1. Audio Forensic

    Title: Audio Forensic
    Location: IMT Gallery- Image Music and Text
    Description: Comprising of ambitious works by nine artists who employ sound as the principle media of their practice, Audio Forensics demonstrates the breadth of engagement with sound in the arts, and how it can be re-evaluated in the context of an increasingly noisy world. The artists exhibiting are Libero Colimberti, Jan Hendrickse, Simone Izzi, Nitin Lachhani, Luc Messinezis, Maria Papadomanolaki, Vytis Puronas, Mark Shorey and Mark Wright.

    I M T
    UNIT 2/210 CAMBRIDGE HEATH ROAD
    LONDON E2 9NQ UK

    Audio Forensics is an exhibition and symposium presenting the final work of the first MA Sound Arts graduates of London College of Communication. The groundbreaking work in the exhibition demonstrates the high level of critical debate in sonic disciplines fostered by the university’s Department of Sound Art and Design since 1998. The exhibition is co-curated by ELECTRA and IMT
    Start Time: 18:00
    Date: 2008-11-27

    Sound art encompasses a wide range of forms and concerns and has its
    precedence across many creative fields, yet, as these artists demonstrate, the
    acknowledgment of sound’s significance in the arts is becoming of greater
    importance as technologies develop, and as the public become ever more
    aware of the interactions between sound, space and artistic practice.

    Some of the works make one aware of interactions with sound that are often
    overlooked, such as the effect of sonic frequencies on the body in Shorey’s
    work. Puronas’s audiovisual installation immerses the visitor in questions
    of reality, hyper-reality and the authenticity of digital technology, whilst Izzi
    turns installation against the audience as an analogy of the psychological
    pressures of contemporary society. Others, such as Messinezis’s collection
    of sonic curiosities, in an audio equivalent to the Wunderkammer, or
    Lachhani’s extraordinary 3D sculptures of sound waves, translate sound
    into contexts more familiar in the visual arts presenting experiences that are
    at once recognisable and alien.

    Other work in the exhibition explores and re-evaluates major disciplines in
    sound art, whether through Hendrickse’s compositional use of air currents
    to play both musical and non-musical instruments, or Colimberti’s
    subversion of the use of music and the sound effect in film. Likewise
    Papadomanolaki and Wright explore the field recording as a discipline
    through which to narrate place, the space outside the gallery and the Abbeys
    of the north of England respectively, demonstrating the capacity of sound to
    evoke absent environments in very tangible ways.

    As a whole the exhibition provides an extraordinarily comprehensive enquiry
    into how sound, and its manipulation, influences our experience and
    understanding of our environment.

    On Sunday 30th November there will be a symposium in which keynote
    speakers Ben Borthwick, Assistant Curator at Tate Modern, and Steven
    Connor, professor of Modern Literature and Theory at Birkbeck, will address
    issues of sonic practice raised by the exhibition. This event will also give
    visitors the opportunity to talk to the artists personally about their work.

    Audio Forensics is an exhibition and symposium presenting the final work of
    the first MA Sound Arts graduates of London College of Communication. The
    groundbreaking work in the exhibition demonstrates the high level of critical
    debate in sonic disciplines fostered by the university’s Department of Sound
    Art and Design since 1998. The exhibition is co-curated by ELECTRA and
    IMT.


  2. Africa Now!

    Title: Africa Now!
    Location: Barbican Hall
    Description: Featuring Baaba Maal, Amadou & Mariam, Bassekou Kouyate, Oumou Sangare, Muntu Valdo, Toumani Diabate, Amy Sacko, Souad Massi, Rachid Taha, Sola Akingbola, Daara J Family + more guests tbc
    Start Time: 19:30
    Date: 23 October 2008


  3. DOT DOT DOT 17

    Title: DOT DOT DOT 17
    Location: The Studio, Embankment Galleries, Somerset House, The Strand, LONDON
    Description: David Reinfurt will explain Naive Set Theory with an overhead projector
    Malcolm McLaren (in absentia) will talk to Mark & Stephen Beasley (in
    absentia)
    Stuart Bailey will describe the science, fiction of E.C. Large, and
    inaugurate the republishing of 2 novels
    Start Time: 19:00
    Date: 2008-10-31


  4. DOT DOT DOT 17

    Title: DOT DOT DOT 17
    Location: The Studio, Embankment Galleries, Somerset House, The Strand, LONDON
    Description: Jennifer Higgie and Johnny Vivash will read from (and around) Carnival
    Theory, a play-in-progress
    Dan Fox will play an extended version of Refracted Light Through Armory Show
    Agency will recount the copyright case of Papa Hemingway
    Start Time: 19:00
    Date: 2008-10-30


  5. DOT DOT DOT 17

    Title: DOT DOT DOT 17
    Location: The Studio, Embankment Galleries, Somerset House, The Strand, LONDON
    Description: James Goggin (and others) will itemize ways of reading in London, 2008
    Richard Hollis will listen to the image
    Will Holder will speak of the poetics of concrete poetry and documenting
    the work of Falke Pisano
    Mike Sperlinger will introduce Stefan Themerson & Language
    Start Time: 19:00
    Date: 2008-10-29


  6. KÄMMER KLANG

    Title: KÄMMER KLANG
    Location: Charlie Wright\’s International Bar - 45 PITFIELD STREET N1 6DA
    Description: With special guests Oren Marshall and Maurizio Ravalico, KÄMMER KLANG continue to bring a night of modern classical, electronic and improvised music
    Start Time: 20:30
    Date: 2008-10-28

    IT IS TIME… KÄMMER KLANG
    number two is ready for your ears….

    With special guests Oren Marshall and Maurizio Ravalico,
    KÄMMER KLANG continue to bring a night of modern classical,
    electronic and improvised music to your favourite drinking hole.

    Charlie Wright’s International Bar
    Tuesday October 28th
    8.30pm
    £5 on the door

    Come and support this exciting new night, have some Thai, hear some great and rarely performed new music whilst tasting the range of good beers from the bar…..

    THE MUSIC:
    * OREN MARSHALL & MAURIZIO RAVALICO DUO
    Tuba and Congas

    * ALFRED SCHNITTKE A Paganini for solo violin
    David Worswick - violin

    * STEVE REICH Pendulum for microphones, amplifiers and performers
    Sound Engineer - Isambard Kroustaliouv

    * LOUIS ANDRIESSON Workers Union
    Vicky Wright - Bass Clarinet / Sasha Koushk-Jalali - Tuba / Rob Ames - Viola /
    Sarah Cresswell - Percussion / Lucy Railton - cello


  7. Thomas Hirschhorn, Doing Art politically: What Does This Mean?

    Title: Thomas Hirschhorn, Doing Art politically: What Does This Mean?
    Location: The Geological Society Lecture Room, Burlington House, Piccadilly, London
    Description: The Royal Academy Schools Annual Lecture:
    a talk by Thomas Hirschhorn ‘Doing Art politically: What Does This Mean?’ (booking 0844 209 0360 / fee: £7.00/£4.00 inc.)
    Start Time: 18:30
    Date: 2008-11-05

    The Royal Academy Schools will hold its first annual lecture on 5th November 2008. The inaugural lecture will be given by artist Thomas Hirschhorn and is entitled DOING ART POLITICALLY: WHAT DOES IT MEAN?

    Thomas Hirschhorn who was born in Switzerland in 1957, initially worked in Paris as a graphic designer during the 1980’s with Communist design group Grapus. He left Grapus to focus on installation pieces. He is best known for his site specific installation works, which can be found both inside and outside the gallery setting. Hirschhorn says “Today there is great confusion about the question concerning what ‘Political’ and ‘political’ are. I am only interested in what is really political, the ‘Political’ with a capital P, the political that implicates: Where do I stand? Where does the other stand? What do I want? What does the other want? The ‘political’ with a small p, the opinions and forging of the majorities, does not interest, and has never interested me. For I am concerned with making my art politically.“

    The annual lecture will form part of one of four annual events run by the Royal Academy Schools which are open to both the public and Royal Academy Schools students alike.

    The events are supported by the David Lean Foundation.

    The Royal Academy Schools are run by artists for artists and is a leading centre for the postgraduate study of fine art; offering the only three-year, full time course in the UK. The RA Schools offer a forum for a lively programme of events, with lectures and individual tutorials provided by Royal Academicians, international contemporary artists, critics, writers and theorists.


  8. The First Pictures I Enjoyed

    Title: The First Pictures I Enjoyed
    Location: Frieze Talks
    Description: Writer and artist Alasdair Gray in conversation with novelist and artist Tom McCarthy.


    Start Time: 15:00
    Date: 2008-10-17


  9. The Aesthetic Responsibility

    Title: The Aesthetic Responsibility
    Location: Frieze Talks
    Description: Writer, curator and philosopher Boris Groys will give a keynote lecture on how design today functions as a leading medium of self-revelation and self-positioning in public space. Arguing that design has acquired a new ethical dimension, he contends that where there was once religion, there is now design.
    Start Time: 17:00
    Date: 2008-10-16


  10. The Ideology of the \’Iconic\’

    Title: The Ideology of the \’Iconic\’
    Location: ARCHITECTURAL ASSOCIATION
    Description: Love her or loathe her\’ says Kirsty Wark of Madonna, \’you cannot underestimate the impact she has had on music, or her iconic status.\’
    The word \’iconic\’ might be the best way into a discussion of where postmodernism\’s collapse of high and low has led us: to a situation in which opting out of mass market phenomena simply isn\’t considered to be an option. The \’iconic\’ as an ideology means that, regardless of taste, we all have to pay attention to – and analyse, preferably in a sub-Barthesian manner infused with terms like \’guilty pleasures\’ and \’getting my fix\’ – a new canon in which commercial status and cultural status are one and the same thing. As a result, even in the academy quantitative terms have swamped qualitative ones, and criticism – co-opted and confounded by the comforting repetitions of celebrity culture and PR – is in crisis. As we approach the end of this postmodern tyranny, Momus signals what he calls Unpop as one possible exit strategy.

    Momus is a singer, writer and artist living in Berlin. As well as 18 albums of \’disorienteering\’ pop music, he\’s written for Wired, Frieze, and has a weekly design and culture slot on the website of the New York Times. His first novel, The Book of Jokes, will appear in 2009, when Sternberg will also publish his Book of Scotlands, a piece of speculative non-fiction listing 1000 parallel world Scotlands.

    Future guests in the ‘Pop and Populism’ Lecture series include Sam Jacob.

    Start Time: 18:00
    Date: 2008-10-14