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UID:Indybay-18837607
SEQUENCE:18993870
CREATED:20201017T040600Z
DESCRIPTION:Telematic Media Arts \n\npresents \n\nThe Archive to Come \n\nAn exhibition 
 of short time-based works \n\nOn-Line and In-the-Gallery \n\nOctober 22nd - 
 December 17th, 2020 \nOpening Reception: Thursday, October 22nd, 4:00 - 
 7:00pm [PDT] \n\nCurated by Clark Buckner and Carla Gannis \n\nAlfredo 
 Salazar-Caro, Alicia Escott, Antonio Roberts, Auriea Harvey, Bayeté Ross 
 Smith, Caroline Sinders, Christina Corfield, Clareese Hill, Claudia Hart, 
 Danielle Siembieda, Darrin Martin, David Bayus, Faith Holland, Faiyaz 
 Jafri, Gabriel Barcia-Colombo, Genevieve Quick, Gretta Louw, Hank Willis 
 Thomas and Kambui Olujimi, Jakob Kudsk Steensen, Jamel (Jam No Peanut) 
 MCT-ing Budong, James X Patterson, Jenifer Wofford, LaJuné McMillian, 
 Laura Gillmore, Laura Hyunjhee Kim, Laura Splan, Leila Weefur, Liss 
 Lafleur, Lorna Mills, Lynn Marie Kirby, Mads Lynnerup, Maggie Roberts 
 [Orphan Drift], Mark Amerika, Mark Klink, Martina Menengon, Mary Flanagan, 
 Minoosh (Raheleh) Zomorodinia, Mohsen Hazrati, Molly Soda, Noth (Qinyuan) 
 Liu, Penelope Umbrico, Porpentine Charity Heartscape, R. Luke DuBois, Ranu 
 Mukherjee [Orphan Drift], Rosa Menkman, Ruben Natal-San Miguel, Sean 
 Capone, Shaghayegh Cyrous,  shawné michaelain holloway, Sherie Weldon, 
 Snow Yunxue Fu, Surabhi Saraf, Susan Silas, Tamiko Thiel, Tiare Ribeaux, 
 Yuliya Lanina \n\nEmail:  info@tttelematiccc.com  
 \nWebsite: www.tttelematiccc.com  \nInstagram @tttelematiccc \nPhone: 
 415-336-2349 \n\n\nExhibition Statement \n\nAs an outgrowth of Carla 
 Gannis’ wwwunderkammer, Telematic Media Arts is pleased to present, The 
 Archive to Come, an exhibition – both on-line and in the gallery – of 
 short, time-based works that address questions of loss, memorialization, 
 crisis, and re-invention, through the lens of contemporary networked 
 culture and digital media. \n\nThe crises we confront raise fundamental 
 questions about what we value and want to preserve as we work to recover 
 from their ravages and build for the future.  How will we memorialize 
 those whose lives have been lost?  What could do justice to the fact that 
 so many have died needlessly, as a result of government inaction and 
 political maneuvering, or worse, as victims of racist terror and state 
 violence?  How can we redress the unequal distribution of suffering and 
 work to dismantle systems of oppression?  What histories demand to be 
 foregrounded and what legacies should be left behind? What have we carried 
 with us as we’ve withdrawn into isolation and emerged in protest? What 
 are the sources of precariousness and resilience in our personal and 
 collective constitutions?  What kinds of work do we honor as 
 essential?  What do we need to preserve our sense of well-being?  What 
 novel modes being and relating have we developed to maintain our social 
 connections?  What do we hope for the future?   \n\nThese are questions 
 of the archive, which both founds and sustains the authority of discourses, 
 institutions, and practices. They concern the construction of memory, 
 knowledge, experience, and power; and they present themselves now, amidst 
 these crises, as both problems and possibilities: revelations of the 
 previously unconscious contradictions in our way of doing things, as well 
 as opportunities to re-orient our attunement to the world. \n\nCarla 
 Gannis’ wwwunderkammer appeals to the 16th – Century “Cabinets of 
 Curiosity” to consider the uncanny complications of grounded reality and 
 virtual reality, nature and artifice, science and science fiction in 
 contemporary digital culture, while building virtual worlds, founded upon 
 de-colonizing, post-human, and feminist archives.  The Archive to Come, 
 accordingly, opens these concerns to consideration by a broad field of 
 other artists, inviting them to construct archives of their own, to reflect 
 upon the correlative issues of historical trauma and displacement, and to 
 consider how the digitalization of memory has changed the experience of 
 what we remember – indeed, memory and experience themselves? \n\n \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/10/16/18837607.php
SUMMARY:The Archive To Come
LOCATION:Attend the opening at: \n\nIn Social VR:  
 https://hubs.mozilla.com/BRLaDhW/archive-gallery \n\nStreaming on Twitch:  
 www.twitch.tv/tttelematiccc \n\nSee the work on-line at 
 www.tttelematiccc.com \n\nAnd / or visit our physical gallery space 
 \n\nHours: Small friend groups and individuals, by appointment 
 \nAddress: 323 10th St., San Francisco, CA 94103 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/10/16/18837607.php
DTSTART:20201022T230000Z
DTEND:20201023T020000Z
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