Concurrent with the inauguration of the exhibition, the Crowds website has launched at http://crowds.stanford.edu. The Crowds project book is forthcoming from Stanford University Press in February 2006.
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SHL believes that some crucial questions about what it is to be human, about experience in a connected world, about the boundaries of culture and nature transcend old divisions between the arts, sciences and humanities; between the academy, industry and the cultural sphere. We engage in experimental projects with a "laboratory" ethos collaborative, co-creative, team-based involving a triangulation of arts practice, commentary/critique, and outreach, merging research, pedagogy, publication and practice. Beyond commentary and discussion, we build: new media, interactive archives, predictive models of social change, collaborative research workshops, art exhibitions. The SHL agenda encompasses animating archives - regenerating, bringing to life,
and fostering new modes of interaction with the storehouses of human, cultural, artistic, scientific achievement - our focus is on the question of the relationship of the human past to efforts at conservation and preservation Previous Posts
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Revolutionary Tides exhibition opens Sept. 14
In development since the foundation of SHL in 2000, the REVOLUTIONARY TIDES exhibition opened at the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford on Sept. 14, 2005. The show includes over one hundred and twenty objects from the poster collections of the Hoover Institution archives and The Wolfsonian-FIU, a well as 1/3 to 1/2 scale reconstructions of constructivist Gustav Klucis's agitprop media stations. Forthcoming also in Italian and French, the exhibition catalogue was published by Skira editore in Milan.
Concurrent with the inauguration of the exhibition, the Crowds website has launched at http://crowds.stanford.edu. The Crowds project book is forthcoming from Stanford University Press in February 2006. |
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