Categories
Archives
Clever family
links
- + Photos – gallery, media
- + Podcast – live, collaborations
- + Videos – micro docs, installations
- + Wiki – compositions, special projects
- apc.au
- Garton's MySpace
- Secession Records
- Terminal Quartet
Recent Posts
- Bleaching Jakarta
- On cacophony
- Skylines, gardens and memorable floor tiles
- I ain’t done with living yet…
- An afternoon on 9th and Rusterburg
Recent Comments
- agarton on Skylines, gardens and memorable floor tiles
- kath on Skylines, gardens and memorable floor tiles
- agarton on I ain’t done with living yet…
- rodg on I ain’t done with living yet…
- agarton on I ain’t done with living yet…
Sarawak Gone Micro-docs
Photo Gallery
Meta
License
~ 26/06/06
The iSummit has attracted former filmmakers, television producers, lawyers, IT specialists, remix artists and amongst the many more vocations declared here, we even had a “I was once a punk rocker” in our midst. They showed us photos of themselves in dreadlocks just to prove it. A few hours later they declared, “as a punk rocker...”!
In 1992 I wrote an article exploring the hopes and aspirations of a movement seeking to encourage the world's leadership to urgently address the environmental degradation that ails us still. I was in Rio for the Earth Summit.
There was no doubt a wave of hope that swept through all participants there, but despite the means being so apparent, we find ourselves in 2006 where this is talk of a resumption of commercial whaling and governments the world over are considering Nuclear as a “viable and clean” energy option. If, as Lawrence Lessig puts it, creativity is built on the past, clearly common sense is not.
If we're unable to address the big issues, how can we expect to deal with the details, that which contributes to the sum of many parts that constitute the power bases that sustain poverty, wealth and everything in between?
~ 25/06/06
Getting at least three articles up on iSummit06 blog including a revised and full version of the previous Road to Rio piece.
~ 20/06/06
Just completed version 1.2 of this CSA for the APC.
Make Training Work For You - Introducing itrainonline mmtk.
~ 12/06/06
It began with a single photo, a b/w self-portrait with the accompanying text, "open the door, leave the room".
http://www.flickr.com/photos/29518917@N00/78633614/
Flickr supports a commenting system which appends text from individual authors, other Flickr users, to individual photographs. From these comments one can cross-reference other people's photo archives enabling one to broaden out through countless networks, including tag threads and theme based content pools. One such thread grew from that photo, and from that thread grew a small community, from which new works were created, ideas built upon ideas generated a whole new set of photos including poems and references to inspirational texts and people. It lasted a good three months, but its influence was far reaching and affected the every day lives of these people, in ways that may never be truly known nor measured.
At the core of this community were a small group of young Turkish girls based in London. From their desire for a homeland that surrendered blue skys and seagull nights there grew stories of home sickness, lost love, heartache, dislocation and estrangement. In amongst the despair a garden grew, a secret garden of ideas where like minds and like concerns met, via a simple web page to share their losses and support each other, to express, inspire and excel themselves by way of a few simple words, "how deep can we go?".
The network that grew there, although initially inspired by a handful of photographs, drew together a community that would otherwise have never known each other. Across time-zones some labored into the night, others into the day, sharing stories, making friends... being there in the company of strangers and yet not, when their immediate world became less tangible for a time, only to be witnessed through the eye of a lens and the beat of a poem, to be encouraged and stimulated by the arrival of a new image or a reply to an email, some only seconds apart.


