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RENCONTRES ONLINE

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David Campbell, Franck Evers, André Gunthert, Karim Ben Khelifa
Fred Ritchin, Thomas Mailaender, Joan Fontcuberta, Penelope Umbrico
Pierre Haski, Marie Anne Ferry Fall, Guillaume Herbaut
Vincent Glad, Benjamin Chesterton, Brian Storm, Azyz Amami
Photography,
the internet & social networks

6 > 8 July 2011


In the course of the 1990s the new technologies—and more specifically the Internet and the digital revolution—triggered an ongoing restructuring of our sensory and mental environment. The fresh practices that were quick to take shape in the real and virtual domains went hand in hand with all kinds of upheavals and new issues:obliteration of the boundaries between information, advertising and art; market deregulation; far-reaching technological change; and industrial / economic approaches combining the work of amateurs as well as professionals.


At the same time the Internet made art the core of a nexus involving artists, computer specialists, technical systems and the public. What emerged was a more collective and interdisciplinary art practice, often with its roots in the Internet and social networks. The digital revolution, the new media and innovative forms of creation, narration, production, circulation and storage offered photography fresh sources of documentation, reflection and origination. Sites like Flickr, Second Life, Myspace, Wikipedia and YouTube stimulate a culture of sharing and in the image sphere have built up functions conducive to exchange and interaction. The goal is not to stockpile content, but to turn it into nodes for conversation and circulation. These features add up to a coherent system of socialisation of images. Out of this principle of content collectivisation has come a new state of the image as common property.The effective value of the image today lies in being shareable, which means that photographers, via the new networks and the Internet, are exploring the imprint of the real in a different way. By building their images out of a new, digital reality, artists are confronting the old boundaries, in some cases blocking them out and in others breaking through them. They are now using digital tools not only as a means for challenging both meaning and form, but also for raising questions to do with image objectivity.


At the same time it must be remembered that photographers, and creators of still images in general, are one of the categories most severely affected by the Internet in copyright terms: the problems being cut & paste downloading, massive commercial exploitation of their work by companies immune to legal action, and the steadily increasing growth of ‘copyright exempt’ online image banks .The symposium will also delve into photography’s relationship with the new sources represented by the Internet and the social networks, which have yet to find their place in the writing of history. This is a situation that calls for hard thinking about their possible inputs and their limitations. How has the Internet modified the image economy? What further changes lie in wait for images, and what will be their impact on tomorrow’s society and our perception of reality? What new uses are taking shape in the realm of photography? How are the social networks influencing creativity? What form is the emergence of an Internet-based art scene taking? What are the forces driving art in this context? What does it mean to be a creative artist? What forms of exhibition and viewer reception are evolving?


Overall direction by Jean-Noël Jeanneney, president of Rencontres

and François Hébel, director of the Rencontres.

Organized by Françoise Docquiert,

lecturer at Université de Paris I, Panthéon-Sorbonne.

Moderator: Pierre Haski, director of Rue 89.



Wednesday 6 July, 10 am to 1 pm / The Image Economy

How Internet changed our point of view on images? How photography, its broadcast and economy have changed because and thanks to those new medias?


Opening by Jean-Noël Jeanneney, chairman, lecturer at the École des Sciences Politiques de Paris, media historian specialised in the relationship between photography and the Internet;

André Gunthert, researcher at the EHESS, director of the Laboratoire d’histoire visuelle contemporaine (Lhivic), editor of Culture Visuelle L’image fluide;

David Campbell, photography consultant, writer, award-winning multimedia producer, and member of the Durham Centre for Advanced Photography Studies at Durham University;

Frank Evers, founder of INSTITUTE, a management company representing leading visual artists, president of Evergreen Pictures, a production company serving clients in the broadcast, commercial and cultural fields;

Karim Ben Khelifa, photographer, founding member of the website www.emphas.is.

Thursday 7 July, 10 am to 1 pm / Photography and the Internet

What are the terms for the outbreak of a photographic world centered on the Internet? What could lead to it? What does it mean to be an author? What are the new ways of exhibiting and understanding those oeuvres?


Joan Fontcuberta, photographer, co-curator of From Here On with Clément Cheroux, Erik Kessels, Martin Parr and Joachim Schmid;

Penelope Umbrico, lecturer in photography, visual and related media at the School of Visual Arts, New York City;

Thomas Mailaender, artist and multimedia photographer;

Fred Ritchin, lecturer at the New York University Tisch School of the Art, editor-in-chief for the New York Times Magazine (1978-82) and Camera Arts magazine (1982-83), curator of the New York Photo Festival in 2010, the director of PixelPress;

Guillaume Herbaut, photographer, founding member of L’oeil Public, he works on the Internet to produce documentaries (La Zone, interactive work on the prohibited zone of Tchernobyl shown in the Gaité Lyrique);

Marie Anne Ferry Fall, legal director of ADAGP (the rights of the authors in the visual arts).

Friday 8 July, 10 am to 1 pm / Photography and social networks (flash back on the tunisian Arab Spring)

How social networks change our creativity and information? How one could fiddle on the Internet via Facebook, Twitter and blogs and broadcast information? How collaborative websites invent tools to get around censorship?


Lina ben Mhenni, teacher, bloger, journalist and prime eye-witness of the Arab Spring in Tunisia;

Brian Storm, founding member and director of MediaStorm, a multimedia production studio broadcasting on the Internet;

Benjamin Chesterton, co-founder with David White of the website Duckrabbit, working with photography and social networks;

Vincent Glad, journalist on Slate.fr, student in Arts et Langages in the EHESS;

Azyz Amami, or azyz405, a Tunisian blogger, took part in the Arab Spring.