[P2P-F] Internet Interventions: Imperica magazine interviews Ruth Catlow of Furtherfield.

marc garrett marc.garrett at furtherfield.org
Fri May 13 12:22:57 CEST 2011


Internet Interventions: Imperica magazine interviews Ruth Catlow of 
Furtherfield.

Networks are disrupting our society. They offer new opportunities, while 
bringing age-old issues into sharper focus. If networks offer us a 
chance to engage and connect with others in order to crystallise 
thinking, the devices that provide a connection to them can be 
ecologically unpleasant. According to Ruth Catlow, we are nowhere near a 
harmonious resolution to these problems – even though we can almost feel 
them within our grasp.

Catlow is the co-founder and co-director of Furtherfield, a digital 
community of co-creators that are interested in the intersection between 
art and technology, complimented by the Furtherfield Gallery in north 
London, a space dedicated to the exhibition and performance of work. 
Underpinning the organisation is a creative approach which is inspired 
by the metaphors and material media of networks within art.

http://www.imperica.com/features/ruth-catlow-internet-interventions/

Furtherfield continues to offer new angles on received and perceived 
thinking. As arts funding starts to put digital creativity at risk, 
Catlow is adamant that, as digital media becomes more sophisticated and 
more connected, this is a space that should build, not shrink. "What 
gets missed out is how much value there is in a much more networked, 
lateral, thinking approach that isn't just about markets, but is pumping 
value into the communities that are engaged with it - that doesn't fit 
into the existing model of metrics. The value of this approach is missed."

Ruth Catlow is co-founder and co-director of Furtherfield. Re-rooting 
Digital Culture takes place on Friday 13 May at the University of 
Westminster.

Chair: John Hartley

Speakers: -

Michel Bauwens - On how Peer to Peer thought and technology point 
towards alternative production methods and a sustainable future.

Catherine Bottrill - On working with producers and consumers to consider 
the environmental long-tail of digital culture.

Ruth Catlow - On ecological approaches to tools, networks and behaviours 
in a digital art community.

http://www.furtherfield.org/event/re-rooting-digital-culture-media-art-ecologies





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