin van der Heideâs âRadioforestâ installation does precisely that. http://www.evdh.net/radioforest/
A binaural recording of the installation can be listened to here:Â http://www.evdh.net/radioforest/radioforest8dec.mp3
An amazing document of the Mini-Fm movement in Japan, back in the 80s. Within this context, Tetsuo Kogawa hosted a monthly program, "Saturday Night Virus", at the free radio station Radio Home Run, Shimokitazawa. Video: Akihiro Ito.
Electromagnetic Middle Eastern Excursions
Joana Moll took a one day trip to the Ministry of Interior of Israel equipped with an electromagnetic coil connected to an iPod, to record the electromagnetic fields inside the building. The result can be listened to here:Â http://www.janavirgin.com/electromagnets.html
Maternity leave
Lenka Clayton is also the artist behind an amazing collage of a George Bush speech with all the words he used reassembled in alphabetical order.
In this work, she managed to get paid her maternity leave, by transmitting via live audio feed the intimacy of her domestic life to an empty Gallery.
http://www.lenkaclayton.com/work/#/maternity-leave/