Remix Cinema Workshop: call for presentations & papers
March 24-25th 2011; Oxford Internet Institute (University of Oxford, UK).
The Remix Cinema workshop is organised by the Oxford Internet Institute,
(University of Oxford, UK) in collaboration with UNIA Prácticas y Culturas
Digitales (Universidad Internacional de Andalucía, ES), and is funded by the
UK's Art and Humanities Research Council's (AHRC) Beyond Text programme.
Website: www.remixcinema.org
Abstracts deadline: January 7, 2011.
*Context
*In August 2010, the remix movie Star Wars Uncut was the first
user-generated production to win an Emmy Award. Other online platforms such
as wreckamovie.com enable online communities to form for independent and
open source filmmaking, harnessing distributed forms of collaborative
co-creation rather than relying on traditional organisational structures.
Cloud-based editing suites have begun appearing: Stroome.com was launched in
April 2010 by USC Annenberg with the tag-line “mix it up. mash it out”.
Digitalised photos, videos, and sound, easily accessible through popular
websites, constitute a diverse online repository of content that is being
used for artistic remix purposes. Recently, the Electronic Frontier
Foundation won a court case giving exemptions from the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act (DMCA) anticircumvention provisions to amateur remix video
artists sharing their works on e.g. YouTube. VJ’s and live cinema artists
(e.g. Dj Spooky, Eclectic Method or SOLU) have permeated multiple cultural
settings, ranging from contexts of mainstream entertainment to museums, and
other spaces institutionalizing art practices.
The examples outlined are just a few fitting under the umbrella term of
“Remix Cinema”, and point to ways in which networked devices and resources
are facilitating new artistic audiovisual practices and cultures. The
concept of 'remix' describes a broad set of social and cultural practices
centred around the fragmentation and re-ordering of already existing and new
content, whether text, sound or images. This 2-day multi-disciplinary
workshop focuses on these diverse creative practices, particularly in the
context of the contemporary socio-technical media environment. It brings
together people interested in understanding and shaping remix cinema:
doctoral students, established scholars, practising artists, and anyone else
interested in addressing themes related to questions including:
- How is the contemporary media-scape influencing artistic audio-visual
creation?
- What can we learn from the changing practices in remix cinema?
- How are new models of economic support (e.g. crowdfunding) changing
productions of cultural objects?
- What methodological and theoretical challenges arise in empirical
studies on remix cinema, and how do we overcome these?
Call for presentations & papers
The workshop committee welcomes proposals on any social, critical, cultural,
aesthetic, political, technical, economic or legal aspects of remix cinema
practices, cultures and works. We particularly welcome contributions that
report on empirical studies and adopt innovative methodological approaches.
Each presentation should last for a maximum of 15 minutes. Participants may
present finished studies or works-in-progress, as the workshop also serves
as a forum for gaining valuable feedback and exchanging ideas. All proposals
will be peer reviewed by at least two members of the workshop's academic
committee (Oxford Internet Institute faculty). Presenters are invited to
submit full papers which will be eligible for review and possible inclusion
in a subsequent ISBN publication on remix cinema.
Grant Blank, Ph.D.
Oxford Internet Institute
1 St Giles, Oxford OX1 3JS, United Kingdom
email: grant.blank@oii.ox.ac.uk
phone: +44 (0)1865 287 210
*Remix Cinema Workshop: call for presentations & papers*
March 24-25th 2011; Oxford Internet Institute (University of Oxford, UK).
The Remix Cinema workshop is organised by the Oxford Internet Institute,
(University of Oxford, UK) in collaboration with UNIA Prácticas y Culturas
Digitales (Universidad Internacional de Andalucía, ES), and is funded by the
UK's Art and Humanities Research Council's (AHRC) Beyond Text programme.
*Website*: www.remixcinema.org
Abstracts *deadline*: January 7, 2011.
*Context
*In August 2010, the remix movie Star Wars Uncut was the first
user-generated production to win an Emmy Award. Other online platforms such
as wreckamovie.com enable online communities to form for independent and
open source filmmaking, harnessing distributed forms of collaborative
co-creation rather than relying on traditional organisational structures.
Cloud-based editing suites have begun appearing: Stroome.com was launched in
April 2010 by USC Annenberg with the tag-line “mix it up. mash it out”.
Digitalised photos, videos, and sound, easily accessible through popular
websites, constitute a diverse online repository of content that is being
used for artistic remix purposes. Recently, the Electronic Frontier
Foundation won a court case giving exemptions from the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act (DMCA) anticircumvention provisions to amateur remix video
artists sharing their works on e.g. YouTube. VJ’s and live cinema artists
(e.g. Dj Spooky, Eclectic Method or SOLU) have permeated multiple cultural
settings, ranging from contexts of mainstream entertainment to museums, and
other spaces institutionalizing art practices.
The examples outlined are just a few fitting under the umbrella term of
“Remix Cinema”, and point to ways in which networked devices and resources
are facilitating new artistic audiovisual practices and cultures. The
concept of 'remix' describes a broad set of social and cultural practices
centred around the fragmentation and re-ordering of already existing and new
content, whether text, sound or images. This 2-day multi-disciplinary
workshop focuses on these diverse creative practices, particularly in the
context of the contemporary socio-technical media environment. It brings
together people interested in understanding and shaping remix cinema:
doctoral students, established scholars, practising artists, and anyone else
interested in addressing themes related to questions including:
- How is the contemporary media-scape influencing artistic audio-visual
creation?
- What can we learn from the changing practices in remix cinema?
- How are new models of economic support (e.g. crowdfunding) changing
productions of cultural objects?
- What methodological and theoretical challenges arise in empirical
studies on remix cinema, and how do we overcome these?
*Call for presentations & papers*
The workshop committee welcomes proposals on any social, critical, cultural,
aesthetic, political, technical, economic or legal aspects of remix cinema
practices, cultures and works. We particularly welcome contributions that
report on empirical studies and adopt innovative methodological approaches.
Each presentation should last for a maximum of 15 minutes. Participants may
present finished studies or works-in-progress, as the workshop also serves
as a forum for gaining valuable feedback and exchanging ideas. All proposals
will be peer reviewed by at least two members of the workshop's academic
committee (Oxford Internet Institute faculty). Presenters are invited to
submit full papers which will be eligible for review and possible inclusion
in a subsequent ISBN publication on remix cinema.
---------------------------------------------------
Grant Blank, Ph.D.
Oxford Internet Institute
1 St Giles, Oxford OX1 3JS, United Kingdom
email: grant.blank@oii.ox.ac.uk
phone: +44 (0)1865 287 210
---------------------------------------------------