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<news>
  <content>&lt;p&gt;Group Show, 4/11-11/11/2006, 1-7pm &lt;br /&gt;
  Opening Event and Private View 4/11/2006, 4 -12 pm&lt;br /&gt;
  Closing Event 11/11/2006, 4-12 pm&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Auto-Italia South London Gallery &lt;br /&gt;
  82-86 Queens Road &lt;br /&gt;
  SE152QX Peckham, London &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;OpenLab is delighted to present OpenLab3, an group exhibition with an opening 
  and closing event featuring musical performances by more than 20 artists and 
  musicians of the OpenLab collective. OpenLab engages in the aesthetics and politics 
  of Free Open Source Software Culture. Free Software Culture seeks to emphasise 
  transparency of the creative process by making all stages of development available 
  to others, enabling them to learn how the creation works and alter it for their 
  own purposes. When this idea is applied to artistic practices, the boundaries 
  between the artistic usage of software tools and their collaborative development 
  become blurred. The workings of the artist's tools are exposed, and the artists 
  are actively engaged in developing media technologies. They can modify them 
  to suit their goals, rather than creating works by using existing tools that 
  impose &amp;quot;their way of doing things&amp;quot; on the artwork. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This group exhibition brings together interactive installations, sonic interventions, 
  video works and animations which explore the audio-visual code of this network 
  culture: computers start to paint pictures on their own, expose their internal 
  circuits and &amp;quot;commit suicide&amp;quot;; birds will sing and fly around in multiple 
  realities, the skylines of two cosmopolitan cities merge, language, meaning 
  and time burst into fragments and recombine. The range of the combined works 
  points to the strength of Open Source Culture &amp;#8211; its increasing versatility 
  as artistic playground essential to contemporary debates and its continued importance 
  not just in the invention of new media realities but also in tackling themes 
  of &amp;quot;real&amp;quot; time and space. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The two music events feature sound and multimedia performances of artists who 
  use and develop open-source tools such as PD, Supercollider, Processing and 
  Fluxus. They will perform prepared sets and code their music live in various 
  programing languages. Musicians will also experiment with a set of live instrument 
  swapping. By exchanging PD-Patches, they will challenge each other in an uncharted 
  space of sonic manipulation. The performances will span from excursions into 
  the symphonica, experimental noise and soundscapes to electronica and beat-oriented 
  minimal techno-sets. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;PARTICIPATING ARTISTS: Rob Canning, Chun Lee, Claude Heiland-Allen, Carl Forsell, 
  Sabine Gottfried, Karsten Gebbert, Paul Webb, Rob Munro, Chiharu Kaido, Evan 
  Raskob, U-Sun, Ryan Jordan, Oli Laruelle, Robert Atwood, Luke Jordan, Rene, 
  Monica Subrotova &amp;amp; Daniel Kordik, Michael Woelkner, Andy Farnell, Martin 
  Aaserud, Ryan Jordan &amp;amp; Rachel Horne, Dave Griffith &amp;amp; Alex McLean &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;For more information please visit :&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
  &lt;a href="http://www.fexia.com/openlab" onclick="window.open(this.href); return false;"&gt;http://www.fexia.com/openlab&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
  &lt;a href="http://openlab.pawfal.org" onclick="window.open(this.href); return false;"&gt;http://openlab.pawfal.org&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
  &lt;a href="http://www.midnightbluecollective.com" onclick="window.open(this.href); return false;"&gt;http://www.midnightbluecollective.com&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
  &lt;br /&gt;
   &lt;/p&gt;
</content>
  <date type="date">2006-10-29</date>
  <headline>Openlab3</headline>
  <id type="integer">58</id>
  <person-id type="integer">1</person-id>
</news>
