[Hackmeeting] [Fwd: [NetBehaviour] Tagged: 5 artists working…

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Author: jilt
Date:  
To: hackmeeting
Subject: [Hackmeeting] [Fwd: [NetBehaviour] Tagged: 5 artists working with RFID, opening 6 October at Space Media Arts]


muoritemi luridi infami
lo so che vi interessa....
percui ve la passo
ma non leggero' le vostre risposte perche' non siete degni.

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TAGGED
//Five new works by artists working with RFID technology as part an
ongoing project produced by [ space.media.arts ]//

Opening Reception: 6 October, 6 - 9pm; continuing until 21 October
With a performance by Paula Roush

Electronic tagging technologies are increasingly impacting society and are
set to shape the future. Standing for Radio Frequency Identification, RFID
tags use radio waves and can potentially function without your knowledge,
with widespread adoption across many commercial and public industries.

In this exhibition, the artist collaborative **Louis-Philippe Demers and
Philippe Jean** are working with local shop Hollywood Convenience
electronically tagging their grocery items to produce the artwork iTag.
Using a portable music device, available to pick up from the exhibition,
shoppers can listen to music generated from the grocery aisles.

RealSnailMail is a project in development by **boredomresearch**, using
RFID technology to enable real snails to carry and deliver electronic
messages on their own time, despite growing expectations of instant
communication.

**Mute-Dialogue (Yasser Rashid and Yara El-Sherbini)** have created the
interactive installation, Origins and Lemons. Arranged as an East End
market stall the installation invites you to pick up RFID-tagged items and
scan them to receive clues as to their history and origin.

In SWAPOId, **evoLhypergrapHyCx (C6)** implement RFID technology in the
Antisystemic Distributed Library Project, an alternative library of shared
books, videos, and music with venues in community centres and bedrooms
worldwide, and through this acting as but one site of resistance against a
de-humanising, de-dimensional agenda.

Arphield Recordings by **Paula Roush** records the sound of citizens
scanning their Oyster cards in London Underground stations, and outputs
them in live performance, installation and public intervention.

A new essay by **Armin Medosch**, The Spychip Under Your Skin, accompanies
this exhibition and will be published on a new [ space.media.arts ]
website: http://www.spacemedia.org.uk.

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FOR MORE INFORMATION

Email: exhibitions@???
Web: http://www.spacemedia.org.uk

vado mangiata cruda senno' non si sente il gusto del nervo.
jilt