Hartware MedienKunstVerein at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund/Germany
August 30 – October 29, 2006
With: Daniel G. Andújar (Valencia/ES), Rachel Baker (London/UK),
Kayle Brandon (Bristol/UK), Heath Bunting (Bristol/UK),
Minerva Cuevas (Mexico City/MX), Marcus Valentine (Bristol/UK)
Have you ever taken part in International Tree Climbing Day? Did you
know that there is a genetically modified “superweed” resistant to
current herbicides such as Roundup? How would you react to the statement
“Remember, language is not free?” Have you ever heard of “Public
Sculpture Climbing” or the “Tour de Fence”? All of these are projects
that have taken form around the server irational.org in recent years.
On August 27, 2006, the Hartware MedienKunstVerein in the PHOENIX Halle Dortmund is opening a unique exhibition project called The Wonderful World of irational.org. Techniques, Tools, and Events 1996 – 2006. The show will run from August 30 to October 29, 2006.
Irational is a loose grouping of six international net and media
artists who came together around the server irational.org, founded by
the British net artist Heath Bunting in 1996, going on to make decisive
contribution to early net art from the mid-1990s onward. They include
Daniel Garcia Andújar / Technologies to the People (ES), Rachel Baker
(UK), Kayle Brandon (UK), Heath Bunting (UK), Minerva Cuevas / Mejor
Vida Corporation (MX) and Marcus Valentine (UK).
With dry
humor and minimal aesthetics, irational commented the Internet hype of
the mid-to-late 1990s, competing with the commercialization-euphoria of
the new market by developing its own pseudo-ventures. Net art was
immediate during this period, neither needing nor enjoying the safety of
a mediating space or instance. This is why irational often hit upon
humorless trademark attorneys, who wanted to keep irational from using
brand names such as 7-11, American Express, Sainsburys and Tesco. These
encounters, which the exhibition documents extensively, were little more
than a prelude to more recent developments on the field of copyright,
intellectual property, and brand protection. Heath Bunting was the first
net artist to retire in 1997, putting an end to his exclusive work in
the net and turning back to more intensive work in public space, which
the Internet has become such an important part of today. If the
activities of irational during its “net phase” were dedicated to calling
virtual boundaries into question, its members now experiment with
interrogating and overcoming economic, political, and social boundaries
in real space, producing a great deal of comic relief, among other
things.
Never before have so many complex and relevant
artworks from around irational.org been shown in such a comprehensive
exhibition. Its goal is to use the media of a large-scale showing,
workshops, and a comprehensive documentation to make these
artistic-activist pieces more accessible to a general public.
The Hartware MedienKunstVerein, which – like irational – is celebrating
its tenth anniversary this year, has received significant funding
through the Federal Cultural Foundation of Germany.
Inke Arns, Jacob Lillemose
* * *
The ca. 50 works presented in the exhibition can be divided into seven thematic chapters:
Taking corporate aesthetics to another level
In the mid-1990s, the new economy bubble provided a good target for
poking fun at capitalism. Therefore, many irational projects make use of
corporate aesthetics in a subversive-affirmative way. In the high times
of net art, i.e. around 1996-1997, commercial and artistic projects
basically shared the same space – the Internet. Sharing that very same
space made possible many irritating pseudo-corporate self-presentations,
like CERN, the Mejor Vida Corporation, the American Express and the
7-11 mailing lists, and the like. IA
Irational
Technologies to the People
Mejor Vida Corporation
Heath Bunting, Vuk Cosic, JODI, Alexei Shulgin, Keiko Suzuki, 7-11 mailing list, 1997
Rachel Baker, TM Club Card, 1997
Rachel Baker, Heath Bunting, Cultural Terrorist Agency, 1999
Rachel Baker, Personal Data Fairy, 2000/2001
Daniel G. Andújar / Technologies to the People, Awards, ca. 1997
Minerva Cuevas / Mejor Vida Corporation, Del Montte International Media Campaign, 2002/2003
Providing gateways and protection
This topic bridges the gap between online and offline activities
developed on and around the irational server/community. The projects
selected for this category provide secure passages, tunnels and gateways
running in parallel or subverting the political, economic or social
divisions of existing territories. Irational techniques transgress these
fenced-off spaces and provide secure and entertaining ways from point a
to point b. Previously unconceivable spaces are being made accessible
in simple and intelligent ways. Protection and surveillance systems are
detourned and made to serve alternative passage ways. IA
Heath Bunting, CCTV, 1997
Rachel Baker / Heath Bunting, CCTV Sabotag, 1998
Daniel G. Andújar / Technologies to the People, Armed citizen, 1998
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, D’fence cuts, 2002
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, Tour de Fence, 2002
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, Tour de Fence Techniques, 2003
Marcus Valentine, How to be a Community Radio Station, 2003
Heath Bunting, London Pirate Listening Station, 2004
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, Sponsored Influenza Pandemic Evacuation Rehearsal (SIPER), 2005
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, Public Sculpture Climbing, 2006
Attention! Creating situations
Whether in the form of material objects or conceptual information
irational likes to create adventurous situations in public space that
you can participate in. Through their work they invite you to join them
in exploring and experimenting with the laws of nature and the politics
of social structures. The character of the situations varies from the
playful collective climbing of trees at the annual International Tree
Climbing Day to subversive bio-activism in “Natural Reality Superweed”,
“a genetically modified anti-capitalist weed” designed to resist
Monsanto herbicides and thus threaten the production of genetically
modified crops; the weed is open source and distributed freely from
irational’s website. As works of art, irational’s situations are
conceived as open-ended fields of action where you can experience
freedom as well as empowerment. Thus there is a good chance that
participation will heighten your awareness of the realities that you
interact with in your daily life and furthermore give you an idea of the
multiple possibilities the world contains if you use the right,
alternative means. JL
Heath Bunting, Vunerability, 1996
Heath Bunting, Cybercafé, 1996
Rachel Baker, Lucy Eyers, Steve Rushton, Cramley Election, 1998
Rachel Baker, Heath Bunting, Natural Reality SuperWeed, 1999
Kayle Brandon, International Tree Climbing day, since 2003
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, The World Downhill Skate Championships, 2005
Heath Bunting, Memorial Stone – Quest for the Forgotten Art, 3 videos/DVDs, 60 min., 60 min., 30 min., 2006
Rachel Baker, Towards Death: Aerobics with Antifamily and Cindy Crawford, 2006
Minerva Cuevas / Mejor Vida Corporation, Student ID Card, 2006
Maps for the global DIY public
From the very beginning irational have been occupied with visual and
conceptual ‘maps’ that give directions to both creative and critical
engagements with the world in which we live. The public poster is a
popular medium for these maps that tell you “it costs more to be poor”,
warn you that “equality is deceit” or states that “representation
reverses reality”. You can use the maps to learn how to cross the
borders within Europe bypassing the official border crossings, read
through the Day Planner to learn how “minimalise time spent working or
waiting and maximise engagement with pleasure, happiness and growth” or
consult the online database Free Food to find free natural food all year
round in the city of Bristol. The maps operate without the restrictions
of traditional iconographic maps, rather than trying to picture the
world as we know it they disclose hidden meanings or generate new
meanings that allow us to perceive the world in challenging ways. Also
the maps do not recognize rational separations between virtual,
physical, symbolic and mental spaces, they operate in all these spaces
simultaneously. Follow the directions and become part of the global
do-it-yourself public. JL
Heath Bunting, Corporate skip raider’s manual, 1996
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, BorderXing Guide, 2001
Heath Bunting, For Sale, 2003
Heath Bunting, Global Warming, 2003
Heath Bunting, Tag retrospective, 2003
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, Botanists Guide, 2003
Heath Bunting, Poster retrospective, 2004
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, BorderXing Slide Show, 2004
Kayle Brandon, Lunch packs, 2004
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, Food for Free, 2005
Heath Bunting, Day planner, 2006
Collecting data all over the net
Data represents a significant value in the information age. No one is
more aware of that than irational. To collect as much data as possible
about a wide variety of contemporary subjects irational often uses the
well-known format of the questionnaire. The questions can relate to
facts about Internet culture, involve philosophical reflections or
concern experiences with violence in urban space. Irational exploits the
value of the data for their own aesthetic, not financial, purposes. The
data collections vary from simple statistics to rather speculative
conceptual lists; in any case they are most probably to generate a
surplus in the digital network. Through the questionnaires irational not
only challenges you to re-engage in the world by asking unexpected and
impossible questions; irational also challenges you to ask yourself: How
do I want to invest my data? Or rather: How do I want to invest myself
as data? JL
Heath Bunting, The pleasur project, 1996
Daniel G. Andújar / Technologies to the People, TTTP Research Department
Daniel G. Andújar / Technologies to the People, Preliminary Basic Application
Marcus Valentine, irational disfunctionality questionnnaire, 1999
Minerva Cuevas, Violence Questionnaire
We deal in Language Property
Over the last ten years language has been turned into a deadly serious
commodity. Not only have wars been waged over intellectual property and
over copyright infringement cases – today letters and words themselves
have become properties of legal owners. Language has become a minefield.
This process has been especially visible on the Internet with the
battles fought over ownership of domain names. Two works by
irationalists have very early onwards predicted this development and
have reflected upon this in their own ways. Heath Bunting’s piece
“_readme” imagines a world in which each single domain name is sold,
whereas Technology to the People’s work “Language (property)” joyfully
submerges itself in trademarked sentences – which are the property of
their respective owners. Thus we come to realize: “Language is not free”
(TP). IA
Daniel G. Andújar / Technologies to the People, Language (property), 1997
Heath Bunting, _readme - Own, Be Owned or Remain Invisible, 1998
Smart tools for a networked society
Irational works do challenge our conceptions of tools as the means of
cultural production. Their works of art often take the explicit form of
cultural tools that work on both practical and conceptual levels. The
tools are smart in the sense that they take advantage of the newest
technology and can be used for all possible and unthinkable purposes.
You can print out “Unfare” to travel around the London underground for
free, use Bar Code Stickers to make shopping a cheaper but more fun and
daring experience or you can explore the amazing logic of TTTP’s
calculators to compute things you did not know were important. In a more
abstract sense you can use the tools to figure out and play with the
world. And if applied to the right context you can even make some money.
The tools are made for you so they are, of course, free and open
source. JL
Heath Bunting, Skint - the internet beggar, 1996
Technologies to the People, Street Access Machine, 1996
Heath Bunting, Unfare, 2000
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, RED#NET, 2003
Kayle Brandon, Heath Bunting, A Guide to Net Making, 2004/2006
Daniel G. Andújar / The New Technologies to the People System, x-devian by knoppix – The evolution of the species, 2003/2004
Minerva Cuevas / Mejor Vida Corporation, Recommendation Letter, 2006
Minerva Cuevas / Mejor Vida Corporation, Various Products and Services in Dortmund, September 15-17, 2006
Kayle Brandon, Irational Transfer Stall, 2006 – irational memorabilia, as iron-on transfers for your clothes. Bring in your own clothes or buy a T-shirt from the stall!
* * *
PROGRAM
Sunday, August 27, 2006, 16:00
Opening „The Wonderful World of irational.org - Tools, Techniques and Events 1996-2006“, Hartware MedienKunstVerein at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund/Germany
With addresses by:
Susanne Ackers, HMKV
Kurt Eichler, Leiter des Kulturbüros Stadt Dortmund
Theda Kluth, Staatskanzlei NRW, Düsseldorf
Dr. Inke Arns, HMKV & Jacob Lillemose, artnode, Copenhagen, curators of the exhibition
Friday, September 15 – Sunday, September 17, 2006, all day
Irational Action Weekend in the framework of the exhibition (see program at www.hmkv.de)
Saturday, September 16, 2006, 20:00
„10 Years Hartware MedienKunstVerein“
Party in the context of the 6th Dortmund Museum Night
PHOENIX Halle Dortmund
with irational DJs from Valencia, Bristol, London, Mexico City
and Carsten Helmich (Dortmund)
Sunday, October 1, 2006, during the day
PHOENIX Safari Weekend: Guided tour by KJ Conze (check www.hmkv.de for more details)
Saturday, October 28, 2006
Catalogue presentation The Hartware Guide to irational. Techniques, Tools and Events 1996-2006, edited by Susanne Ackers / Inke Arns / Francis Hunger / Jacob Lillemose (see www.hmkv.de for more details)
Saturday, October 28, 2006
Symposium "From Net to Space", 10 Years Hartware MedienKunstVerein (see detailed program at www.hmkv.de)
Guided tours through the exhibition
Sunday, September 3, 10, 17, 24, 2006, 16:00
Sunday, October 1, 8, 15, 22, 29, 2006, 16:00
* * *
The Wonderful World of irational.org
Tools, Techniques and Events 1996-2006
Daniel G. Andújar (Valencia/ES), Rachel Baker (London/UK),
Kayle Brandon (Bristol/UK), Heath Bunting (Bristol/UK),
Minerva Cuevas (Mexico City/MX), Marcus Valentine (Bristol/UK)
a.o.
A project by Hartware MedienKunstVerein
In the framework of medien_kunst_netz dortmund
at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund/Germany
August 30 – October 29, 2006
Opening: Sunday, August 27, 2006, 16:00
Exhibition
curated by Inke Arns, Jacob Lillemose
irational Action Weekend
curated by Francis Hunger
Managing director
Susanne Ackers
Exhibition architecture and technical director
Uwe Gorski
Organisation, coordination
Francis Hunger, Darija Simunovic
Press Contact
Roland Kentrup, Dortmund
Catalogue
A catalogue will be published at the end of October 2006:
Susanne Ackers / Inke Arns / Francis Hunger / Jacob Lillemose (eds.)
The Hartware Guide to irational. Techniques, Tools and Events 1996-2006
Revolver – Archiv für aktuelle Kunst, Frankfurt am Main 2006, ISBN 3-86588-299-4
The project is funded by
Kulturstiftung des Bundes
Der Ministerpräsident des Landes NRW
Kulturbüro Stadt Dortmund
dortmund-project
PHOENIX
LEG
Venue
Hartware MedienKunstVerein (HMKV) at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund
Hochofenstrasse / corner Rombergstrasse
Dortmund-Hörde (no postal address!)
Opening hours PHOENIX Halle
during the exhibitions of HMKV:
Wed 11:00 – 17:00, Thu until Sun 11:00 – 20:00
Tuesday, October 3, 2006, open 11:00 – 20:00
Admission
4 Euro / reduced 2 Euro
Guided tours
Each Sunday at 16:00
Individual tours on request (Tel ++49 – 231 – 823 106)
How to get there by car
B 54 exit Rombergpark, Nortkirchenstraße direction of Hörde, left into
Entenpoth (speed 30 zone), then left into Hochofenstrasse
How to get there by subway
U41 direction Hörde until Dortmund-Hörde Bahnhof, 10 min. ride from Dortmund main railway station, then a 10 min. walk
Map
http://www.hmkv.de/dyn/e_contact_roaddescription/
HMKV Team
Dr. Inke Arns (Artistic director Hartware MedienKunstVerein)
Susanne Ackers (Managing director Hartware MedienKunstVerein)
Uwe Gorski (Technical director)
Francis Hunger (Junior Curator)
Darija Simunovic (Project coordinator and manager



