NODE.London – States of Interdependence

NODE.London – States of Interdependence

A collaborative text written by Marc Garrett and Ruth Catlow, for “Media Mutandis: A Node.London Reader” (to be published in February 2006)

There is a Sufi fable in which a group of foreigners sit at breakfast, excitedly discussing their previous night’s exploration. One starts saying “…and what about that great beast we came across in the darkest part of the Jungle? It was like a massive, rough wall.” The others look perplexed. “No it wasn’t!” says one, “It was some kind of python”. “Yeah…” another half-agrees, “…but it also had powerful wings”. The shortest of the group looks bemused- “well it felt like a tree trunk to me.”

This fable aptly illustrates many aspects of the NODE.London experience. The name, which stands for Networked Open Distributed Events in London, indicates the open, lateral structure adopted to develop a season of media arts. It is intentionally extensible, suggesting possible future NODE(s), Rio, Moscow, Mumbai etc. As participants/instigators in the project’s ongoing conceptualization and praxis, we are just two individuals positioned on the interlaced, scale-free networks of NODE.L (more on these later). As such, our descriptions of this collectively authored project are inevitably incomplete and contestable, with a complete picture emerging only in negotiation with others.

Scale-free networks such as the network of Nodes are constantly adopted by NODE.L’s to facilitate the emergence of a grass roots media arts culture in London and in building its own organisational and communication structure. The Internet is a scale-free network. Scale-free networks are described by scientists as maintaining their levels of connectivity regardless of their size. They do this by linking small ‘clusters’ of locally networked nodes to more massively linked hubs, which are in turn connected to each other. Theoretically this allows one to link from one node on a local cluster to another distant, local node with just a couple of steps through the hubs. This creates the “small world” phenomena whereby anyone on the network is felt to be close to any other as well as to the centre.

To read more of the article visit Mazine:
http://www.mazine.ws/NODE.L_Interdependence.

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More bout NODE.London:
NODE.London [Networked, Open, Distributed, Events. London] is committed to building the infrastructure and raising the visibility of media arts practice in London. Working on an open, collaborative basis, NODE.London will culminate, in its first year, in a month long season of media arts projects across London in March 2006. http://nodel.org/

Media Mutandis: A NODE.London Reader:
A survey of media arts, technologies and politics which aims to provide a critical context for NODE.London’s activities as an evolving media arts production and infrastructure-building project. A 1000 publications will be printed initially and sold at a low price at the events of the March season. Contributing authors and artists include: Armin Medosch, Simon Yuill and Chad McCail, Adam Hyde, Sabeth Buchmann, Ruth Catlow and Marc Garrett, Michael Corris, Matthew Fuller, Graham Harwood/Mongrel, Richard Barbrook and Neil Cummings.

The publication is engineerd via the Print On Demand system by NODE.London partner OpenMute. It will be available as a printed and bound volume, a PDF document on the publication website (url tbc) and the texts will be made available in formatted versions individually for editing and recompilation by readers, who can either order a printed and bound version of their selections through Print On Demand or simply print them off at home. Readers can also become ‘agents,’ or distributors – please see www.metamute.org for a fuller explanation of the magic potential of POD.

announcement for the launch of Deptford.TV on 03/03/06

Deptford.tv is an audio-visual documentation of the regeneration process of the Deptford area in collaboration with SPC.org media lab, Bitnik.org, the Boundless.coop, Liquid Culture and Goldsmiths College.

Since September 2005 we started assembling AV material around the regeneration process of the Deptford area, asking community members, video artist, film-makers, visual artists and students to contribute statements, feedbacks, critiques of the regeneration process of Deptford.
This rough material as well as edited media content will be made available on the Deptford.TV database and distributed over the boundless.coop wireless network an open content license such as the creative commons and the gnu general public license.

In March 2006 Deptford.TV will launch with hands-on database filmmaking workshops to be held at a media lab installed at dek.spc.org in Greenwich. On the 25th of March a "best of" selection of the regeneration documentation will be screened on ³the boat² opposite the Laban Dance Centre and on public screens over the boundless.coop network.
On the 24th of march a walk will take place through the Deptford regeneration area past public screens which will distribute over the wireless network boundless the content produced during the Deptford TV database workshop; invited are all the people involved and interested in the regeneration process such as architects, members of the local communities, community activists, artists, students and more. The walk will be organised in collaboration with experts from the Centre for Urban Studies and Community Research (CUCR) as well as members of the community (Deptford Community Forum).

On the 25th of march a "remix" conference will be held at Goldsmith College. This conference will showcase the work of the Deptford.TV workshops and discuss the regeneration process in Deptford with architects, artists and people involved and/or interested in the process.
The workshops and events are free and open to all those interested to take part in this project.