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19 Oct 2009

City as Stage, City as Process - MIT Visual Arts Program Lecture Series Fall 2009


Photo: The Yes Men (Andy Bichlbaum, left; Mike Bonanno, right)

Monday, October 26, 2009
7:00pm
'Propaganda City'
http://visualarts.mit.edu

Info

The activist collective The Yes Men transformed New York City for a day through a tactical media intervention. A hoax print of the New York Times was massively distributed throughout the city during the US presidential election campaign in 2008.

Contact

vap@mit.edu
001-617-253-5229

Address

http://visualarts.mit.edu
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bartos Theater
(Building E15, Wiesner Building)
20 Ames Street
Cambridge, MA, USA
Map

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The Yes Men have an unusual hobby: posing as top executives of corporations they hate. Armed with nothing but thrift store suits, The Yes Men lie their way into business conferences and parody their corporate targets in ever more extreme ways - basically doing everything that they can to wake up their audiences to the danger of letting greed run our world. The Yes Men were featured in the documentary, The Yes Men Fix the World, which won the Panorama Audience Award at the 2009 Berlin Film Festival.

This lecture series, City as Stage, City as Process, brings together speakers from art and (counter) culture, architecture, urbanism, and media technology to discuss such questions as: In what way is the city not a fixed entity, but a process? How do artists and cultural activists reclaim the street, activating the city as backdrop and insisting on the right to a public sphere? What makes a city a city? Who owns the city? How can media technology be designed to intervene in and navigate the city? The MIT Visual Arts Program (VAP) lecture series is directed by Ute Meta Bauer and Amber Frid-Jimenez. On the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the VAP this term, the lecture series highlights the issues at the core of the academic program and the work and research of the faculty.

LECTURE SERIES SCHEDULE

09/28/09 - Factory City

Christoph Schaefer
In the new urban fabric, subcultures, cultural workers, musicians and artists play a significant role as producers of collective spaces, of places shaped by desires, and as inventors of new perspectives and lifestyles. Christoph Schaefer will introduce Park Fiction, a collective self-organised project that sought to break an expensive piece of land at the prestigeous riverbank of Hamburg St. Pauli out of the grip of real estate developers. This fight by residents, along with artists, for the right to the city, and against gentrification, succeeded in the creation of a public park with a harbor view. Hamburg-based German conceptual artist Christoph Schaefer focuses on urban space and how it can be altered through art.

10/05/09 - Performative City

Joan Jonas
Performance and video pioneer Joan Jonas screens and discusses her outdoor performance pieces Jones Beach Piece, Nova Scotia Beach Piece, and Delay, Delay that she developed into a video piece titled Song Delay (1973). First performed in lower Manhattan in 1972, the footage was shot from the roof of a loft building. From there, the audience overlooked the performance taking place in empty lots below with a view to the distant docks of the Lower West Side. Performing with a cast that included Gordon Matta-Clark, Jonas choreographed a theater of space, movement and sound with the urban landscape of New York in a featured role. She performed this piece a second time in Rome, where the audience watched the performance from the other side of the Tiber riverbank. Joan Jonas is a professor in the MIT Visual Arts Program, teaching performance and related media.

10/19/09 - Public City
Antoni Muntadas
Artist Muntadas investigates notions of 'City' and 'public.' Is there still a public space? Is the city a place for interventions? City authorities and the private sector provide surveillance and control. Yet it is the city dwellers who should make critical decisions over the city. Can they? What contribution can artists, architects, designers, city planners make today to this discussion? Antoni Muntadas is a visiting Professor of the Practice in the MIT Visual Arts Program. In his teaching, Muntadas focuses on the shift of public art to the production of public spheres through artistic intervention.

10/26/09 - Propaganda City
Mike Bonanno of the The Yes Men
The activist collective The Yes Men transformed New York city for a day through a tactical media intervention. A hoax print of the New York Times was massively distributed throughout the city during the US presidential election campaign in 2008. The Yes Men have an unusual hobby: posing as top executives of corporations they hate. Armed with nothing but thrift-store suits, they lie their way into business conferences and parody their corporate targets in ever more extreme ways.

11/02/09 - Protest City
Ana Miljacki, Nomeda Urbonas
Architect and architecture theorist Ana Miljacki speaks about her project Classes, Masses, Crowds. Representing The Collective Body and The Myth of Direct Knowledge. Miljacki is an Assistant Professor in MIT's Department of Architecture. Nomeda Urbonas, member of the Lithuanian artist collective Gediminas and Nomeda Urbonas, talks about the concept, process, and outcome of their project Pro-test Lab, a multi-dimensional project to save a historical cinema in Vilnius.

11/09/09 - Fragmented City
Angus Boulton
Berlin-based English photographer Angus Boulton talks about his photo series Richtung Berlin currently on view at the Wolk Gallery in MIT's Department of Architecture. This 'Becoming Berlin' event is collaboration between the MIT Museum and the MIT Visual Arts Program on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of the fall of the Berlin wall. Boulton's Berlin images are currently on view at the Wolk Gallery in MIT's Department of Architecture.

11/16/09 - Porous City
Krzysztof Wodiczko
Artist Krzysztof Wodiczko introduces his critical design proposals including Poliscar and Homeless Vehicles. Wodiczko's work points toward the search for the city to come, one which provides a space that allows for disagreement, a prerequisite for democracy. This lecture coincides with his solo show at the ICA Boston, which will be open November 4, 2009 to March 28, 2010. Wodiczko is a professor in the MIT Visual Arts Program and Director of the Interrogative Design Workshop and the Center for Advanced Visual Studies at MIT.

ABOUT US

The MIT Visual Arts Program offers a two-year Masters of Science in Visual Studies (SMVisS). The program emphasizes the development of artistic practices focusing on artistic research and transdisciplinary studies. The program is part of the Department of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology