Saturday, July 05, 2008

Call: Netmage 09 - International Live Media Festival seeks entries

Netmage 09 - International Live Media Festival

Tue Sep 16, 2008
(Timezone: Eastern Time - Montreal)
www.netmage.it (map)
Calendar: Audio Calls

Call: Netmage 09 - International Live Media Festival

June 30, 2008 at 10:35 am · Filed under calls: internal

Call for entries
Deadline: 16 September 2008

Netmage 09
International Live Media Festival - 9th edition
Bologna, 29>31 January 2009

International Live Media Floor

The call for participation is now open for the International Live Media Floor of Netmage 09 a festival aimed to explore media innovation within the context of electronic arts that will take place in Bologna from the 29nd to the 31st January 2009.

The Live Media Floor - main section of Netmage festival program - is an international platform to confront practices of generating and/or mixing images and sound of every type and format exploring cinematic and inter-media aesthetics.

Participation is open to projects that employ electronic, electroacoustic, analogue and cinematic means to produce visuals and sound.

The projects selected will be performed, single or multi-screen, for a duration of about 20 minutes each.

Download entry form from
www.netmage.it

All material must be sent to:
Netmage
Via Cà Selvatica 4/d
40123 Bologna
Italy
tel (+39) 051 331099
bando@netmage.it
www.netmage.it

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Monday, July 16, 2007

Call: Society for Cinema and Media Studies seeks papers on the subject of "design and media"

Dear friends and colleagues:

Below I've pasted in a bulletin board announcement for the March 2008
Society for Cinema and Media Studies conference in Philadelphia,
where the "theme" is design and media.

I'm filling out a panel proposal on "designing musical media," which
I'm hoping will be a productive opportunity to revisit notions of
musicality in the context of media transitions, the analytics of
corporeality, sense, or sensation, and contemporary problems in
biopolitical analysis. I'll leave a proper bibliographic treatment
aside, in the interest of soliciting a wide variety of treatments of
"musicality" on (or as) the audiovisual screen or interface.

The usual "motley cr?e" -- so to write -- of critical approaches are
welcome: historical-empirical; critico-theoretical; cultural; ethico-
aesthetic; political-philosophical; popular cultural; popular music
cultures; gender, sexuality; race, ethnicity; class; globalization;
deconstructive; post-Deleuzian; "new (old) media" or media
transitions; historical-speculative; and also, significantly in this
case, design critique; etc.

The common denominator will be that proposals are centered around the
problematic of musicality, media reception, and "the screen" broadly
understood. And I'm hoping for challenging approaches rather than
conventional ones.

My apologies for cross-posting; and feel free to pass on.

I'd need abstracts/proposals (250 - 1000 words, short bibliography)
by August 10. Note that you'd have to be a member of SCMS by January
2008 in order to participate.

And my email reply info is below.

Warm regards,

James Tobias, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Cinema and Digital Media Studies
English Department/Department of Media and Cultural Studies
University of California, Riverside
james.tobias@ucr.edu



Subject: SCMS Bulletin Board Post


Type of Posting: Panel

Proposed Panel/Workshop Subject: Designing Musical Media: From
Biomechanical to Bioinformatic Screens

Organizer Name(s):

James Tobias

E-Mail Address: james.tobias@ucr.edu

Summary: What does it mean to put music on the screen?
From early cinema to contemporary digital media, we observe repeated
efforts at designing the projected image as a musical display. As
varied as they have been challenging, these efforts propose the
musical screen as a device for regulating viewer mood, as visual
music animation, as avant-garde experiment or conceptual
intervention, as commercial spectacle, as critical engagement, as
"immersion," as parody, as television theme-song, as advertisement,
as promotional music clip (in film or video), as musical game, as
playback device, or aesthetic-scientific prototype.
While given short shrift in critiques of narrative or of the avant-
garde, considered as symptomatic of spectacular culture in commercial
production, or written off as unnecessarily duplicating the
soundtrack or attempting to impose attributes of the auditory on the
visual, the design of musical media taken as a problematic rather
than as a margin of artistic or commercial production actually
exhibit three crucial characteristics which allow a re-configuration
of screen studies within contemporary transmedia logics. First,
divorcing the "musical" from the "auditory," musical media designs
question the relationships of perception or cultural context to
technological exhibition; these attempts are often affective and
ethical, as much as technological, interventions in media practices.
Second, designs for musical media point to the complexity of any
"single" medium, so even a "visual" medium becomes multi- or
transmedial, with broad implications for contemporary "convergent"
digital media. Third, across media, musical design as problematic
emphasizes the relations of synchronization necessarily determining
audio, visual, or haptic meaning. In this sense, musical media offer
a rich yet specific account of media situations.
This panel seeks presentations exploring the design of musical media,
whether in the context of the "biomechanics" of early cinema, or the
"bioinformatics" of contemporary digital transmedia. Papers might
explore late 19th and early 20th century devices for the projection
of musical images, visual music animation, narrativized musical
presentation in commercial film or TV, artist video, musical video
games, or MP3 interfaces. How does the media object attempt "musical"
presentation of the visual screen or interface? The goal is to reveal
historical and contemporary problematics of transmedia exhibition and
situational use of synchronized media.

Send individual topics & summaries to organizer(s) by: E-Mail



Bulletin Board Policies - Please Read

1. All chairs/organizers must notify individuals whether bulletin
board submissions have been accepted or rejected by August 15, 2007.

2. All individuals must be registered users of the website before the
proposal process can begin. If you are unsure you have registered or
if you have forgotten your username and password, please contact the
SCMS office at office@cmstudies.org. To avoid duplicate entries and
data errors, please do not re-register.

3. Individuals whose submissions are accepted must provide the
required information for completion of the proposal form to the chair/
organizer prior to September 1, 2007.

4. Chairs/organizers of panels or workshops are responsible for
submitting the entire panel or workshop form by September 1, 2007.

5. SCMS membership is a requirement to participant in the
conference. Chairs/organizers are responsible for notifying panel/
workshop participants (if accepted) that they must be or need to
become a member of SCMS, register for the conference and pay the
registration fee by: January 4, 2008.

6. To request a conference registration fee waiver and/or membership
waiver for any panel or workshop participants, a waiver application
must be completed at the following link:

http://www.cmstudies.org/index.php?
option=com_content&task=view&id=39&Itemid=93

and e-mailed to the SCMS office by September 1, 2007. (Note:
Waiver requests may be granted in exceptional circumstances for
artists, filmmakers, or renowned scholars from other disciplines
whose contributions would illuminate the panel or workshop topic.
Open call participants do not qualify for these waivers).

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Friday, May 18, 2007

Call: DOKU.ARTS Festival for Films on Art

Call for entries - DOKU.ARTS Festival for Films on Art


DOKU.ARTS - 2nd International Festival for Films on Art will take place
between September 19th and 23rd, 2007 in Berlin. DOKU.ARTS is the new
European platform for international films on art. While the focus lies on
documentaries, there is also the chance to see films that are between
fiction and documentary. DOKU.ARTS is the only European festival that
presents films from all fields of art (music, literature, theatre, dance,
cinema, photography, architecture, fine arts). In the forum, "Producing
Films on Art", the festival invites filmmakers, producers, critics, persons
engaged in the cultural sector, artists and commissioning editors from all
over Europe to discuss the challenges involved in producing documentaries on
art.


DEADLINE: June 1, 2007
Info: info@doku-arts.de - www.doku-arts.de

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Thursday, May 17, 2007

Call: WNDX New Prairie Cinema Showcase seeks innovative cinema

WNDX New Prairie Cinema Showcase: Open Call
> Deadline for Submissions: Friday, June 15, 2007
>
> Download submission forms at: www.wndx.org
> ** There is no submission fee **
>
> WNDX is an on-going curatorial effort designed to
> highlight the new, living cinema being created on
> the Canadian prairies today - contextualized to the
> greater Canadian and international stage - and to
> foster the creation of new works.
>
> The cornerstone of WNDX's programming efforts is our
> New Prairie Cinema Showcase, developed via an open
> call for recent avant-garde film and video works by
> prairie artists (those currently living and working
> in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta, or who lived
> in the prairies for a significant period of time).
>
> The guiding principals our programming jury use to
> select works for inclusion in the program are:
> innovation in form, technique and / or in the
> treatment of the media.
>
> WNDX 2007 will be held October 4 - 7, 2007 in
> Winnipeg. Along-side our New Prairie Cinema
> Showcase, we will once again be featuring a variety
> of curated programs, visting artist talks and
> workshops, and the very popular One Take Super 8
> Event.

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Sunday, March 04, 2007

Call: Soil Digital Media Suite seeking Web Cinema production applicants

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: Web Cinema

The Saskatchewan Filmpool Cooperative and Soil Digital Media Suite
are currently accepting applications for Web Cinema. Web Cinema is a
co-production that seeks to explore the connection between the Web
and film as artistic mediums.

Submissions will be assessed on the artistic merit of the project,
the capacity of the independent filmmaker / artist to complete the
project and the conceptual relevance of the work proposed. All
projects must be created with the Web as a screening venue in mind.
Works should be between 4 and 15 minutes in length.

Proposals must be for new work not previously presented to an
audience and will be selected by a jury comprised of representatives
from the Saskatchewan Filmpool Co-operative and Soil. Production
resources will be available from both the Filmpool and Soil. Projects
must be ready to launch in October 2007 and be archived on the Soil
Web gallery site at http://www.soilmedia.org. Artists retain all
copyrights to their projects which can be linked or stored on Soil's
server. Funding is to be applied to costs for domain names, technical
specialists, membership fees.

Five $1,000.00 production honorariums will be awarded to five
successful applicants who must be independent artists / filmmakers
and who will retain all copyrights to their projects.

Please submit a brief (one-page) synopsis and / or treatment of your
project, a C.V. and 1 example of past work by March 30, 5:00 pm to
the Saskatchewan Filmpool Co-operative, 301-1822 Scarth Street,
Regina, SK (postal code).


If you have received this missive from someone other than Neutral
Ground and would like to be added to the list,
please email neutralground@accesscomm.ca with "ADD" as the subject line.

If you have received this missive in error or would like to be
removed from the list, please reply to
neutralground@accesscomm.ca with "REMOVE" as the subject line.


Neutral Ground & Soil Digital Media Suite
#203 - 1856 Scarth Street
Regina, SK
S4P 2G3
tel: 306-522-7166
fax: 306-522-5075
neutralground@accesscomm.ca


http://www.neutralground.sk.ca
http://www.soilmedia.org

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Sunday, February 11, 2007

Callout: STEM Cell Film Festival

The Film & Video Arts Society – Alberta (FAVA), Metro Cinema and Latitude 53
are pleased to introduce you to the first annual STEM Cell – a new Edmonton
event celebrating non-traditional media art and co-op culture.

STEM Cell emerges on April 12th, 2007, and will stay above ground until
April 15th.

Attached is a call for submissions for the STEM Cell Film Festival – one of
the main events at STEM Cell that will celebrate the role of our co-ops and
the fantastic talent of their members. The festival is looking for short
submissions from members of media arts co-ops near and far.

For more information about the STEM Cell Film Festival, please contact FAVA
at (780) 429-1671.

For more information about STEM Cell, keep your eye on stemcelledmonton.org
or contact FAVA, Metro Cinema or Latitude 53. We can be found at:

www.fava.ca
metrocinema.org
www.latitude53.org

Please distribute widely!

Alison Turner, Executive Director
FAVA The Film & Video Arts Society - Alberta
============================
p: 780. 429.1671
f: 780.429.3636
w:
fava._______________________________________________________________________
____

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