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IPAK
- 10,000 SONGS, 10,000 IMAGES, 10,000 ABUSES
(14 March 2008)
An
interactive science-art work, 'iPak - 10,000 songs, 10,000 images,
10,000 abuses', developed by artist Ajaykumar, will be launched
online on 14 March 2008. 'iPak' is a series of three interconnecting
evolving internet art works exploring themes of art as medicine,
mental illness and racism. The online exhibition will reflect artistic
responses to recent scientific research that indicates that black
people are several times more likely than white people to suffer
from mental illness, and that the causes are social rather than
genetic.
The
research indicates that racism engenders mental illness. In a BBC
interview, one of these researchers, Professor Robin Murray of the
Institute of Psychiatry, stated that the very experience of living
in the United Kingdom almost drives black people mad. With increasing
migration and multiculturalism in many of the world's countries,
racism and its engendering of mental illness is becoming a significant
global phenomenon. Critically, the submitted works will also explore
art as therapy and healing, a way of channelling insight from madness.
The
art works will be displayed in three continually changing forms
- 'chaos,' 'jukebox' and 'platform.' 'chaos' will be a generative
art work, a constantly shifting, random interplay of video, still
images, poetry and music, creating a transforming montage eliciting
new meanings, ideas and emotions. The 'jukebox' component will offer
the user playful interactivity, allowing her/him to choose the sounds
and music to accompany the ever-changing collage. Finally, 'platform'
is composed of a gallery to which anyone can upload their art work
and create blogs/forums on the themes of the project.
CALL
FOR SUBMISSIONS
Artists
and all individuals are invited to submit material related to the
themes of the project by uploading items onto the 'platform' component.
This material will also be fed into 'chaos' and 'jukebox,' thus
continuing its evolution into a relational art work. The prospective
participation of hundreds of individuals offering their submissions
over the next few years will bring the three art forms fully into
being, feeding into a work that both transforms second by second
and evolves over a number of years.
Curator
and founder of the project and Lecturer at Goldsmiths, Ajaykumar
says: "The work combines conceptual originality, playfulness,
and original engagement with disturbing cultural and social themes.
It explores possibilities of generative art as re-generative force."
ABOUT
AJAYKUMAR
Ajaykumar
is a critically acclaimed artist - initially in performance - but
now spanning multiple media, including internet art, installation,
site-specific art, film, video, design, architecture, creative writing,
dance and live art. He lectures on Technology, Art and Philosophy
at Goldsmiths; and he is a member of the Transnational Art, Identity
and Nation (TrAIN) research centre at the University of the Arts,
London.
The
'iPak' project has been commissioned by Turbulence and funded by
the National Endowment of the Arts (USA), and will be viewable until
28 February 2010. Founded in New York in 1996,
www.turbulence.org has commissioned, exhibited and archived
over 150 networked art projects. It is a project of New Radio and
Performing Arts, Inc. (NRPA).
More
information is available at www.iPak.org.uk
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