Triple Canopy show

Triple Canopy

Summary: Podcasts from Triple Canopy, an online magazine, workspace, and platform for curatorial activities. Podcast episodes include live recordings from our public programs, as well as curated audio projects. Working collaboratively with writers, artists, and researchers, Triple Canopy facilitates projects that engage the Internet’s specific characteristics as a public forum and as a medium.

Podcasts:

 Ghost in the Machine by Karen Gregory, Alice Marwick & Frank Pasquale with Sam Frank | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

A conversation about the human future of automation, in finance, health care, and law enforcement.

 Period Styles by Eric Hu, Lisa Naftolin & Susan Sellers with William S. Smith | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

A roundtable on what it means in graphic design for a period to have a style and for a style to have a proper period.

 The Internet Hate Machine by Gabriella Coleman & Ben Wizner | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

A conversation about online surveillance, privacy, resistance, and Anonymous, the shadowy collective of hackers, activists, and trolls.

 CiCi Better CC Me by Andrew Durbin & Lucy Ives | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Andrew Durbin reads his poem, “You Are My Ducati,” and speaks with Lucy Ives about poetry and prose, Ciara and Beyoncé, the lyric and the sublime.

 The Story of My Accident Is Ours: A Reading by Rachel Levitsky | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Hear author Rachel Levitsky read from her new novel, The Story of My Accident Is Ours, during late hours for B. Wurtz's exhibition, "History Works" at Bureau. “History Works” consisted of three new sculptures, each paired with a photograph that distorts the scale of the object or confounds perspective, echoing the artist’s seminal Photo/Object series. An iteration of Wurtz's project, also titled "History Works," was published in issue 18 of Triple Canopy. As Rachel argues, in a recent interview with Triple Canopy deputy editor Lucy Ives, "I emphatically don’t buy into the notion that avant-garde writing is inaccessible. That notion makes me nuts. There is parochialism in both mainstream writing and avant-garde writing, by which a set of requirements becomes more important than the power of intervention. I think the role of the avant-garde is not to represent the present in past tense terms, but rather to make the present in present tense forms." Experience these present tense forms aloud!

 The Story of My Accident Is Ours: A Reading by Rachel Levitsky | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Hear author Rachel Levitsky read from her new novel, The Story of My Accident Is Ours, during late hours for B. Wurtz’s exhibition, “History Works” at Bureau.

 Critical Language: A Forum on International Art English by The Editors | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

A recording of Critical Language, Triple Canopy's forum on "International Art English," a widely circulated essay on the relationship between language, legibility, and power in the art world written by Alix Rule and David Levine and published in issue 16. Participants in the forum, which took place in April, included the authors and Wenzel Bilger, Lauren Cornell, Mariam Ghani, Mostafa Heddaya, Alexander Provan, Yael Reinharz, Lumi Tan, and Hrag Vartanian. In "International Art English," Rule and Levine, analyze a corpus of press releases circulated by e-flux in order to describe the language of contemporary art. They trace the particularities of this language to English translations of critical texts published in the 1970s in journals like October. The widespread use of the Internet has, they argue, accelerated the development of IAE, turning it into a kind of lingua franca; the proliferation of international variations—French IAE, Scandinavian IAE, Chinese IAE—ends up diluting the authority of critics, "traditionally the elite innovators of IAE." Given these developments, Rule and Levine ask: "Can we imagine an art world without IAE? Without its special language, would art need to submit to the scrutiny of broader audiences and local ones? Would it hold up?" With this forum, Triple Canopy aimed to provoke a critical response to the article, consider questions and perspectives eschewed by the authors, and solicit the perspectives of those who work with (or resist working with) IAE, whether they are critics, curators, educators, or publicists. Specifically, the discussion focused on the political implications and uses of IAE, within and outside of the art world. How does "critical" language direct attention away from the suppression of political dissent, especially when employed by institutions—and their proxies—operating in environments marred by human-rights violations, such as China and the UAE (or even the US)? How does obfuscation slip into propaganda? And do those who regularly produce IAE experience the language as burdensome or liberating, a welcome tool for the diffusion of power or another step toward a global standard of ambiguity and opacity?

 Critical Language: A Forum on International Art English by Triple Canopy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

A recording of Critical Language, Triple Canopy’s forum on “International Art English,” a widely circulated essay on the relationship between language, legibility, and power in the art world written by Alix Rule and David Levine and published in issue 16.

 Novel Operations by Jim Fletcher | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

A recording of a performance marking the release of Corrected Slogans: Reading and Writing Conceptualism, by actor Jim Fletcher with Lakpa Bhutia, Alex Delinois, Sam Frank, Jordan Lord, and Ariana Reines. The performance, which took place at Artists Space Books & Talks on March 29, 2013, draws on various literary formats included in Corrected Slogans—transcripts, footnotes, stanzas, dialogue, indexes, and a lexicon—to interpret and amplify the book’s many textual registers, unraveling dialogues and vocalizing wordplay. Corrected Slogans is the culmination of the multipart project Corrected Slogans (A Publication in Four Acts), which was conceived as Triple Canopy’s contribution to “Postscript: Writing after Conceptual Art,” an exhibition organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver. The book, which hinges on annotated transcripts of a series of public conversations, represents a collective effort to establish a new critical discourse around conceptual art and poetics.

 Novel Operations by Jim Fletcher | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

A recording of a performance marking the release of Corrected Slogans: Reading and Writing Conceptualism.

 Antisocial Network by Triple Canopy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Listen in for an evening of readings by poets Donald Dunbar, Jane Gregory, Joe Luna, K. Silem Mohammad, and Jacob Wren, originally hosted by Triple Canopy, publishers Fence and The Song Cave, and digital poetry journal The Claudius App, on March 8th, 2013, at the Cambridge, MA offices of The Harvard Advocate.

 Antisocial Network by The Editors | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Listen in for an evening of readings by poets Donald Dunbar, Jane Gregory, Joe Luna, K. Silem Mohammad, and Jacob Wren, originally hosted by Triple Canopy, publishers Fence and The Song Cave, and digital poetry journal The Claudius App, on March 8th, 2013, at the Cambridge, MA offices of The Harvard Advocate, the oldest continuously published collegiate literary journal in America. Here we celebrate the publication of Triple Canopy's newest work of research into the intersection of contemporary art and writing, Corrected Slogans: Reading and Writing Conceptualism, as well as Jane Gregory's first full-length book, the intriguingly titled, My Enemies, and a new issue from The Claudius App. * * * Donald Dunbar is the author of the chapbooks You Are So Pretty (Scantily Clad Press, 2009) and Click Click (Gold Wake Press, 2010), and of Eyelid Lick (Fence Books), which won the 2012 Fence Modern Poets Series. He lives in Portland, Oregon, where he co-curates the reading series If Not For Kidnap and teaches poetry to future chefs at Oregon Culinary Institute. Jane Gregory is from Tucson, Arizona. She has an MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and is currently working towards a PhD from the University of California at Berkeley. She lives in Berkeley, California. Her book My Enemies will be released by The Song Cave in early 2013. Joe Luna lives in Brighton, UK, where he runs the Hi Zero reading series and edits Hi Zero magazine. Crater Press published the letterpress fold Google Song in November 2011; his poems have appeared in, among others, Poems, Written Between October and December 2010 (Grasp Press), The Claudius App (online), Better than Language: An Anthology of New Modernist Poetries (Ganzfeld Press), FRIENDS (Critical Documents), The Cambridge Literary Review, Sous les Pavés, Damn the Cæsars, Lana Turner, and The Death and Life of American Cities. A booklet, LVRSLVRSLVRSLVRS, was privately distributed in 2010; the .pdf epic FAILCORE is still public. A new book, ASTROTURF, is forthcoming. K. Silem Mohammad is the author of several books of poetry, including Deer Head Nation (Tougher Disguises, 2003), A Thousand Devils (Combo, 2004), Breathalyzer (Edge, 2008), The Front (Roof, 2009), and Monsters (forthcoming, Edge Books). In his current project, The Sonnagrams, Mohammad anagrammatizes Shakespeare’s Sonnets into all-new English sonnets in iambic pentameter. He is also editor of the poetry magazine Abraham Lincoln and faculty editor of West Wind Review. He is an associate professor in the English & Writing program at Southern Oregon University. Jacob Wren is a writer and maker of eccentric performances. His books include: Unrehearsed Beauty, Families Are Formed Through Copulation, and Revenge Fantasies of the Politically Dispossessed. As co-artistic director of Montreal-based interdisciplinary group PME-ART he has co-created: En français comme en anglais, it's easy to criticize, Unrehearsed Beauty / Le génie des autres, La famille se crée en copulant and the ongoing HOSPITALITÉ / HOSPITALITY series. In 2007 he was invited by Sophiensaele (Berlin) to adapt and direct Wolfgang Koeppen's 1954 novel Der Tod in Rom and in 2008 he was commissioned by Campo (Ghent) to collaborate with Pieter De Buysser on An Anthology of Optimism. He travels internationally with alarming frequency and frequently writes about contemporary art.

 The Making of Americans on WKCR by Sam Frank, Lucy Ives & Dan Visel | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Columbia University radio station WKCR's Blair McClendon interviewed Triple Canopy editors Sam Frank, Lucy Ives, and Dan Visel about the annual marathon reading of Gertrude Stein's The Making of Americans, which took place in January, and about Triple Canopy's new book, Corrected Slogans: Reading and Writing Conceptualism. During the weekend of January 18–20, an Triple Canopy invited scores of New York–based artists, writers, publishers, scholars, and other collaborators to gather in Greenpoint to perform the entirety of Stein’s enormously long and allegedly unreadable novel. The reading lasted for 52 hours. The marathon inaugurated Triple Canopy's fifth year. There were coffee and donuts during the dawn walk-in hours; there was borscht at dinnertime; we toasted at the beginning and end. We tweeted (#MakingUSA) the Americans as they progressed.

 The Making of Americans on WKCR by Sam Frank, Lucy Ives & Dan Visel | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Columbia University radio station WKCR’s Blair McClendon interviewed Triple Canopy editors Sam Frank, Lucy Ives, and Dan Visel about the annual marathon reading of Gertrude Stein’s The Making of Americans, which took place in January, and about Triple Canopy's new book, Corrected Slogans: Reading and Writing Conceptualism.

 Productive Behaviors by Astrom/Zimmer | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

How might publishing platforms amplify the relationships between people, places, objects, and social processes that comprise publication? A conversation about new directions in digital publishing with Triple Canopy's first designers-in-residence, the Zurich-based duo of Anthon Astrom and Lukas Zimmer.

Comments

Login or signup comment.