Marcel René Marburger studied Art History, German Literature and Philosophy at the University of Cologne with a PhD on theoretical art relevance in Vilém Flusser’s writings.
The jury for the transmediale Award 2011 have nominated seven outstanding art works from among an impressive pool of over 1000 entries submitted from around the world, covering a broad range of digital and media arts practice. Congratulations to the nominees - and good luck to the transmediale Award 2011 winner who will be announced in Berlin at the Awards Ceremony 5 February 2011!
Nominated for the Open Web Award are three projects that critically consider and make use of the potential of the Open Web. They have an online component, implement open and free technology and facilitate participation and collaboration. Drumbeat Project Producer Henrik Moltke represented award partner Mozilla at the jury session.
From 15 October 2010 the nominated works will be made available on the Mozilla Drumbeat Platform for a public vote that will determine the winner of this award.
Out of more than 1,500 submissions nine art projects have made their way onto the list of transmediale Award 2010 nominees. In a session of several days the members of the international jury have nominated the following artists and art collectives.
Michelle Kasprzak is a Canadian curator and writer based in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. She has appeared in Wired UK, on radio and TV broadcasts by the BBC and CBC, and lectured at PICNIC. She founded one of the world’s leading art curating blogs, Curating.info. She has written critical essays for Rhizome, CV Photo, Mute, and many more. Michelle is currently a Curator at V2_ Institute for Unstable Media, Project Director at McLuhan in Europe 2011, and a member of IKT (International Association of Curators of Contemporary Art).
David Link is an artist, theorist and programmer. He holds the new Chair for “Experimental Technologies in the Art Context” at the Academy of Visual Arts Leipzig. His current research focuses on the development of an archaeology of algorithmic artefacts.
Mina Lunzer is an artist and freelance writer for art and film-journals such as Senses of Cinema. Between 2004 and 2009 she studied Film and Video Installation and Cultural Studies at Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, the University of Sydney and University of the Arts, Berlin.
The winners of the transmediale Award 2010 and the Vilém Flusser Theory Award 2010 have been announced! Congratulations and Hurray to Michelle Teran and Warren Neidich! ...more
The Award Ceremony on 6 February will reveal the winners of this year's transmediale and Vilém Flusser Theory Award. Barbara Kisseler will moderate the evening together with the members of both juries.
The the programme highlight raster.noton.unun will subsequently take place on the occasion of the Award After Party at WMF. ...more
In order to reflect the increasing significance of theoretical and critical practice works submitted for the transmediale Award competition, the festival has introduced the Vilém Flusser Theory Award in 2008. This year's freshly announced nominees are David Link, Mina Lunzer, Warren Neidich and Daniela Alina Plewe!
Warren Neidich is an artist, theorist and trained biologist. The exploration of the creative processes that underpin the production of subjectivity and knowledge is central to his interdisciplinary work.
José Luis de Vicente is a researcher, curator and writer working around the edges of new media arts and innovation in design and culture. Recent projects include The Atlas of Electromagnetic Space and the Exhibition Machines and Souls at the Reina Sofia National Museum, Madrid.
A film by British artist duo Mirza/Butler following a series of visits to Karachi, Pakistan: subjective impressions and experiences regarding the collaboration with many different local professionals as well as a critique of the complex role of international and local media as crucial ideological mediators.
A technological composition project by Canadian artist duo [The User] (Emmanuel Madan / Thomas McIntosh) in which the mundane ticking of a clock is transformed into the source of complex acoustic structures in homage to Hungarian composer György Ligeti's Poème Symphonique.
A new kind of domestic robots invented by the british art collective Auger-Loizeau & Zivanovic Material Beliefs (Jimmy Loizeau / James Auger / Alexandar Zivanovic): bizzare carnivorous hybrids between machine and living organism feeding on small flies.
Once again, the jury of the transmediale Award 2010 consists of five curators, writers and artists. The jury members of the upcoming festival edition are the Belgian media activist and programmer Yves Bernard; Michelle Kasprzak, artist, curator and online/artblogging communities developer from Edinburgh; José Luis de Vicente, a Spanish researcher, curator and writer working around the edges of new media arts as well as the multi-media artist, curator and producer Li Zhenhua from China, and the curator and writer Doreen Mende from Berlin.
Together transmediale and CTM annually invite submissions to the transmediale Award. The transmediale award seeks to honor outstanding experimental artworks that embrace, question and enrich our understanding and relationship to our immersed media and technologically driven society. Once again an international jury has met in Berlin at the end of September to issue the list of Award Nominees for 2010.
A glowing 4m sphere of hundreds of energy saving light bulbs created by artist Wang Yuyang (cn): A poetic allusion to the changing roles of technology and environment, nature and artificiality as well as the, since 1969, still unresolved claiming of the moon between East and West.
An online work by Aaron Koblin and Daniel Massey (us) whose title refers to the song line 'bicycle built for two' from the well-known Daisy Bell: Based on a distributed system of 2000 human voices Bicycle Built For Two Thousand is a reconstruction and cover version of the very first song in history ever synthetically sung by a computer (in 1962).
The American art and design collective Sosolimited (Justin Manor / Eric Gunther / John Rothenberg) has been nominated with their performance project ReConstitution, a live remix of broadcast television, and a format originally configured for the 2008 presidential elections.
Michelle Teran's (ca) tour through the Spanish town Murcia on three levels at once: by bus, on Google Earth and YouTube. The search for places and authors of various YouTube videos shot in town - an intimate encounter between videomakers and audience, the overlapping of the real and the virtual, of past and present.
An audiovisual installation by the artist Félix Luque Sánchez (es). A peculiar, geometric object releasing a code of light and sound: synthetically generated images destabilise the viewers' faith in their own perception.
Founded in 2007 by Evan Roth and James Powderly, and grown by 17 new members since, the F.A.T. network is as a loose online collective working across several continents, and with a great amount of humour, on free software and other exciting projects supporting open values through the use of open licenses.
Free Art and Technology Lab was founded in 2007 by Evan Roth and James Powderly. It grew over the last 2 years to 19 members, working on more than 3 continents connected through the internet. With a great amount of humour they collaborate on free software and other projects with open licenses.
Daniel Massey is an artist whose recent work seeks to instigate new modes of collaboration, creation, and transformation. Daniel earned his MFA in Digital Arts & New media from UC Santa Cruz, and was part of the Yahoo! Design Innovation Team.
James Auger and Jimmy Loizeau run London-based design partnership Auger-Loizeau combining a range of disciplines that include product design, engineering, and fine art. Auger-Loizeau collaborated with the enigneer Alexandar Zivanovic (uk) on the Carnivorous Domestic Entertainment Robots.
Alexandar Zivanovic has a BA in Computer Systems Engineering and an MA in Electronic Engineering. He has a post-doc in Mechanical Engineering and Medical Mechatronics. Alexandar Zivanovic collaborated with Auger-Loizeau on the Carnivorous Domestic Entertainment Robots.
James Auger has a BA in Product Design from Glasgow School of Art and an MA in Design Products from the Royal College of Art in London. Currently James is a teacher and a PhD candidate in the Design Interactions department at the RCA. Together with Jimmy Loizeau he runs Auger-Loizeau.
Justin Manor has a BS and MA in Physics and Media Art both from MIT. With specialisation in software systems he is a founding member of the art and design collective Sosolimited with is nominated for the transmediale.10 Award and with which he has exhibited and performed internationally.
Aaron Koblin is an an artist specialising in data visualisation. His work takes social and infrastructural data and uses it to examine cultural trends and emergent patterns. Aaron’s work has been shown at festivals around the world. Aaron works as Technology Lead of Google’s Creative Lab in San Francisco.